Europe’s New On-demand Regional Airline Flyvbird Progresses With ‘flyvAI’ Prototype
/flyvbird, Europe's new low-cost on-demand regional airline model, is pleased to confirm the creation of its flyvAI prototype, featuring a proprietary algorithm and software architecture. It has been developed in collaboration with a customized software development company, The Startup House of Poland, working in close collaboration with flyvbird’s CEO Anton Lutz. The system will now be fine-tuned over the next six to nine months.
The algorithm Prototype pools travel demands from customers – marrying them with available city pairs and routes. Passengers can determine an itinerary based on ‘constraints’ – i.e., whether they are prepared to make stops en route to their chosen destination, because doing so will reduce the ticket price. More flexibility with the itinerary will enable flyvbird to distribute a price-sensitive model to its customers.
"This is a significant milestone in our development,” said CEO Anton Lutz. “Using this proprietary software, we hope to deliver high standards in efficiency, convenience, and environmental sustainability for regional air mobility."
Regional air mobility for Europe is first step
flyvbird is committed to its vision of enhancing connectivity in rural areas of Europe - all utilizing smaller, more accessible airports. Its first aircraft will be the nine-seat Tecnam P2012 Traveller, with its short runway and rugged performance characteristics. Thereafter, it plans to move into the hybrid-electric Electra, when the infrastructure to support next-generation aircraft becomes available. Flyvbird signed a Letter of Intent with the US manufacturer for up to 100 aircraft in June 2023.
“We haven’t determined our full future fleet yet, but we plan to keep loyal to the Tecnam Traveller P2012 for a long time. It’s right-sized, offers excellent performance with good economics and is perfect to get distributed in new networks and scale up. It’s all about unit economics and technology,” said Anton Lutz, speaking at World Aviation Festival 2023 in Lisbon.
Initially, flybird will focus on six initial airports with three aircraft. “We ask the algorithm what it can do – to help us to generate 72 connections, for example, considering passengers’ needs flying on a route (including whether they will accept a stop). Once fine-tuned we skip into the second year with seven aircraft, enabling 85 connections. And once that’s happening, we can escalate and open all our airports in between, because then we will understand our customers, and fly non-stop flights,” explained Anton Lutz.
Speaking at a media event at London Oxford Airport last week Tomislav Lang co-founder and Managing Director explained. “It’s a little how (legendary) regional carrier Crossair did it (out of Basel Euroairport). “We want to do it on a bigger scale, because we're aiming to operate more than 70 to 80 aircraft in the next five years. And we cannot solve operational positioning on paper anymore. You need this technology, the right fit aircraft, start operating on your own Air Operator Certificate and manage the system to become excellent in what you do.”