New York is one of these places in the world where you can get a dollar slice at 2am. Or have a burger delivered in less than 30 minutes, but you will spend two hours crawling under the highway to catch a flight.
Archer Aviation wants to change it with Air taxis who envisions flying passengers from Manhattan to nearby airports within 15 minutes.
The start on Thursday presented the proposed airline taxi network for New York in collaboration with United Airlines, which would allow passengers to stick to an ARCHER walk on their traditional airline tickets.
“We start with nine key hubs,” Adam Goldstein, co -founder and CEO of Archer, told me during an interview with Casa Cipriani, a club only for members at the bottom of Manhattan, watching helicopters in the center of Skyport.
“So you have the three major international airports – JFK, Laguardia, Newark,” Goldstein continued. ‘You have the three great helicopters, [including] The center of Skyport, and then the helicopters of the East and the west side. And then the three big peripherals – Teterboro, Westchester and Long Island Republic. ”
Archer shared a similar vision of air taxi networks in cities such as Los Angeles. The company is still waiting for the federal aviation administration to approve its five-seat Evtol aircraft (electric vertical take-off and landing vehicle) named midnight-in the case of starting to try out the routes it has planned.
Archer also has to take a pilot on one of his aircraft to try it. So far, the company has only thrown the plane autonomously without people inside. Its competitors, Joby Aviation and Beta Technologies, have both flights.
Goldstein seemed optimistic that Archer would achieve the necessary certifications in 2026, telling TechCrunch that he would have an update on pilot flights at the next call of his profits. The company has been released in 2021 through a merger of special purpose acquisition and has raised $ 3.36 billion to date, per Pitchbook, through public and private money.
In the meantime, Archer sets the foundations, creating infrastructure and functions. Therefore, corporate relationships are necessary.
In New York, United will help with aircraft storage, maintenance, charging adjustment and creating vertiports at airports. Archer also worked with the steady-base operators managed by Manhattan’s Helipads-Air Air Force, Signature and Modern Air Force-which, as Goldstein says, will give the passengers access to Archer and help create the charging infrastructure.
“What makes New York is very exciting is the city that transmits the helicopter to the world, outside Sao Paulo,” said Nikhil Goel, a head of Archer. “You don’t have to drain too hard to imagine that any of these helicopters flying to Hudson simply replacing them with one of our aircraft. Routes are already there. Air traffic already knows how to work with them.
Archer’s plan is to start young, bringing up to five aircraft to New York – and other cities – to exercise the operation of the routes before the start. Ten to 20 years below the line, the goal is to throw hundreds of aircraft into various cities. Last month, Archer began manufacturing at midnight in its production in Georgia that it was built in collaboration with Strategic Investor Stelantis. It plans to build 650 aircraft annually by 2030.
In addition to New York and LA, Archer also plans to start in San Francisco and Miami, but the timetable still depends on the certification of FAA and the company has not chosen its first US city.
The company also plans to launch an air taxi service in Abu Dhabi, where the regulations are less strict, later this year. Goldstein said the proposed New York network gives people a vision they can understand.
‘We hope people will see [Abu Dhabi] And say, “Oh, it’s real. How will New York work? ”
