The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

KAIZUKA HOPING TO BECOME DRONE ‘HOLY LAND’

- By Setsuko Kitaguchi Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer

KAIZUKA, Osaka — One of the highlights of the opening ceremony of the Tokyo Olympics was a light show with a display of drones forming the shape of the Earth in the air. With drones continuall­y playing expanded roles in society, from weather observatio­n to assisting rescue efforts, it is only natural that they would also become used in sports competitio­ns and recreation.

The city of Kaizuka, Osaka Prefecture, is aiming to become the “holy land” of the new pasttime, and will host a drone race on Sept. 23 in which operators can pit their skills against each other.

The competitio­n will be held at the municipal Drone Cricket Field, which the city opened in October last year. The grass field covering about 1.2 hectares was part of a park designated as a disaster evacuation area.

By permitting the use of drones in its airspace, and with its convenient location close to Kansai Airport and accessible by expressway, Kaizuka hopes the field will draw drone enthusiast­s from around the country.

In drone racing, a pilot maneuvers a drone around an obstacle course in a timed race, watching through special goggles images from a camera mounted on the aircraft. Crashes are not unusual, either into obstacles or each other, but the technology for quick repairs is also part of the appeal.

With speeds exceeding 100 kph, popularity of this “new motor sport” is growing, with the global number of competitor­s estimated at about 1 million. Some overseas races offer prize money totaling $1 million.

In Japan, the number of races and competitor­s began growing around 2016, although it is still rare for a local government to host a competitio­n.

The Sept. 23 event is divided into three categories: “general,” which has no restrictio­ns on participat­ion, “women” and “over 30.” The drone must use a 5-inch propeller.

“I want people to experience the intensity,” said Takako Kishimoto, the leader of Osaka-based drone racing team Pteryx, who plans to enter the event.

A UNIQUE FIELD

Kaizuka’s Drone Cricket Field is a rarity in Japan, and not just from the leisure aspect.

As a facility for use in land surveys, it serves as a public marker approved by the Geospatial Informatio­n Authority of Japan, and has five concrete cubes, each about one square meter, which can be identified from the sky. A source at the Drone Surveying Education & Research Organizati­on, based in Nishinomiy­a, Hyogo Prefecture, said he had never heard of a local government having a permanent facility like that.

The city reached a deal with the research organizati­on to rent out the site for drone operating sessions or land surveyors’ examinatio­ns by companies and local government employees.

Using drones for laser surveys has been attracting attention in recent years because it is cheaper than using airplanes. As the drones are remotely operated by radio, they can quickly and safely survey disaster areas, such as landslide sites, and other places inaccessib­le by humans. In thickly forested mountainou­s areas, accurate data is obtainable by shining a laser through the leaves to the ground surface.

In December last year, the city held a drone training session for municipal employees. About 20 people took turns operating the two city-owned drones, moving them in all directions and making them do figure-eights.

In the future, the city plans to increase the number of employees who can operate drones, and use them to inspect high places of public facilities and collect disaster response informatio­n.

This movement is expected to get a tailwind from the 2025 Osaka-Kansai world expo, which aims to realize flying cars using drone technology.

 ??  ?? Kaizuka city employees learn to operate a drone for future use during disasters and other occasions last December.
Kaizuka city employees learn to operate a drone for future use during disasters and other occasions last December.
 ?? Yomiuri Shimbun photos ?? A drone passes an obstacle at the Drone Cricket Field in Kaizuka, Osaka Prefecture.
Yomiuri Shimbun photos A drone passes an obstacle at the Drone Cricket Field in Kaizuka, Osaka Prefecture.

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