Real laboratories are testing grounds for innovation and government regulation in Germany. Droniq and DFS won their award for the U-Space Real Laboratory Hamburg. As part of this real laboratory, it was demonstrated for the first time how a U-Space can function in practice.
The Real Laboratory Hamburg is one of the 10 winners of this year's innovation prize for such real laboratories. This is the second time that this award has been held. The aim of the innovation award is to make real laboratories visible, to honour innovative ideas and to encourage new real laboratories.
More than 100 projects throughout Germany
A high-calibre jury of experts chaired by Dr Anna Christmann, Member of the German Bundestag and the Federal Government's Coordinator for German Aerospace Policy, selected the prize-winning projects in the competition. Throughout Germany, more than 100 start-ups, companies, associations and research institutions submitted their projects for this national award.
In their real laboratory, set up with funding from the German Federal Ministry for Digital and Transport (BMDV), Droniq and DFS demonstrated for the first time how the European Union's U-Space concept can work in practice. From 2023, these U-Spaces, in essences airspaces for drones, can be set up in Europe. These areas will allow drones to be safely and efficiently integrated into airspace, including the interplay with manned aircraft. This will enable the regular use of drones, for example in logistics, agriculture or in the medical sector.
The findings of the real laboratory were handed over to the Ministry by Droniq and DFS as recommendations for action. The BMDV is using these to develop a concept for the nationwide establishment of U-Space areas.
"An important part of future air traffic"
"At Droniq, it is our aspiration not only to accompany the future of the drone market, but to actively shape it and advance the market through new approaches," said Droniq CEO Jan-Eric Putze. "With the real laboratory, we have shown what one of the next development steps for the drone market looks like. We are delighted to have been entrusted with the implementation of this project on behalf of unmanned aviation."
"Unmanned aviation is an important part of future air traffic," added Arndt Schoenemann, CEO of DFS. "To integrate unmanned aviation safely into existing air traffic, we have combined our experience from manned aviation with innovative technological solutions within the framework of the real laboratory. Alongside drones, we will also experience important developments in other fields over the next few years as aviation is becoming increasingly autonomous. We are proud to be at the forefront here."