Navya SAS
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Company type | Société anonyme |
---|---|
Euronext: NAVYA | |
Industry | Autonomous cars |
Predecessor | Induct[1] |
Headquarters | 1 RUE DU DR PIERRE FLEURY PAPILLON, Villeurbanne , France |
Key people | Jean-Claude Bailly (C.E.O) |
Number of employees | 140[2] (2024) |
Parent | Macnica GROUP [1] |
Website | Gama - Gaussin Macnica Mobility, formerly Navya |
Footnotes / references [3] |
Gama, formerly Navya, is a French company specialized in the design and construction of autonomous and electric vehicles. The company was acquired from receivership in April 2023 by autonomous vehicle manufacturer Gaussin , and semiconductor manufacturer Macnica, and changed its name to Gaussin-Macnica-Mobility, Gama for short.[4]
After inquiring at Macnica's IR Center, we learned that Kudan's SLAM technology is used in the autonomous electric bus, Navya.
History
[edit]In June 2014, Christophe Sapet, co-founder of the companies Infogrames and Infonie, joined the investment fund Robolution Capital to take over the assets of the company Induct, then in liquidation.
Induct launched Navia, a self-driving electric van. This prototype was demonstrated at the 2014 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas[5][6] and was tested on the site of the Civaux Nuclear Power Plant in June 2015.
Six engineers remained in the new structure renamed Navya, based between Paris and Lyon. One year after the company's takeover, the new company launched Arma, the first standalone production vehicle.
In June 2021 Etienne Hermite stepped down as CEO and was replaced by Pierre Lahutte [7]
In July 2021, Navya received 7.5m Euros of Subsidies from the Government of France to develop further Projects [8]
Navya was put in receivership in 1 February 2023.[9] The company was acquired from receivership in April 2023 by autonomous vehicle manufacturer Gaussin, and semiconductor manufacturer Macnica, and changed its name to Gaussin Macnica Mobility.[4][10]
Pilot studies
[edit]- France. In 2016 in Lyon, an experimental service of electric and autonomous minibus service was launched in the Confluence district.
- France. In September 2021, Navya also began testing its new Autonom Tract 135 in with French Logistics Company Geodis.[11] The Autonom Tract is an autonomous tractor for baggage handling.
- USA. A Navya driverless shuttle is operating in downtown Las Vegas. The city of Las Vegas and Keolis initially partnered on a short term deployment in January 2017, which has been followed by a year-long pilot sponsored by AAA of Northern California, Nevada & Utah for a 0.6 mile loop involving eight intersections and connected infrastructure. On November 8, 2017, the shuttle was involved in a minor incident when it was grazed by a delivery truck. The human driver was found to be at fault.[12] As of May 2018, 25,000 passengers had ridden the AAA Self-Driving Shuttle. The current AAA sponsored pilot program is highlighted under Transportation in Las Vegas.
- Singapore. Navya has self-driving vehicles being piloted in Singapore.[13]
- Norway. In April 2019, Navya self-driving buses enter commercial service in downtown Oslo, Norway's capital.[14]
- Japan. In April 2020, Navaya was adopted to a Japanese town of Sakai as the country's first public service of autonomous mobility on open roads.[15] And, Sakai town started operating the service in November. In August 2021, Softbank backed Boldly announced that they decided to roll out more stops in Sakai after the successful test run.[16]
- United Kingdom. In September 2021, Navya and Darwin launched the first autonomous shuttle project on Public Roads in the UK [17]
- Sweden. Starting in 2021, Navya began piloting its service with Västtrafik in Gothenburg.[18]
References
[edit]- ^ "Navya la start up qui a su vite rencontrer son marché".
- ^ "Equipe Navya".
- ^ "Identité de l'entreprise Navya".
- ^ a b Bradley Osborne (August 10, 2023), "Navya receives first customer order following joint takeover by Gaussin and Macnica", Truck & Bus Builder
- ^ Wang, Ucilia. "Hop On This Robot: It Will Shuttle You Around Town". Forbes.
- ^ Murphy, Samantha (7 January 2014). "World's First Commercially Available Self-Driving Car Launches". Mashable.
- ^ "NAVYA Accelerates With a Streamlined Management Board" (Press release). 25 June 2021.
- ^ "Navya will receive 7.5 million euros of subsidies, especially within the framework of the France Relance program, for four of its technological projects". 20 July 2021.
- ^ "NAVYA Has Been Granted an Extension by the Lyon Commercial Court" (Press release). 9 March 2023.
- ^ "Gaussin : Gaussin Macnica Mobility (ex-Navya) devient Gama". Boursier.com (in French). 2023-09-25. Retrieved 2024-11-05.
- ^ "New milestone for our Autonom® Tract".
- ^ "Las Vegas launches the first electric autonomous shuttle on U.S. public roads". 11 January 2017.
- ^ "Singapore Built a Town to test Autonomous Self Driving Vehicles". Bloomberg.com. 4 June 2018.
- ^ "Oslos første selvkjørende buss skal gå mellom Vippetangen og Rådhuset". 29 March 2019.
- ^ "NAVYA equips the Japanese city of Sakai for the country's first public service of autonomous mobility on open roads". 30 January 2020. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
- ^ Boldly Japan (Softbank) is expanding its autonomous shuttle network in Sakai Town, retrieved 21 November 2021
- ^ "Launch of the first autonomous shuttle service by NAVYA on open road in the UK". 2 September 2021.
- ^ "Autonomous shuttles in Gothenburg: green light for a pilot by Keolis". Sustainable Bus. 2021-01-20. Archived from the original on 2024-08-12. Retrieved 2024-08-12.