AeroVect, founded in Silicon Valley in 2020, develops autonomous driving technology for ground support equipment (GSE) used in airside airport operations. Its core product, AeroVect Driver™, is trained on a proprietary airport driving dataset that the company describes as the largest of its kind, covering major airports across North America. The system integrates 3D LiDAR sensors, sensor fusion, and real-time data feeds to deliver 360° situational awareness, and is designed to operate reliably in all conditions - day or night, including inclement weather.
The technology is deployed in production at some of the world's busiest airports, including Atlanta, where it automates critical airside functions such as baggage and cargo logistics. AeroVect reports tens of thousands of successful aircraft crossings under its operational safety record. Its turnkey automation solutions are OEM-agnostic, meaning they can retrofit existing GSE fleets rather than requiring new equipment procurement. Customers and partners include Delta Air Lines, dnata, and GAT.
The technical stack spans autonomous driving for ground vehicles, computer vision and perception, sensor fusion, and the collection and curation of large-scale airport driving datasets. The company is venture-capital backed, with investors described as having expertise in autonomous driving and aviation, though no funding stage or amounts have been disclosed.