Will robot food delivery roll forward in New Orleans?

Robots
Photo credit Smith Collection/Gado via Getty

College students at the University of New Orleans are among the first in the region to experience autonomous robot food delivery, an innovative service that may point to the future of how we get meals, snacks, and more.

Nicholas St. Amant, Director of Auxiliary services at UNO, says the university’s pilot program with Starship Technologies was a big success.

The service allows students and faculty to order from campus eateries using an app, then have meals delivered to their location by small, self-driving robots that navigate sidewalks, cross streets, and avoid obstacles on their own.

“These robots are well trained,” St. Amant said, noting that they handled different terrain around campus with ease, even stopping at intersections much like a pedestrian would.

“The ability for a robot to meet you where you are is a real bonus for students on the go.”

Rather than waiting in line or trekking across campus for a meal, students could order food directly to where they were studying, hanging out, or living. That convenience, he says, resonated with the student body and added value to campus life.

St. Amant says he definitely sees a future for this technology, one where humans and delivery robots walk side-by-side. And while expanding the service to neighborhoods surrounding the university would require changes to local ordinances, he says the vision of robot deliveries outside campus is still within reach.

"If we revisit the idea, we want to incorporate the surrounding community and help get food to more people who need it."

Starship’s autonomous delivery fleet is already one of the most established in the industry, with millions of deliveries completed around the world and a growing presence across college campuses and cities.

As technology continues to evolve, food delivery (whether to your dorm, office, or front door) may look very different in the years ahead.

Featured Image Photo Credit: Smith Collection/Gado via Getty