These pizza-making robots can have a hot pie at your door in 4 minutes
These pizza-making robots can have a hot pie at your door
in 4 minutes
By Maura Judkis June 28 at 12:30 PM
A great pizza dough flipper probably can’t turn out one
perfectly shaped pizza dough every nine seconds, but one California company’s
robotic pizza dough press can make a great pie at that whiplash-inducing rate.
Silicon Valley start-up Zume Pizza has nearly fully automated the process of
making fresh, made-to-order pizza — and it’s streamlined the delivery process,
too. If you live in Mountain View, Calif., and you order a pizza, it could be
at your door as quickly as four minutes later.
While other pizzas — especially the bake-at-home kind you
buy at the grocery store — are also made by machine, Zume is noteworthy because
it makes fresh, customizable delivery pizza with high-quality ingredients,
which it considers to be artisanal even though it is not made by hand. Zume
co-founder Julia Collins already has Pepe and Giorgio, two robots, squirting
pizza sauce onto the dough, and Marta, another robot, spreading the sauce.
Bruno, a robotic arm, lifts the pizza into the oven. The dough is still made by
humans. But now that Zume has the doughbot, as they’re calling it, it means
that the only part of the pizza assembly process that requires a human touch is
the toppings.
“Human beings are great at that step,” Collins said.
“When we think of the end-of-arm tools that we would need to pick up a cherry
tomato and then a nugget of sausage, it’s hard to find tools that manage that
much variety. We don’t have any intention of limiting variety to serve the
robots.”
With this technological upgrade, the company can now make
and deliver 372 pizzas an hour. That efficiency comes from dramatically
reimagining the way pizza can be delivered. Zume is the first company to reduce
“dwell time” — a.k.a the 20 minutes your piping-hot pizza spends sliding around
in the back of a Honda Accord. They have custom delivery trucks that can bake
en route, so pizza will arrive fresh out of the oven. Through analyzing their
customer data and using artificial intelligence, they’re also able to predict
which pizzas will be popular in certain neighborhoods during certain times, so
the truck can be preloaded and ready to serve.
“We’ve already guessed that you’ve wanted asparagus and
ricotta pizza at 12:30,” Collins said.
Zume is now adding scooters to its delivery fleet, which
will use the baking trucks as a hub. If someone wants a pizza that isn’t in the
truck’s preloaded orders, it can take up to 45 minutes from when the order is
placed to when the pizza arrives at your door. But if you order a basic
pepperoni pizza and the truck is already circling your neighborhood, it could
be at your door as quickly as four minutes later.
The food delivery industry is growing rapidly: Consulting
firm McKinsey expects that the market for new delivery will reach more than 20
billion euros — $22.7 billion — by 2025. Other tech companies are working on
transforming delivery, as well: Starship Technologies, an Estonian company, is
using D.C. sidewalks for its robot delivery pilot program. The rolling robots —
they’re almost cute, like WALL-E — deliver food for Postmates, and eventually,
the company hopes they will be able to make other courier deliveries for $1 a
trip.
For now, Zume Pizza is only available in Silicon Valley.
Collins says the company will expand up to Menlo Park, and down to San Jose,
before moving to other cities. They also are considering eventually leasing
space in their trucks to other food companies that also want to bake en route.
Susan Alban, a former general manager of UberEats, has joined the company to
work on its expansion.
“[We] wanted to be sure that the delivery experience was
the best it could be,” Collins said. “It’s different when you’re building just
an app. When you’re putting food in people’s mouths … you better take some time
and get it right.”
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