Aware Vehicles accelerates pilot-free drone development thanks to IgniteX partnership with Black & Veatch
September 28, 2019 | Anna Turnbull
Drones are one step closer to becoming completely automated with the help of Aware Vehicles, a finalist in the IgniteX Accelerator.
The Kansas City-based tech startup focuses on non-human interaction for the flight, charge and data collection of drones, emphasized PJ Piper, CEO of Aware Vehicles and founder of QM Power.

PJ Piper, Aware Vehicles
“You get the eye in the sky and that added intelligence,” he said. “Our vision is to make it capable for these drones to be fully autonomous and it enables for a much greater collection of data. If something can fly without a person involved, it could keep flying either around the clock or every day.”
“We think it is going to unleash a significant wave of drone adoptions for various applications,” Piper added.
Autonomous drones can help with many tasks that employees typically execute, from agriculture to architecture, he said.
“Artificial intelligence [is used] to derive these really wonderful insights about identifying crop stress and saving a field, or being able to identify internal damage protection in bridges or buildings, and things like that,” Piper said.
Click here to read more about Aware Vehicles and its mission to develop drone technology.
Aware was among seven companies selected for the IgniteX Accelerator — sponsored by Black & Veatch and powered by LaunchKC — and the only Kansas City startup in the cohort.
“We view [IgniteX] as a way to accelerate the adoption of sustainable infrastructure,” said Hyleme George, IgniteX director. “We see it as an opportunity for both Black and Veatch and the participating companies to grow their business and advance.”
To be accepted to join the accelerator, Aware was chosen from among 120 applicants in a highly competitive process, he said.
“What we really appreciate about Aware Vehicles is that there is a lot of publicity and hype around the use of unmanned aerial vehicles,” said George. “What Aware is trying to do is automate some of those manual activities that are associated with the operation of the done. If we are able to do that [charge, fly and operate drones] it really increases our ability to utilize the technology.”
Each finalist in the accelerator receives a valuable 75-day collaboration with Black & Veatch, as well as an equity investment from the Kansas City-based global leader in engineering, procurement and construction services for energy, water and telecommunications.
“The bigger value is the collaboration with Black & Veatch… the opportunity to accelerate deployment of their technology out to our project sites,” George said. “They have the ability to refine their offerings with real-world-use cases.”
Click here to learn more about the IgniteX Cleantech Accelerator and its inaugural cohort.
Aware’s team is excited to participate in the IgniteX Accelerator, emphasized Piper.
“We could not be happier about this and we are trying to take advantage of the opportunity,” he said. “I almost don’t think of it as an accelerator as much as a partnership with Black & Veatch to develop and demonstrate something. … We can really establish the basis for continuing ongoing strategic relationships throughout the infrastructure business.”
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Fading passion compels in-the-black Creelio to shut down
Kansas City-based storytelling startup Creelio is closing its doors after three years of helping executives write custom content. Founded in 2013, Creelio was born out of a 2012 Startup Weekend competition and led by Julie Edge and Steve Stava. The six-person firm company co-wrote blogs and content with more than 60 area executives, helping them…
Kansas City founders to discuss the ‘Art of Failure’
Most startups fail. But that doesn’t mean that lessons from their demise must fade away with them. Zen and the Art of Failure — set for May 19 at Village Square Coworking Studio — will explore the topic of failure via three local founders’ startup experiences and how they grew as a result. Matthew Marcus, executive director…
Gigabit Summit leader: ‘People look to Kansas City for answers’
So you’ve got gigabit-fast — roughly 1,000 megabits-per-second — internet speeds. Now what? That’s a question the Kansas City-hosted Gigabit City Summit will help communities from across the U.S. answer. The summit — organized by KC Digital Drive and set for May 16 through 18 — is back for round two thanks to popular demand after…

