Calgary Herald

City unveils 50-hectare testing site

Mayor Nenshi touts concept of living lab on city’s prairie outskirts

- BILL GRAVELAND

The sky’s the limit as the city of Calgary opens what it believes is the first testing area in Canada for drones, autonomous vehicles and other technologi­es.

The city has set aside a 50-hectare site in its industrial southeast to offer airspace for an increasing demand from companies and educationa­l institutio­ns wanting to do mass tryouts of commercial drones.

A downturn in the energy industry, when oil prices took a free fall in 2014-15, spurred the developmen­t of geospatial sciences, Patti Dunlop of Calgary Economic Developmen­t said.

There’s places in the United States that have testing, but in Calgary we’re the first municipali­ty that’s allowing this type of testing to happen.”

“There’s many companies that came out of the downturn that actually took their engineers, mathematic­ians and ... transition­ed into ... another burgeoning technology,” she said.

“Energy will always be our backbone but we are more than that.”

Geographic informatio­n systems are designed to capture, store, analyze and manage spatial or geographic data.

Mayor Naheed Nenshi said the Calgary testing site will be a boon to many sectors, including oil and gas, film and financial services.

“We have a part of the city that is part of the endless prairie where there are no buildings, so the concept of the living lab, here, for the first time in Canada ... really allows us to help these companies grow,” he said Friday at the official opening of the testing area.

Nenshi gave an example of how new technology can be used in everyday life.

“I had my roof damaged in a hailstorm. The insurance company was able to send a drone over my roof to look at the damage without having to send someone over to climb a ladder and have a look there.”

Dunlop said a pilot project last year offering a test area within the city was so successful it led to the permanent site that opened Friday.

“From what I know, nobody else has started doing this. There’s places in the United States that have testing, but in Calgary we’re the first municipali­ty that’s allowing this type of testing to happen.”

There are requiremen­ts companies have to meet to use the test centre.

They include licensing fees, proof of $2 million in corporate liability insurance and a special flight operations certificat­e for drone technology.

 ?? PHOTOS: KERIANNE SPROULE ?? Aerium Analytics Inc. pilots show off the Robird — a remote-controlled bird — following a drone testing demonstrat­ion.
PHOTOS: KERIANNE SPROULE Aerium Analytics Inc. pilots show off the Robird — a remote-controlled bird — following a drone testing demonstrat­ion.
 ??  ?? Mayor Naheed Nenshi ducks after a failed drone launch Friday, while at the newly opened Point Trotter Autonomous Systems Testing Area.
Mayor Naheed Nenshi ducks after a failed drone launch Friday, while at the newly opened Point Trotter Autonomous Systems Testing Area.

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