INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
French startup Stanley Robotics showed off its self-driving parking robot at Lyon-Saint-Exupéry airport today
While I couldn’t be there in person, the service is going live by the end of March 2019
And here’s what it looks like.The startup has been working on a robot called Stan
These giant robots can literally pick up your car at the entrance of a gigantic parking lot and then park it for you
You might think that parking isn’t that hard, but it makes a lot of sense when you think about airport parking lots.Those parking lots
have become one of the most lucrative businesses for airport companies
But many airports don’t have a ton of space
They keep adding new terminals and it is becoming increasingly complicated to build more parking lots.That’s why Stanley Robotics can
turn existing parking lots into automated parking areas
It’s more efficient as you don’t need space to circulate between all parking spaces
According to the startup, you can create 50 percent more spaces in the same surface area.If you’re traveling for a few months, Stan robots
can put your car in a corner and park a few cars in front of your car
Stan robots will make your car accessible shortly before you land
This way, it’s transparent for the end user.At Vinci’s Lyon airport, there will be 500 parking spaces dedicated to Stanley Robotics
Four robots will work day in, day out to move cars around the parking lot
But Vinci and Stanley Robotics already plan to expand this system to up to 6,000 spaces in total.According to the airport website, booking a
parking space for a week on the normal P5 parking lot costs €50.40
It costs €52.20 if you want a space on P5+, the parking lot managed by Stanley Robotics.Self-driving cars are not there yet because the
But Stanley Robotics has removed all the unpredictable elements
You can’t walk on the parking lot
You just interact with a garage at the gate of the parking
After the door is closed, the startup controls the environment from start to finish.Now, let’s see if Vinci Airports plans to expand its
partnership with Stanley Robotics to other airports around the world.