KCMO, Avis launch first-in-the-world test lab with 5,000 connected rental cars

November 30, 2017  |  Bobby Burch

Kansas City Hall

Accelerating the Smart City initiative’s focus on enabling autonomous vehicles, the Kansas City area is now serving as the laboratory for a large test of thousands of connected rental cars.

Avis Budget Group and the City of Kansas City, Missouri, announced Thursday the launch of the “Mobility Lab,” featuring a fleet of 5,000 internet-connected vehicles at more than 20 Avis car rental locations, including Kansas City International Airport. The lab will also extend to Nebraska’s Eppley Airfield and Lincoln Airport.

Through the partnership, Avis will be able to cut operational costs and better serve customers with new internet-enabled features. The Kansas City area will benefit from troves of new data that city officials and private Smart City partners can access and analyze, said Bob Bennett, chief innovation officer for Kansas City.

The partnership will ultimately advance the city’s plan to accommodate autonomous vehicles by laying the foundation of data collection and management, Bennett said.

“What this means is that we’ve taken the next large step for the transition between cars as we know them today and cars as they will exist in the 21st-century,” he said. “Like smart cities, autonomous vehicles are dependent on data management. We have an amazing opportunity now to better understand that than any other community and to lead the way. We’re a frontier city, doing frontier things again. We’re very excited at the opportunity to do this.”

By playing host to the Mobility Lab, Kansas City is making the iterative step to prepare its infrastructure for the day when autonomous vehicle technology comes to life, Bennett said.

“I think we’ll be the first city on the planet to use them at scale because we’ll know what the infrastructure underneath it needs to look like,” he added. “It’s the first of its kind on the planet. Avis has been wanting to do this for a number of years and they chose us because of the success of our Smart City program. This is where they want to validate its use.”

The lab should benefit Avis’ operations by providing real-time inventory counts, mileage management and automated maintenance notification. The data will optimize fleet management capabilities and provide scalable benefits as Avis its fleet of connected cars, the company said.

In May, Avis announced it would connect more than 50,000 cars in its nationwide fleet by early 2018, bringing the total number of connected cars to more than 100,000. It hopes to have a fully connected global fleet by 2020.

“Our Mobility Lab in the greater Kansas City area extends our next-generation mobility initiatives,” said Avis CEO Larry De Shon. “The steps we’re taking with connected car and smart technologies will increase customer satisfaction as well as reduce operational costs in the near term, while also preparing us to meet the evolving needs of consumers, entrepreneurs, corporations and governments.”

The Mobility Lab also aims to enhance Avis customers’ experiences while renting a vehicle, the company said. Via the Avis app, it will allow customers to control their rental from an app, including making, changing or managing their reservation, extending their rental and locking and unlocking car doors.

Kansas City Mayor Sly James praised the partnership between the City of Fountains and Avis.

“Kansas City has a fully integrated suite of Smart City initiatives in our community that make it a better place for our citizens and visitors,” he said in a release. “Partnering with Avis Budget Group allows us to make that experience even more efficient and responsive to the needs of 21st Century Kansas Citians and our visitors.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2017 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Photo courtesy of Epic Aloha

    Epic Aloha: KC startup opens interactive, photo-ready experience in Hawaii’s biggest hotel

    By Tommy Felts | November 20, 2018

    Surrounded by lush Hawaiian scenery, Epic Aloha waves to vacationers with an unexpected ask: Trade the Waikiki sunshine for another kind of island escape. “It’s a really hard concept to talk about. It’s such a visual thing,” said Matt Baysinger, searching for words to describe the 6,000-square-foot Epic Aloha experience space. “Is it a selfie…

    Adrienne Haynes, SEED Law

    Opening KC to black entrepreneurs begins with teaching startup lingo, tearing down walls

    By Tommy Felts | November 19, 2018

    Most entrepreneurs operate within silos, said Adrienne Haynes, noting that black-run startups face particular — though not insurmountable — challenges becoming embedded in the Kansas City startup scene. Seemingly approachable community events and coworking spaces aren’t always as open as organizers think, added Quest Moffat, founder of Project United Knowledge, joining Haynes and Donald Hawkins,…

    failure

    Facing failure? Think about the bad ideas first

    By Tommy Felts | November 17, 2018

    Entrepreneurs need to stop glamorizing the startup world, and recognize the inevitable burnout or failure involved, said Danielle Lehman. Lehman, founder of Kansas City-based consulting firm Boxer & Mutt, knows about failure, she told a crowd Friday at Global Entrepreneurship Week, noting a list of startups that she was involved in, including MySpace, that didn’t…

    Ann O’Meara, Fantastic 55, seniorpreneurs

    ‘Don’t shut yourself off’: Seniorpreneurs reveal power in age, experience, savings

    By Tommy Felts | November 17, 2018

    Figure out what you love to do and monetize it, Ann O’Meara told a room of entrepreneurs looking for advice on starting their second act after retirement. Seniorpreneurs — entrepreneurs over the age of 50 — are working to turn their lifelong hobbies into cash flow, O’Meara, CEO of Fantastic 55, revealed during a Global…