Skip to main content

Magway plots retail delivery revolution

May 8, 2020 Read time: 3 mins

While most of the debate around hyperloop focuses on the potential for passenger traffic, technology firms are also exercised about how to respond to the fast-changing nature of the retail sector.

One such company is the UK-based start-up Magway, co-founded in 2017 by former South African mining engineer Rupert Cruise and retail and technology consultant Phill Davies.

In short, Magway moves goods from warehouses to distribution centres – or to new residential or commercial hubs - through small, high-density polyethylene pipes in pods driven by linear synchronous motors.

The thinking is simple – that the growth in online retail is not going to slow any time soon. Magway plans to offer an e-commerce delivery system that improves air quality and congestion by removing significant numbers of parcels and the delivery vans that carry them from highways and urban areas.

The Magway system also claims strong green credentials. It produces zero emissions and, say the founders, can be run entirely off renewable electricity.

Although the basic thinking is similar to many hyperloop projects, Magway is fundamentally different – and cheaper to develop – as it does not operate at low pressure to create very high speeds. There is little need for the average Amazon delivery to travel at 1,000km/h.

Core competence

Part-funded by the government agency Innovate UK, and through equity crowdfunding, the developers argue that Magway is inherently safer, independent of weather conditions and more secure than road transport, and would be capable of fulfilling over 90% of online orders.

“Our core competence is linear motors and all of the software systems that go around them,” Cruise told ITS International.

Magway believes pipes could follow motorway routes
Magway believes pipes could follow motorway routes

“We are addressing the explosive growth in online retail and warehousing.  Our first focus is from the warehouse to the distribution centre. We calculate there could be a 50-70% cost saving over traditional transport solutions, plus the related environmental benefits in terms of reduced emissions and congestion. But we are also talking to developers about whether it would be possible to lay a Magway connection right into major new developments, perhaps even into the base of tower blocks.”

Based in an old Osram light factory in Wembley, north-west London, Cruise and his colleagues are talking to a number of organisations in the hope of being given a chance to show what Magway can do.

Possible clients are airports and ports, online retailers and warehouse owners.

They also think there will be interest from logistics companies who, according to Cruise, “recognise that they cannot grow by putting more and more vehicles on the road”.

Cruise believes there is an opportunity to run Magway pipes along motorway hard shoulders. By taking vehicles off the road, he says the company can help Highways England solve its biggest challenges - air quality, congestion, road maintenance and safety.

Although a very young company, Magway’s partners already include the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory, online retailer Ocado and the Old Oak and Park Royal Development Corporation in west London.

Cruise added: “Hyperloop is probably five to 10 years away from being used for passengers, but by focusing on freight coming out of automated warehouses, we could be up running much quicker.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Here: AI has place in ‘privacy by design’
    June 23, 2020
    Artificial intelligence may improve traffic in cities and keep location data private, but Here Technologies shows that it only takes four points of anonymous data to predict your identity.
  • Personal Rapid Transit, clear benefits for European cities
    July 26, 2012
    David Crawford watches the race to get the world's first PRT system up and running. To paraphrase the old joke about buses bunching, you seem to have to wait several decades for a Personal Rapid Transit (PRT) system, and then half a dozen come along together. Currently, in fact, there are well over that number of schemes for driverless electric passenger-carrying 'pod' networks at various stages of planning, design and implementation around the world. Locations range from a straight-off-the-drawing board ne
  • Elon Musk’s underground movement
    August 3, 2020
    The Boring Company is building tunnels under various US cities – but for what? Kristina Smith delves deep into a project which may (eventually) have real appeal for mass transit providers and transportation agencies
  • A new direction for the future of mobility?
    August 14, 2013
    Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has unveiled his vision of a futuristic Hyperloop transport system this week, proposing to build a solar-powered network of crash-proof capsules that would whisk people from San Francisco to Los Angeles in half an hour. Musk says the Hyperloop is expected to be a closed-tube transport system not unlike the pneumatic delivery systems found in some old buildings, which use a pulse of air to move a capsule and cargo to a designated location. Based on what he has revealed to date,