Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Dubai looks to the skies to modernize transporta­tion

- By Jon Gambrell

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — With a whirling buzz from 18 rotors, the pilotless helicopter gently lifted off the ground and soared up into the afternoon sky, the spire of the world’s tallest building visible behind it.

The recent unmanned flight by the German-made electric Volocopter represents the latest step in Dubai’s pursuit of flying taxis, which would not seem out of place among the Gulf city’s already futuristic skyline — imagine “Blade Runner,” with less rain.

Dubai already has invested in another model of a flying, autonomous taxi, and is working to design regulation­s for their use. Putting more passengers in the air could free its already clogged highways and burnish the city’s cutting-edge image of itself.

“It’s public transporta­tion for everybody, so you can use, you can order it, you can pay for the trip and the trip is not much more expensive than with a car,” said Alexander Zosel, Volocopter’s co-founder. “If you build roads, you build bridges, it’s a huge amount and it’s always much more cheaper to have a system where you don’t need that infrastruc­ture.”

Driving in Dubai already makes one yearn for the open skies. Rush hour on Sheikh Zayed Road, a dozen-lane artery running down the length of the city, alternates between dense gridlock and sports-car slalom.

Over 1.5 million Dubairegis­tered vehicles ply its roads, not counting those crowding in from the United Arab Emirates’ six other sheikhdoms.

The Volocopter’s designers envision the electric, battery-powered two-seat helicopter­s taking off and landing from pads set up across the city. The prototype used in Dubai has a maximum flying time of 30 minutes at 31 mph, with a maximum airspeed of 62 mph. Batteries charged in climate-controlled areas near the pads would be swapped in as needed.

“I believe (the) urban air taxi will contribute an interestin­g addition to the existing transporta­tion modes,” Volocopter CEO Florian Reuter said. “There are certain routes that are just extremely beneficial if you can go to the third dimension.”

In practice, however, there’s a long way to go. Convincing white-knuckled flyers to get into a buzzing, pilotless helicopter is just the beginning. Unpiloted passenger flights represent a new frontier for regulators. Dubai’s Road and Transporta­tion Authority, which has invested an undisclose­d sum in Volocopter, says it will work the next five years to come up with laws and develop safety procedures.

That’s a longer time frame than initially offered by Dubai. Mattar al-Tayer, the head of the RTA, told a conference in February that the Chinese-made EHang 184, a Volocopter competitor, would be regularly flying through the city’s skies by July, though that deadline came and went. The RTA did not respond to a request for comment.

Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, says he wants 25 percent of all passenger trips in the city to be done by driverless vehicles by 2030.

 ?? KAMRAN JEBREILI/AP ?? A pilotless Volocopter prototype flies last month during a test flight in Dubai.
KAMRAN JEBREILI/AP A pilotless Volocopter prototype flies last month during a test flight in Dubai.

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