Skip to main content

Plans for eVTOL service around California's Bay Area

Archer plans air mobility network to cut journey times in environs of San Francisco
By David Arminas July 3, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Artist's impression of Archer’s anticipated Bay Area electric vertical take-off and landing aircraft operations in Oyster Point, San Francisco (image: Archer Aviation | Kilroy)

Aircraft manufacturer Archer says it hopes to connect the San Francisco region with electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) aircraft – reducing a two-hour drive with a 20-minute flight.

Five areas - South San Francisco, Napa, San Jose, Oakland and Livermore - will have “unprecedented connectivity” to communities around the region, allowing people to replace one-to-two-hour drives to cities around the bay with flights that take around 10-20 minutes (see map below).

To anchor the network, Kilroy Realty, a landlord and developer, recently signed an agreement with Archer to make Kilroy’s Oyster Point – a 50-acre waterfront campus in South San Francisco – the hub of Archer’s planned San Francisco Bay Area network.

The companies will investigate the potential for a “vertiport” at the Kilroy Oyster Point development, a mixed-use campus in the heart of the Bay area’s biotech region. Archer would have access to a take-off and landing site for its aircraft to connect with planned Archer vertiport locations at Napa, San Jose, Oakland and Livermore, where Archer has relationships with other infrastructure and operations partners.

The agreement with Kilroy will help create the infrastructure to support Archer’s air mobility service and laying the foundation for a robust network of landing sites throughout the Bay area, said Bryan Bernhard, Archer’s chief infrastructure officer.

Kilroy would become the first developer in the US to bring eVTOL operations to its tenants and the employees. The agreement with Kilroy supports the development of an Archer “Sea Portal'' - a waterfront mobility hub providing electric ferry service and eVTOL operations for all companies at Kilroy Oyster Point.

The Sea Portal will also be powered by renewable energy, explained Angela Aman, Kilroy's chief executive officer: "We believe that this innovative and sustainable service has the potential to provide exceptional convenience and optionality to current and future tenants at the project, further differentiating Kilroy Oyster Point within the South San Francisco market."

An initial launch location at Kilroy Oyster Point could open as early as the end of 2025 and the two companies are exploring potential expansion into other locations within Kilroy’s portfolio.

Archer’s Midnight is a piloted, four-passenger aircraft designed to perform rapid back-to-back flights with minimal charge time between flights. Archer, based in Santa Clara, California, said its goal is to “unlock the skies” by transforming urban travel. 

The strategy is to replace 60–90-minute commutes by car with estimated 10–20-minute electric air taxi flights that are safe, sustainable, low noise and cost-competitive with ground transportation.

Related Content

  • March 14, 2023
    Watch your step: the sidewalk robots are here
    The way we order and pay for goods has changed radically – but what about how those goods are delivered? Gordon Feller looks at how sidewalk robots might reshape the urban landscape
  • May 27, 2016
    ITS America 2016 San Jose tours programme shows the present and future of ITS
    The major theme of Thursday, June 16, at ITS America 2016 San Jose will be a series of tours that exemplify intelligent transportation at work today and with an eye to the future. The Interstate 80 Integrated Corridor Mobility Project Tour will take in one of the most complex integrated Active Traffic Management systems in the country. This tour includes a stop at the Caltrans TMC in Oakland for an overview of system operations
  • November 10, 2023
    Mott MacDonald and UrbanV plan to fly high with AAM projects
    Companies set to develop vertiports for 'fast, efficient, safe and clean' transport option
  • March 23, 2015
    I-80 Smart Corridor sets the ITS standard for California's Bay Area
    Colin Sowman looks at California’s ‘smartest’ road which will open this spring to counter congestion and accidents on one of the Bay Area’s busiest interstates. Interstate 80 (I-80) is one of the busiest roads in the San Francisco Bay area with up to 270,000 vehicles using the corridor every day. The section between the Carquinez Bridge in Crockett and the Bay Bridge not only suffers congestion during the working week but also at weekends. Traditional remedies such as building additional lanes (there are al