Skip to main content

Flying taxis: Kitty Hawk and Boeing team up on urban mobility

Companies big and small have recently been expanding efforts to explore the viability of small, electric, autonomous flying machines for air taxi services in urban areas, with partnerships beginning to spring up between various players with an interest in the technology.

Kitty Hawk’s Cora aircraft. Kitty Hawk

Take Boeing. The company this week announced it’s partnered with Mountain View, California-based Kitty Hawk — a relatively small startup backed by Google co-founder and Alphabet CEO Larry Page — as part of a plan to “to advance safe urban air mobility,” according to the aerospace giant, though it declined to disclose the precise terms of the deal.

Kitty Hawk, named after the beaches of Kitty Hawk in North Carolina, where the Wright brothers’ flying machine first took off in 1903, has been developing a couple of small aircraft since its founding four years ago.

One of them, Flyer, is an electric-powered single-seater with 10 sets of rotors and two control sticks. It currently has a top speed of 20 mph, though it’s hoped that a future design will reach speeds of up to 100 mph.

Its more ambitious design, however, is Cora, an autonomous two-seat electric aircraft with 12 wing-mounted rotors that enable vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL), and a large pusher-prop that allows it to fly like a regular airplane.

Cora has a range of around 60 miles and a top speed of 93 mph, and has already been undergoing testing in New Zealand.

Boeing said the new partnership will combine the innovation of Kitty Hawk’s team with Boeing’s scale and aerospace expertise, and gives the plane-maker access to an expanding and potentially lucrative market. The tie-up is similar in many ways to the way in which long-established automakers have been partnering with tech startups to research and develop autonomous cars.

“Working with a company like Kitty Hawk brings us closer to our goal of safely advancing the future of mobility,” Boeing’s Steve Nordlund said in a release. “We have a shared vision of how people, goods, and ideas will be transported in the future, as well as the safety and regulatory ecosystem that will underpin that transportation.”

Commenting on the partnership, Kitty Hawk CEO Sebastian Thrun said his team set out “to advance technology in flight and bring new innovations to life,” adding, “I am excited about our companies working together to accelerate making safe electric flight a reality.”

Boeing’s main rival, Airbus, has been making progress with its electric, autonomous Vahana VTOL aircraft, and there are plenty of other companies working on their own designs, too.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
These new NASA EVs will drive astronauts part way to the moon (sort of)
NASA's new crew transportation electric vehicles.

Three specially designed, fully electric, environmentally friendly crew transportation vehicles for Artemis missions arrived at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida this week. The zero-emission vehicles, which will carry astronauts to Launch Complex 39B for Artemis missions, were delivered by Canoo Technologies of Torrance, California. NASA/Isaac Watson

NASA has shown off a trio of new all-electric vehicles that will shuttle the next generation of lunar astronauts to the launchpad at the Kennedy Space Center.

Read more
5 upcoming EVs I’m excited for, from luxury SUVs to budget champions
Lotus Eletre

Almost every major automaker has released an EV by now -- or plans to soon -- and makers like Ford and Kia already have a variety to choose from. But if you haven't found one that's right for you yet, hang tight. There are dozens of announced electric car models that have yet to come out, and it's clear that the future of EVs is bright.

From longer range to lower prices, the next batch of EVs gives us plenty to get excited about. Here are five upcoming EVs that we can't wait to drive.
Volvo EX30

Read more
Tesla shows off first Cybertruck after two years of delays
The first Cybertruck built at Tesla's Giga Texas facility.

The first Cybertruck built at Tesla's Giga Texas facility. Tesla

Tesla has shown off the first Cybertruck to roll off the production line at its new Gigafactory plant in Austin, Texas.

Read more