Voyage, the autonomous vehicle startup that spun out of Udacity, announced Thursday it has raised $31 million in a round led by Franklin Templeton.
Khosla Ventures, Jaguar Land Rover’s InMotion Ventures and Chevron Technology Ventures
also participated in the round. The company, which operates a
ride-hailing service in retirement communities using self-driving cars
supported by human safety drivers, has raised a total of $52 million
since launching in 2017.
The new funding includes a $3 million
convertible note.
Voyage CEO Oliver Cameron has big plans for the fresh injection of capital, including hiring and expanding its fleet of self-driving Chrysler Pacifica minivans, which always have a human safety driver behind the wheel.
Ultimately,
the expanded G2 fleet and staff are just the means toward Cameron’s
grander mission to turn Voyage into a truly driverless and profitable
ride-hailing company.
“It’s not just about solving
self-driving technology,” Cameron told TechCrunch in a recent interview,
explaining that a cost-effective vehicle designed to be driverless is
the essential piece required to make this a profitable business.
The
company is in the midst of a hiring campaign that Cameron hopes will
take its 55-person staff to more than 150 over the next year. Voyage has
had some success attracting high-profile people to fill executive-level
positions, including CTO Drew Gray, who previously worked at Uber ATG, Otto, Cruise and Tesla, as well as former NIO and Tesla employee Davide Bacchet as director of autonomy.
Funds
will also be used to increase its fleet of second-generation
self-driving cars (called G2) that are currently being used in a
4,000-resident retirement community in San Jose, Calif., as well as The
Villages, a 40-square-mile, 125,000-resident retirement city in Florida.
Voyage’s G2 fleet has 12 vehicles. Cameron didn’t provide details on
how many vehicles it will add to its G2 fleet, only describing it as a
“nice jump that will allow us to serve consumers.”
Voyage
used the G2 vehicles to create a template of sorts for its eventual
driverless vehicle. This driverless product — a term Cameron has used in
a previous post on Medium —
will initially be limited to 25 miles per hour, which is the driving
speed within the two retirement communities in which Voyage currently
tests and operates. The vehicle might operate at a low speed, but they
are capable of handling complex traffic interactions, he wrote.
“It
won’t be the most cost-effective vehicle ever made because the industry
still is in its infancy, but it will be a huge, huge, huge improvement
over our G2 vehicle in terms of being be able to scale out a commercial
service and make money on each ride,” Cameron said.
Voyage
initially used modified Ford Fusion vehicles to test its autonomous
vehicle technology, then introduced in July 2018 Chrysler Pacifica
minivans, its second generation of autonomous vehicles. But the end goal
has always been a driverless product.
TechCrunch previously reported that the company has
partnered with an automaker to provide this next-generation vehicle that
has been designed specifically for autonomous driving. Cameron wouldn’t
name the automaker. The vehicle will be electric and it won’t be a
retrofit like the Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid vehicles Voyage currently uses or its first-generation vehicle, a Ford Fusion.
Most
importantly, and a detail Cameron did share with TechCrunch, is that
the vehicle it uses for its driverless service will have redundancies
and safety-critical applications built into it.
Voyage also has deals in place with Enterprise rental cars and Intact insurance company to help it scale.
“You
can imagine leasing is much more optimal than purchasing and owning
vehicles on your balance sheet,” Cameron said. “We have those deals in
place that will allow us to not only get the vehicle costs down, but
other aspects of the vehicle into the right place as well.”
Source. TechCrunch, Kirsten Korosec, September 12, 2019
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