Aseon Labs, a company developing a distributed network of robotic pit stops for autonomous vehicle fleets, announced Thursday it has raised $10 million in seed funding. The round was led by Crane Venture Partners, with participation from Y Combinator, Expa (the venture firm founded by Uber co-founder Garrett Camp), Robin Hood Ventures, and Founders Capital. Investors also included Adrian Aoun, a former Google executive and technology advisor to the White House; Immad Akhund, founder and CEO of Mercury; Rajat Suri, co-founder of Lyft; and operators from Anthropic, Nuro, Turo, Revolut, and other leading companies.
The funding will accelerate deployment of Aseon’s robotic micro-depots, which allow autonomous vehicles to charge, clean, inspect, and reset directly within their operating zones. By bringing fleet servicing closer to where vehicles operate, Aseon aims to reduce costly downtime and improve fleet utilization. The company says its micro-depots can be deployed in as little as one to two days, compared to the one to two years typically required for traditional centralized depots.
According to public California operating data cited by the San Francisco Chronicle, approximately 45% of Waymo’s miles are driven without a passenger onboard. Those trips can consume up to seven hours per vehicle per day traveling for charging, cleaning, inspections, and maintenance, reducing utilization and increasing operating costs. As fleets expand globally, the cost of charging, servicing, and repositioning vehicles could become one of the largest operating expenses in the industry.
“Autonomous driving is working. The operational model around it is not,” said George Kalligeros, co-founder and CEO of Aseon Labs, in a statement. “Today’s fleets still spend significant time traveling to and from centralized facilities for servicing. We believe autonomous vehicles need autonomous operations. Instead of vehicles leaving demand centers, the infrastructure comes to them.”
The company was founded by the team behind Pushme, a battery-swapping infrastructure network that expanded to more than 5,000 locations across 40 markets and was acquired by Tier Mobility. Aseon is applying that experience in infrastructure deployment and large-scale network operations to what it sees as the next major challenge facing autonomous transportation.
The opportunity extends beyond today’s robotaxi deployments. Goldman Sachs estimates the global commercial robotaxi fleet will grow from roughly 7,000 vehicles in 2024 to approximately 6 million vehicles by 2035. When autonomous transportation expands from dozens of markets to thousands of cities worldwide, the infrastructure required to keep those vehicles operating efficiently will become one of the largest value creation opportunities in the sector.
“The autonomous driving problem is increasingly being solved. The autonomous operations problem is not,” said Dan Jaeck, principal at Crane Venture Partners. “As fleets scale, keeping vehicles charged, cleaned, inspected, and in service will become one of the industry’s defining challenges.”
Proceeds from the funding round will be used to accelerate deployment of Aseon’s robotic micro-depot network, expand its engineering and robotics teams, and onboard a growing pipeline of real estate partners. Since emerging from stealth, the company has engaged with owners and operators of commercial, mixed-use, and industrial properties interested in hosting Aseon infrastructure. The company is also working directly with several leading autonomous vehicle companies and automotive OEMs.
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