Airspace Experience Technologies is taking flight from the automotive cradle of Detroit
Skip to main content
Sister Publication Links
  • Automotive News Canada
  • Automotive News Europe
  • Automotive News Mexico
  • Automotive News China
  • Automobilwoche
AN-LOGO-BLUE
Subscribe
  • Subscribe
  • Account
  • login
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • Dealers
    • Automakers & Suppliers
    • News by Brand
    • Cars & Concepts
    • Shift
    • Mobility Report
    • Special Reports
    • Digital Edition Archive
    • This Week's Issue
    • Big changes are afoot, starting here
    • Argo’s tie-up with Ford, VW leaves room for Asian automaker
      Car2Go theft in Chicago is a lesson for car-sharing business
      Dodge sees electric future for its performance cars
    • Dealerships owned by ex-NFL stars face collapse, litigation
      Want a luxury car? Try a Kia
      Costly lesson of tortuous legal battle: Get it in writing
      Denny Hecker: A changed man?
    • Expanded Ford-VW deal ‘just makes sense'
      Amazon expanding reach in the automotive industry
    • Access F&I
    • Fixed Ops Journal
    • Marketing
    • Used Cars
    • Sales
    • Best Practices
    • Dealership Buy/Sell
    • NADA
    • NADA Show
    • Automakers
    • Manufacturing
    • Suppliers
    • Regulations & Safety
    • Executives
    • Leading Woman Network
    • Guide to Economic Development
    • PACE Awards
    • CES
    • Management Briefing Seminars
    • World Congress
    • Auto Shows
      • Detroit Auto Show
      • New York Auto Show
      • Los Angeles Auto Show
      • Chicago Auto Show
      • Geneva Auto Show
      • Paris Auto Show
      • Frankfurt Auto Show
      • Toronto Auto Show
      • Tokyo Auto Show
      • Shanghai Auto Show
      • Beijing Auto Show
    • Future Product Pipeline
    • Photo Galleries
    • Car Cutaways
    • Design
  • OPINION
    • Blogs
    • Cartoons
    • Keith Crain
    • Automotive Views with Jason Stein
    • Columnists
    • Editorials
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Send us a Letter
    • Here's why Tesla doesn't want a new Model S
      BMW curse claims Krueger as its latest victim
      Gentex gains key tip from going fast on the autobahn
      'What a sales guy': Automotive News' Ferron recalls Iacocca
    • view gallery
      1 photos
      Fix The Grid
      view gallery
      1 photos
      Made In America
      view gallery
      1 photos
      When Pig Fly?
      view gallery
      1 photos
      Falling Fiat
    • Larger than life, Iacocca was one of a kind
      It's a rapidly changing world
      Who's on first? I don't know
    • July 12, 2019 | Truck war is heating up
      July 5, 2019 | New bill is good news for everyone
      June 28, 2019 | More cars are communicating with nearby merchants
      June 21, 2019: Manufacturers need to educate consumers on automated technology
    • Renault should sell Nissan stake and press ahead with FCA merger, Bernstein analyst says
      Larger than life, Iacocca was one of a kind
    • Coming wave of EVs needs better electrical grids
      First impressions linger with buyers — ask Hyundai
      Dreams of flying taxis not ready to come true
      Plenty of lessons from Fiat's U.S. stumble
    • Grid security concerns are real
      Too much inertia for a quick shift to EVs
  • DATA CENTER
  • VIDEO
    • AutoNews Now
    • First Shift
    • Special Video Reports
    • Weekend Drive
    • AutoNews Now: A 'win-win' for Ford, VW?
      AutoNews Now: The past and future of the Fiat 500 EV
      AutoNews Now: Toyota's assembly about-face in Alabama
      AutoNews Now: Former GM director and critic Ross Perot dies
    • First Shift: Ford, VW strengthen alliance with AV, EV deal
      First Shift: VW CUV to replace Beetle on Mexico assembly line
      First Shift: Mourners recall Iacocca's leadership, influence
      First Shift: Mini launches full-electric Cooper SE
    • 2019 PACE Award Finalists - Body Systems and Interiors
      2019 PACE Award Finalists – Automotive Research, Engineered Materials, and Manufacturing Methods
      2019 PACE Award Finalists – Vehicle Safety and Autonomous Driving
      2019 PACE Award Finalists – Suspensions, Drivelines and Fuel Systems
    • Battling the opioid epidemic on the factory floor
      'Products and people': Wayland takes a trip down memory lane
      Why current U.S. fleet sales won't 'haunt' industry
      How the Koreans 'cracked the code' on quality
  • EVENTS & AWARDS
    • Events
    • Awards
    • World Congress
    • Retail Forum: NADA
    • Canada Congress
    • Marketing 360: L.A.
    • Leading Women Dallas
    • Europe Congress
    • Retail Forum: Chicago
    • Leading Women Conference Detroit
    • Fixed Ops Journal Forum
    • 100 Leading Woman
    • 40 Under 40 Retail
    • All-Stars
    • Best Dealership To Work For
    • PACE Awards
    • Rising Stars
    • Europe Rising Stars
  • JOBS
  • +MORE
    • Webinars
    • Leading Women Network
    • Publishing Partners
    • Classifieds
    • People on the Move
    • Newsletters
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit
    • RSS Feeds
    • Ally: Do It Right
    • DealerSocket: Decoding Gen Z the car buyer
    • Guide To Economic Development
MENU
Breadcrumb
  1. Home
  2. Mobility Report
July 15, 2019 12:00 AM

