Shanghai Daily

Seoul fast food customers served by robots

- Jung Yoon Kim

Aburger shop in the South Korean capital is a bit different from typical fast food restaurant­s: Its key staff are robots.

From order to pick-up, customers don’t need a single face-to-face interactio­n. All they need to do is to click the menu they want on a kiosk touchscree­n, pay and wait for a serving robot to bring their takeout bag to the pick-up spot.

While waiting for their food, customers take photos or stare with curiosity at the capsulesha­ped robots, reminiscen­t of the popular minions characters from the animated film “Despicable Me.” The yellow and black accent colors of the No Brand Burger restaurant also give the place the look of a toy shop.

“This is the first time I’ve actually seen such robots, so they are really amazing and fun,” said Shin Hyun Soo, a 31year-old office worker trying out the service.

The restaurant’s human manager Bae Eunyoung explained the process, “When a customer orders at the kiosk, it is automatica­lly sent to the kitchen. There, an automated cooking machine kicks in and heats the buns and patties.”

The human staff do have a role to play, Bae added, while adding toppings to the cooked ingredient­s before wrapping them and passing them over to a robot to serve. “The customer can take the food without any direct contact with the staff.”

That’s been seen as a selling point amid the coronaviru­s pandemic and its restrictio­ns.

Before it eased them on Monday, South Korea had for the last few weeks allowed restaurant­s to provide only deliveries and takeout meals after 9pm and franchised coffee shops like Starbucks to provide only takeout drinks.

The number of new reported coronaviru­s cases in South Korea almost doubled from 56 to 103 over two days in midAugust and continued to spike until it reached a peak of 441 daily cases on August 26. Since then the resurgence has slowed down but still climbs by at least 100 each day.

In August, takeout orders accounted for 58 percent of No Brand Burger’s total sales, up by 16 percent from July, according to Shinsegae Food, the South Korean food company that operates No Brand Burger. No Brand Burger isn’t the only local restaurant using robots to serve customers.

South Korea’s major IT company KT has partnered with the family restaurant chain Mad for Garlic to provide AI serving robots. Using 3D space mapping and other technology, the robot can freely move through the narrow lanes between tables and avoid obstacles to reach its destinatio­n, said Lee Youngjin, team leader of AI Platform Business Team at KT.

The robot can serve up to four tables per trip.

“Children customers often like to see the robot. Also, customers in general feel it is fresher to receive their food through the robot because of the coronaviru­s,” said Lee Young-ho, the manager of one Mad for Garlic restaurant using the robots.

Children customers often like to see the robot. Also, customers in general feel it is fresher to receive their food through the robot ...

 ??  ?? An employee (right) controls a robot to deliver a takeout bag with food to a customer at No Brand Burger in Seoul, South Korea. These robotic services, without a single face-to-face interactio­n, have been seen as a selling point amid the coronaviru­s pandemic and its restrictio­ns.
An employee (right) controls a robot to deliver a takeout bag with food to a customer at No Brand Burger in Seoul, South Korea. These robotic services, without a single face-to-face interactio­n, have been seen as a selling point amid the coronaviru­s pandemic and its restrictio­ns.
 ??  ?? AI serving robot from KT carries foods and drinks during a demonstrat­ion at a restaurant in Seoul. — Photos/Ti Gong
AI serving robot from KT carries foods and drinks during a demonstrat­ion at a restaurant in Seoul. — Photos/Ti Gong

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