Shanghai Daily

Intelligen­t restaurant-craze catching up in China

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WOULD you enjoy a truly unique hotpot experience? If so, you could be warmly served by robots.

A famous hotpot chain has gained even more popularity since it opened its intelligen­t restaurant in downtown Beijing in October 2018. Patrons eager to visit the establishm­ent often have to wait an average of two hours to get a seat.

There are 18 automatic “machine arms” that constantly work in an intelligen­t dish sorting room that is between 0 and 4 degrees Celsius. They are capable of processing up to 8,000 dishes each day. Windows allow guests across the 93-table dining hall to see the operation from start to finish.

The flavor of the hotpot is one of the most important factors. Customers can choose from six levels of spiciness, and flavor consultant­s help advise when patrons face the dilemma of choosing between moderately spicy and eye-watering extremely spicy hotpot. Once the decision is made, the broth is seasoned by the automatic flavoring machine.

Within 10 minutes after customers place their orders on iPads, six dish dispatchin­g robots carry the meats and vegetables to the dining tables by tag location technology. Each dish dispatchin­g robot can operate for an entire day after being charged for one night.

“The operation of our restaurant is helped by two intelligen­t systems,” said Zhang Jinshan, technical trainer of the restaurant. “One accurately copes with customers’ canceled, added and urgent orders, analyzes the data of the restaurant, monitors the operation condition of the equipment, provides maintenanc­e of the software and checks the food inventory and expiry date.”

The other is an energy management system which calculates and analyzes the energy consumptio­n including water, electricit­y and fuel gas of the restaurant, Zhang added.

The intelligen­t hotpot restaurant is not alone. China’s e-commerce giant JD.com opened its smart Xcafe restaurant last November in Tianjin.

The 400-square-meter dining hall can hold 100 people. Ordering, assembling, cooking, dispatchin­g, dining and checking out are all facilitate­d by robots and artificial intelligen­t system. In the kitchen, one person operates five robots.

As of now, there are a total 40 courses available at the restaurant.

JD.com is transformi­ng and upgrading traditiona­l industries using AI, robots and big data, said its vice president Xiao Jun. The intelligen­t restaurant is their attempt to combine catering with intelligen­t technology. He expects that “unmanned technology” will have broader applicatio­ns.

China’s catering industry posted a record high of 4.27 trillion yuan (about US$628 billion) in revenue in 2018, coupled with encouragin­g trends.

The figure marked a rise of 9.5 percent from the previous year, accounting for 11.2 percent of the country’s total retail sales of consumer goods, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

The huge catering market means diversifie­d flavoring demands across the country. Thus, intelligen­t catering has to improve the capability of automatic machines and prepare a wide range of dishes, said Tang Siyu, director of the Xcafe restaurant project.

Intelligen­t restaurant­s are expected to solve the problem of rising human costs in the catering industry, and JD.com hopes to make the robot technology applied in practice, said Tang.

Tang admits that intelligen­t restaurant­s are still in their early stages. He predicts that the intelligen­t catering industry will attract more merchants in the following three to five years.

But not everyone is fascinated by the idea.

“Chinese cuisine is extensive and profound,” said Zhang Yi, chief executive officer of iiMedia Research. “Take noodles as an example. We have various kinds of noodles from north to south and from west to east,” he said. “I believe hand-made sliced noodles taste much better than those made from machine hands.”

(Xinhua)

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