Taking flight from an automotive cradle

Pete Bigelow
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Share
  • Email
  • More
    Print
    Mobi-One: A new type of mobility?

    DETROIT — Weeds grow from cracks on the tarmac. Runways sit empty for hours. The last commercial passengers departed two decades ago.

    Coleman A. Young Airport, better known as Detroit City Airport, seems like a crumbling remnant of a bygone era of Motor City greatness. But from his vantage point on the second floor of a dilapidated terminal building, Jon Rimanelli swears he sees the future.

    "Look, there's 760 million passengers that enplane at the nation's top 50 airports every year, and there's like 13,000 airports that are underutilized in the United States," he says. "There's a gap in air mobility and vehicle platforms that connect the big airports to the small ones like this one and urban centers to suburbs. If you do that, you end up with a distributed network of air transportation and literally tens of thousands of new aircraft that will be pulled into the system."

    Rimanelli intends to build those aircraft. He's CEO of Airspace Experience Technologies, or ASX, a Detroit startup creating the Mobi-One, an electric vertical takeoff-and-landing aircraft capable of carrying cargo and passengers.

    Like the industry it's trying to help create, the Mobi-One doesn't yet exist. Smaller-scale prototypes are hovering around City Airport, a test mule should be ready in the next 60 days and a full-scale prototype should be operational by the fall of 2020.

    Once aloft, Rimanelli says, the aircraft could usher in a new era of urban air mobility, linking travelers to key destinations five times faster than conventional modes of transportation do — at prices comparable to those offered in today's ride-hailing networks.

    It's an ambitious vision.

    Incumbent aviation manufacturers, he says, are ensnared by the high expenses associated with lower-volume production runs and the complexity of systems needed for higher-altitude flying. Simplifying systems for flights no higher than 3,000 feet and plans for high-volume production should hold down costs.

    So will a novel approach — eschewing traditional aviation suppliers for automotive ones. Central to ASX's plan is relying on Detroit's traditional auto industry and supply base, and repurposing them for aviation use.

    "We're not building flying cars, but we are assembling car parts that you can fly," says Rimanelli, a Dartmouth business school graduate who previously founded Nextronix Inc., an electronics design and manufacturing firm in Romulus, Mich. "The reality is the automotive industry is very interested in electrification, automation, lightweighting, safety and reliability. Those are all the same things I'm interested in."

    Cargo by 2022

    This wouldn't be the first time the auto industry's collective might would be harnessed for aviation. During World War II, Ford Motor Co. built B-24 Liberators at the Willow Run assembly plant in Ypsilanti, Mich. At its peak in 1944, a bomber rolled off the assembly line once every hour.

    Mobi-Ones might not be replicated at that pace, but Rimanelli wants to borrow from that general idea.

