

Delivery Test Linking Public Roads and High-Rise Floors via Elevator Integration
As part of the “Sakigake Project,” which aims to challenge regulatory and operational barriers toward real-world implementation and develop new rules, LOMBY Inc. conducted a demonstration test of its autonomous delivery robot.
ABOUT
Date | March 13 (Mon) – March 24 (Fri), 2023 |
---|---|
Time | 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM |
Test Area | Public roads in Saeki Ward, Hiroshima City, and Hiroshima Institute of Technology, Itsukaichi Campus |

BACKGROUND AND GOAL

The test scenario featured the LM-R1 model—a hybrid robot with remote-controlled outdoor navigation and autonomous indoor driving. The robot was tested for seamless operation from a convenience store on public roads to a designated floor of a high-rise building, using an automated elevator system (Otis elevator).
It became the first delivery robot in Hiroshima Prefecture to travel on public roads with an official license plate.
Test Scenario
STEP 1 | A person on the 15th floor of Building A orders from a convenience store 1.2 km away via a dedicated web store. |
---|---|
STEP 2 | The order is received: At the convenience store via a tablet. By the remote operator (*Note 1), who receives the delivery task from the store to Building A’s 15th floor. |
STEP 3 | The LOMBY robot moves from its docking location to the convenience store via public roads. |
STEP 4 | A store staff member loads the ordered item into the LOMBY robot. |
STEP 5 | LOMBY travels from the convenience store to the 1st floor of Building A via public roads. Upon arrival, it automatically switches from remote control to autonomous mode. |
STEP 6 | LOMBY autonomously links with the elevator and moves to the 15th floor (*Note 2). The recipient scans the robot’s QR code with their smartphone and retrieves the package. |
STEP 7 | LOMBY returns to the 1st floor via elevator, automatically switches from autonomous to remote control mode, and navigates back to its docking station to complete the task. |
Note 1: The robot can be operated remotely from anywhere in Japan with an internet connection.
Note 2: During autonomous driving, the remote operator is free to control other robots.
HIROSHIMA SANDBOX