Transportation

Zoox to ramp up production of up to 100 newly upgraded robotaxis a week

Zoox Robotaxi
Zoox refreshed its robotaxi and said it's prepared to produce up to 100 vehicles a week. Zoox
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Amazon's Zoox is getting ready to ramp up vehicle production with a newly refreshed robotaxi design as the company seeks to expand its service areas in the US.

Zoox unveiled several tweaks to its purpose-built robotaxi on Wednesday, including changes to the interior color, more ergonomic seats, larger cupholders, a more vivid touchscreen, and two-way audio capabilities designed to improve communication with riders and first responders.

Zoox said it can produce up to 100 of the newly updated robotaxis a week to support its expansion plans for this year, pending regulatory approval.

A spokesperson for Zoox said the regulatory approval refers to a pending petition with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The petition seeks a temporary exemption from some federal safety standards that assume a vehicle has a human driver and traditional driving controls.

The core robotaxi design remains unchanged. Zoox said the updates are designed to make rides feel calmer and more intuitive as it prepares to put more vehicles on the road.

The lighter interior color scheme is meant to reduce "visual distractions" and make it easier for riders to spot items left behind, such as phones or keys, Zoox said.

interior of Zoox
Zoox updated the interior to include a lighter color scheme, more ergonomic seats, and other adjustments.  Zoox

"These robotaxis will join the fleet across our markets and become available to riders later this year as they come off the production line," Zoox said.

The company said in its announcement that the updated vehicle is its production-intent robotaxi and will be built at its Hayward, California, factory.

Business Insider previously reported that Zoox's 220,000-square-foot factory can produce more than 10,000 vehicles a year.

A Zoox spokesperson told Business Insider that the company does not need to build 10,000 robotaxis at the moment.

"We are ramping production in a deliberate, phased manner to safely meet the strong consumer demand and regulatory requirements," the spokesperson said.

Zoox provides free robotaxi rides to the public in limited parts of Las Vegas and San Francisco as the company continues to collect rider feedback.

The company said that it plans to expand to Austin and Miami later this year.

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Lloyd Lee
Lloyd Lee
Lloyd Lee is a reporter based in San Francisco, CA.His coverage includes autonomous driving, EVs, and the latest trends in Silicon Valley and Big Tech.Previously, he was a reporter for Almanac News and Palo Alto Weekly, covering housing, business, and Silicon Valley.Reach Lloyd at lloydlee@businessinsider.com or on Signal at lloydlee.07.Relevant and popular stories:Rivian CEO shrugs off Trump's rollback of EV incentivesI rode a Waymo with my 6-year-old twins. The experience was fun but the use cases feel limited.Friends and former colleagues recall OpenAI whistleblower as 'one of the true geniuses'Rivian's head of software says the company is not trying to be like Tesla on automationAn ex-Tesla owner shares why his experience with a Rivian R1T during Hurricane Helene made him a convertA submarine expert tried to dissuade OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush from taking customers in the Titan submersible, emails show