    "We've got this great industrial base here, we've got skilled labor and capacity," he says. "We can leverage this at scale and make it an accessible product that everyone can afford through ride-sharing programs."

    Factories in Hamtramck and Detroit have been identified as potential assembly sites. Production could start as early as 2022, when ASX intends to launch its first wave of aircraft for use in the logistics and emergency-response industries. In June, ASX signed a memorandum of understanding with TPS Logistics, a $1.5 billion global transportation company in Troy, Mich., to explore such possibilities.

    Photo
    Mobi-One is envisioned for cargo and passengers.

    Passengers may board the Mobi-One starting in 2025. That's when Rimanelli hopes to build 2,500 aircraft and launch 50 in each of the most populous cities on ride-hailing networks. Toward that end, ASX has conferred with Uber and has sketched its technical plans for the Mobi-One to meet specifications outlined by the ride-hailing network.

    Those specifications include a tilt-wing design that enables vertical takeoffs and transitions into winged flight — meaning trips can start or end on tops of buildings, parking garages or the so-called vertiports that some mobility leaders foresee. The Mobi-One could also perform more energy-efficient takeoffs and landings from traditional runways.

    The aircraft is slated to have an all-electric range of 65 miles, enough to get from one side of a major city to the other or, alternately, ferry passengers from suburbs to major airports. A version with a hybrid powertrain could extend the range to 260 miles.

    Affordability might be in the eye of the beholder. By Rimanelli's estimates, a trip might cost $75 per seat for a 15-minute flight. (That's in the ballpark of the $68.03 Uber charged for a recent trip between Detroit and Ann Arbor, Mich., for one example.) At that rate, Rimanelli suggests each aircraft could be profitable if it carries seven riders an hour, eight hours a day.

    Skepticism starts to thaw

    If the novelty of passengers boarding flying taxis at their neighborhood vertiports in just a few years sounds like the latest permutation of the Jetsons-style hype rife in the transportation technology industry, well, many experts share or have shared some skepticism.

    "I met Jon at a mobility conference in Montreal," says Anita Sengupta, a former NASA aerospace engineer responsible for the design of the supersonic parachute system that landed the Curiosity Rover on Mars. "He's going on about making electric aviation cheap, and I'm like, 'This is bullshit. I'm from aerospace and this is impossible.' "

    She's been converted into a believer. After the conference, the two became friends, and Sengupta eventually became an adviser to ASX. Now she is the company's chief product officer.

    Others also have warmed to air mobility. A June report from consulting firm Deloitte noted that, after "decades of false starts," new classes of aircraft are emerging that could make urban air mobility a reality. By 2025, the study projects a $1 billion market for intracity passenger service via electric or hybrid-electric vertical takeoff and landing, a figure that reaches $13.8 billion by 2040. Meanwhile, Deloitte expects the intercity passenger market for such vehicles to grow from $2.6 billion to $3.9 billion.

    Projected growth underscores "significant business opportunities for aerospace and manufacturing industries to reexamine product mixes and business models," says the report, released ahead of June's Paris Air Show.

    "These will open up new markets that helicopters can't service today because of price and sound," says Robin Lineberger, head of Deloitte's global aerospace and defense industry practice. "You'll see some people think that all these aircraft have the same flight characteristics, and that it's one size fits all. One size doesn't fit all. How much energy you need, how much weight you carry and how far you want to go — that's the design box, and aircraft are being developed for different corners of that box."

    Dozens of companies have ventured into the vertical takeoff and landing realm in recent years, including Airbus, Uber and Bell, which captured attention in January at CES with the unveiling of its Nexus air taxi concept that would use a hybrid propulsion system. Others include the Larry Page-backed Kitty Hawk, Volvo's Terrafugia subsidiary and Joby Aviation, which has received investment from the Toyota AI Ventures fund.

    For those pursuing electrification, batteries present some technical challenges and perhaps regulatory uncertainty — namely, how will federal fuel-reserve requirements be measured in charge instead of fuel. But there are other, less obvious complexities.

    "Electrification is a net new play or need for the aviation industry," Lineberger says. "They'll have to work on building the supply chain for that, and if this is tens of thousands of vehicles, that's not how the industry builds today. That supply chain velocity is totally new."

