Vancouver-based A&K Robotics, which builds self-driving âmobility podsâ for airports, has secured $8 million CAD in Series A financing.
Navigating airports can be a tough and stressful experience, especially for travellers with mobility limitations. While airports already provide assistive services like carts driven by employees, A&K co-founder and CEO Matthew Anderson told BetaKit over email that, as the global population ages, demand for these services is growing faster than those systems can scale.
“If you can solve mobility in a crowded airport, you can solve it almost anywhere.”
Andersonâs company has developed a small, electric, self-driving vehicle called Cruz thatâs designed to help address this problem by carrying passengers through terminals and other large and crowded indoor spaces. Cruz already serves travellers at the Vancouver International Airport and Madrid-Barajas Airport.
A&K intends to use this funding to move from pilot programs to permanent deployments across North America and Europe. The startup has already opened a new rapid prototyping and research and development (R&D) facility, and intends to expand its manufacturing capacity from dozens to hundreds of autonomous vehicles per month, with a third hub in Surrey, BC.
âWeâre scaling production, accelerating R&D, and working with leading airport operators to integrate autonomous mobility into everyday operations,â Anderson said. âThe focus is turning proven technology into real infrastructure at scale.â
A&Kâs all-equity, all primary capital Series A round closed in late December. It was co-led by BDC Capitalâs Industrial Innovation Venture Fund and New Yorkâs Vantage Futures, the corporate venture capital arm of airport and transportation infrastructure firm Vantage Group. Fellow new investors included Toronto-based RiSC Capital, Silicon Valleyâs Grep VC, Vancouver-based Nimbus Synergies, and Creo and Kardium co-founder Dan Gelbart. Anderson, who did not share the startupâs valuation, said this financing brings A&Kâs total funding to $10.6 million.
Founded in 2015 by Anderson, COO Jessica Yip, and former CTO Anson Kung, A&K aims to bring autonomous mobility into everyday environments. The more than 10-person startup builds integrated autonomous mobility systems, including Cruz, that are powered by Kinesos AI, its foundational model for indoor navigation.
Equipped with 360-degree and three-dimensional sensing systems, Cruz gathers environmental information from cameras, sonar, and LiDAR and uses Kinesos AI to continually adapt its navigation based on crowd behaviour.
âAirports are where we chose to prove itâbecause if you can solve mobility in a crowded airport, you can solve it almost anywhere,â Anderson said.
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While A&K designs and deploys Cruz, Anderson said its core innovation is the intelligence layer that underpins it, which facilitates safe, human-aware movement through complex, real-world environments like airports.
âThe hard part isnât navigationâitâs crowds,â Anderson said. âWeâve built a crowd-centered AI that understands how people move and flows with them, instead of stopping or getting in the way. Most robots struggle in crowdsâwe designed ours specifically for them. It reads the environment, predicts movement, and goes with the flow instead of fighting it.â
The CEO said A&K has been working to position itself âas the infrastructure layer for movement in complex indoor spacesâ more broadly.
âWe want to make mobility seamless everywhereânot just in airports, but in cities, transit systems, and everyday environmentsâso people can move independently wherever they are,â Anderson said.
Feature image courtesy A&K Robotics.
