joins the Parrot Group to strengthen its position as a leading provider of ultralight unmanned aircraft for mapping and GIS professionals.
Two pioneers of ultralight UAS for civil use, senseFly and Parrot, have joined forces to further develop their respective markets. Parrot has sold over 300,000 of its AR.drone quadcopters to the consumer market since its release in 2010; while the Swiss start-up, senseFly, has seen global and fast growth demand for its fixed-wing aircraft for the mapping and GIS market.
senseFly already masters all the key technologies of its mapping solution: autopilot design, control & monitoring software, and hardware integration. Today, its complete solution includes:
• swinglet CAM: ultralight flying drone equipped with a high-resolution camera and senseFly’s proprietary autopilot that completely automates take-off, flight, image acquisition and landing;
• e-mo-tion: flight control and monitoring software;
• Postflight powered by Pix4D: Image reconstruction software capable of producing precise 2D and 3D maps.
This solution fills the gap between traditional terrestrial surveying and aircraft/satellite imagery. The use of conventional measuring tools operated by certified surveyors such as theodolites and laser scanners is time consuming due to manual operations in the field and data processing. Standard aerial and satellite images are expensive, delayed, dependent on third-party availability and subject to cloud coverage.
Parrot will bring 5 million Swiss francs into senseFly. This strategic investment will give senseFly access to Parrot’s high volume industrial know-how, specialized UAS technology, and the cash to fund rapid growth and new product development. The senseFly office will remain in Ecublens, Switzerland, and its original management team will continue to lead senseFly through these exhilarating times. Parrot’s investment enables senseFly to create dozens of new positions in the promising field of autonomous flying systems.
“We are witnessing a revolution whereby unmanned aircraft are no longer exclusive to the military but are quickly spreading into the civilian world. In 2010, Parrot surprised competitors and fellow researchers alike when they hit the market with their iPhone-piloted quadcopter for filming and gaming. The same year, senseFly revolutionized the job of surveyors by providing fully autonomous flying cameras capable of producing precise 2D and 3D maps within minutes. Both companies are focused on developing very lightweight drones with the strong belief that this is critical to their use by the public at large – far beyond the military. I am delighted that we can join forces to write the next chapters of this exciting revolution”, says Jean-Christophe CEO and co-founder of senseFly.
The professional market for ultralight civilian unmanned aircraft is expected to reach at least 1 billion USD per year by 2020. Among others, this demand will be driven by the need for geographical data exemplified by the growing use of geo-information systems (GIS) such as the ESRI software suite or Google Earth. GIS is a global market that reached 4.4 billion USD in 2010 with an annual sustained growth of more than 10.3% [4]. The demand for GIS data is growing even faster with compound annual rates of 15.5% over the past eight years.
senseFly is a Swiss company that develops and produces autonomous ultralight unmanned aircraft and related software solutions. The technology behind senseFly’s solution first emerged in 2001, when a team of robotic researchers in the Laboratory of Intelligence Systems at EPFL (a leading research organization in robotics and artificial intelligence, ) began investigating the control and navigation strategies of flying insects.
This pioneering research enabled the development of a highly integrated autopilot employing smart control strategies similar to those found in flies and bees. In 2008, this autopilot was integrated into an ultralight flying wing, reproducing all the advantages of insects: efficient, elegant, lightweight, elementary, smart. In late 2009, these researchers teamed up with a surveying engineer and a professional pilot to found senseFly and, shortly after, launched the swinglet CAM aircraft for aerial imagery acquisition and mapping. Since then, the founders have been pioneering the field of miniature and bio-inspired flying drones for mapping and GIS applications.
Source: Press Release