Skip to main content

Ush & Poppy take AVs to Antwerp-Bruges

Vay app offers autonomous mobility solutions in Brussels and Las Vegas
By David Arminas February 24, 2025 Read time: 4 mins
(image: Poppy Mobility)

Ush has partnered with Poppy Mobility, a Belgian car-sharing and rental operator, to introduce remote-driving technology for delivering rental cars around the Port of Antwerp-Bruges.

Both companies are subsidiaries of the Belgian company D’Ieteren. They said they are preparing an initial ‘test phase’ that “marks a significant step towards their shared vision of making car rentals as effortless as ordering a taxi”.

Ush has been pioneering autonomous and remote-controlled vehicle solutions in Belgium. Meanwhile, Poppy offers mobility solutions across Belgian capital Brussels as well as Antwerp and national airports, with a fleet of over 2,000 shared cars and vans.

Poppy users around the Port of Antwerp-Bruges will be able to request a rental vehicle via the Poppy app, which Ush will drive remotely to their location in real time. They can then choose to take the wheel themselves or be driven by a remote driver operating from a teledrive station at Ush’s HQ.

This offering is supported by Vay, a developer of automotive-grade technology for remote-driving. Vay is currently operating a commercial service in Las Vegas. Vay announced at the city's Consumer Electronics Show 2025 that it is expanding its door-to-door remote-driving service to 100 vehicles in Vegas this year, having recently gone past the 6,000 trips milestone.

Through the Vay app, users in Las Vegas can request an electric vehicle to be remotely delivered to them. At the end of the trip, the user exits the car and a remote driver takes over, eliminating the time-consuming search for parking.

Ush has secured an exclusive partnership with Vay to further develop and commercialise its proprietary technology in Belgium. The initial roll-out includes two remote-driven vehicles operating in Port of Antwerp-Bruges, serving Boluda, a provider of global maritime towing services.

Through this partnership, Boluda employees working in remote areas of the port can request a Poppy rental car in real-time. The vehicle will be remotely delivered to them, allowing them to drive to their destination. Once they’re finished, control of the car will be returned to the remote driver, who will navigate it to the next user.

“Bringing remote-driving technology to Belgium requires a careful, phased approach in collaboration with regulators,” explained Max Levandowski, chief executive of Ush. “We chose to start at a manageable scale with two vehicles serving key locations in the port.”

“With the introduction of remote-driving technology in Port of Antwerp-Bruges, the port confirms its role as a testing ground for cutting-edge technologies,” said Jacques Vandermeiren, the port's chief executive. “It has already served as a launch pad for autonomous shipping and autonomous drones, both of which are now scaling rapidly [and] demonstrating how the port accelerates innovation."

“The testing of this remote-driving technology follows the same trajectory, reinforcing the port’s position as a key innovation hub where technologies are tested, validated, and fast-tracked for commercial deployment. The port aims to be a regulatory sandbox where new technologies can prove their reliability and potential,” said Vandermeiren.

“I moved back to Europe from Silicon Valley [in the US] and joined my co-founders to take advantage of our continent’s world leading automotive engineering excellence,” said Thomas von der Ohe, chief executive and founder of Vay. “Remotely-driven vehicles are taking to European roads - for a commercial service - for the first time. With the support of regulators, we hope this will be the first of many exciting, remote drive-enabled projects across Europe.”

The companies said that the next steps for full commercial roll-out will be done in phases. Phase 1, already approved by authorities, includes initial deployment on a defined route on the right bank of the port, with a safety driver in the vehicle monitoring the first rides.

Phase 2, coming in months, will be the expansion to a second route on the left bank of the port. Finally, Phase 3, expected by the end of 2025, will be full-scale deployment across the entire port, without route restrictions and without an onboard safety operator.

In the coming months, more companies around Port of Antwerp-Bruges will be invited to offer the service to their employees. Poppy hopes for a full commercial roll out in the city of Antwerp starting in 2026. In order to achieve this, Ush said it will continue its close collaboration with all relevant authorities to define a solid legal framework for remote-driving.

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.
  • Inland waterways can de-stress city roads
    March 17, 2016
    David Crawford looks at an under-utilised solution for city-centre deliveries. The use of rivers and canals for moving freight is a well-established mode in North Western Europe, where it can take advantage of an intensively developed network. In the Netherlands, 40% of the total volume of goods transported internally goes by water; the figure for Flanders (the neighbouring Dutch-speaking region of Belgium) is 11.5%.
  • Connected Vehicles test vehicle to vehicle applications
    January 19, 2012
    In the US, the ITS Joint Program Office is about to conduct a series of Driver Clinics intended to gauge public reaction to Connected Vehicle safety technologies and applications. Starting in August, the US Department of Transportation (USDOT) will test Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) applications with everyday drivers in what it describes as 'normal operational scenarios'. These Driver Clinics are being carried out at six locations across the US and together with the subsequent model deployment beginning in 2012,
  • Meeting the challenges of smartcard fare payment
    July 4, 2012
    David Crawford monitors a growing trend in contactless smartcard ticketing The north east United States has become a hive of activity in the smart fare payment arena. In October 2011, the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) published, as a preliminary to an imminent procurement process, the detailed concept of its New Fare Payment System (NFPS). Based on open payment industry standards, this is designed to be implemented on all MTA bus and subway services operated by New York City Transit (