    From the cradle of the auto industry, that's exactly where ASX plans to excel.

    "This is not aviation in the traditional commercial jet sense at high altitude," Sengupta says. "This is general aviation travel for the masses. And when you look at mass production, the car is a supercomplicated device that costs almost nothing. So for us, the proof is in that pudding."

    Letter
    to the
    Editor

    Send us a letter

    Have an opinion about this story? Click here to submit a Letter to the Editor, and we may publish it in print.

    Recommended for You
    Digital Edition
    THIS WEEK'S EDITION
    See our archive
    Fixed Ops Journal
    Thumbnail
    Read the issue
    See our archive
    Get Free Newsletters

    Sign up and get the best of Automotive News delivered straight to your email inbox, free of charge. Choose your news – we will deliver.

    Subscribe Now

    Get 24/7 access to in-depth, authoritative coverage of the auto industry from a global team of reporters and editors covering the news that’s vital to your business.

    Subscribe Now
    Connect With Us
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter

    Our Mission

    The Automotive News mission is to be the primary source of industry news, data and understanding for the industry's decision-makers interested in North America.

    AN-LOGO-BLUE
    Contact Us

    1155 Gratiot Avenue
    Detroit, Michigan
    48207-2997

    (877) 812-1584

    Email us

    Automotive News
    ISSN 0005-1551 (print)
    ISSN 1557-7686 (online)

    Fixed Ops Journal
    ISSN 2576-1064 (print)
    ISSN 2576-1072 (online)

    Resources
    • About us
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit
    • Subscribe
    • Manage your account
    • Reprints
    • Ad Choices Ad Choices
    • Sitemap
    Legal
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    Copyright © 1996-2019. Crain Communications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    • HOME
    • NEWS
      • Dealers
        • Access F&I
        • Fixed Ops Journal
        • Marketing
        • Used Cars
        • Sales
        • Best Practices
        • Dealership Buy/Sell
        • NADA
        • NADA Show
      • Automakers & Suppliers
        • Automakers
        • Manufacturing
        • Suppliers
        • Regulations & Safety
        • Executives
        • Leading Woman Network
        • Guide to Economic Development
        • PACE Awards
        • CES
        • Management Briefing Seminars
        • World Congress
      • News by Brand
      • Cars & Concepts
        • Auto Shows
          • Detroit Auto Show
          • New York Auto Show
          • Los Angeles Auto Show
          • Chicago Auto Show
          • Geneva Auto Show
          • Paris Auto Show
          • Frankfurt Auto Show
          • Toronto Auto Show
          • Tokyo Auto Show
          • Shanghai Auto Show
          • Beijing Auto Show
        • Future Product Pipeline
        • Photo Galleries
        • Car Cutaways
        • Design
      • Shift
      • Mobility Report
      • Special Reports
      • Digital Edition Archive
      • This Week's Issue
    • OPINION
      • Blogs
      • Cartoons
      • Keith Crain
      • Automotive Views with Jason Stein
      • Columnists
      • Editorials
      • Letters to the Editor
      • Send us a Letter
    • DATA CENTER
    • VIDEO
      • AutoNews Now
      • First Shift
      • Special Video Reports
      • Weekend Drive
    • EVENTS & AWARDS
      • Events
        • World Congress
        • Retail Forum: NADA
        • Canada Congress
        • Marketing 360: L.A.
        • Leading Women Dallas
        • Europe Congress
        • Retail Forum: Chicago
        • Leading Women Conference Detroit
        • Fixed Ops Journal Forum
      • Awards
        • 100 Leading Woman
        • 40 Under 40 Retail
        • All-Stars
        • Best Dealership To Work For
        • PACE Awards
        • Rising Stars
        • Europe Rising Stars
    • JOBS
    • +MORE
      • Webinars
      • Leading Women Network
      • Publishing Partners
        • Ally: Do It Right
        • DealerSocket: Decoding Gen Z the car buyer
        • Guide To Economic Development
      • Classifieds
      • People on the Move
      • Newsletters
      • Contact Us
      • Media Kit
      • RSS Feeds