Autonomous vehicles are already navigating city streets, but the infrastructure required to keep them operational is proving to be a major bottleneck. Aseon Labs, a San Francisco-based startup, emerged from stealth on Wednesday to introduce a new category of infrastructure designed to address this challenge. The company is building a distributed network of modular robotic “reset pods” that enable autonomous vehicles to charge, clean, inspect, recalibrate, and reset themselves without leaving their service zones.
Current fleet operations require vehicles to travel 10–15 miles each way to centralized depots for maintenance, resulting in up to an hour of downtime per cycle plus additional travel time. In some markets, nearly half of total miles driven are empty, much of it tied to servicing logistics. As autonomous fleets expand, this off-road infrastructure is becoming the primary constraint on growth.
“The industry solved the driving problem faster than expected,” said George Kalligeros, co-founder of Aseon Labs. “What it’s running into now is the reality that operating these fleets is far more complex. Vehicles are autonomous on the road, but the moment they need servicing, everything becomes manual again — and that’s where scale breaks.”
Each Aseon reset pod is a fully integrated autonomous servicing unit that fits within a single parking space and requires no permanent construction. It can be delivered via flatbed truck and operational within 24 hours. The pods can be deployed in parking lots, gas stations, and roadside infrastructure, and can integrate with existing underutilized DC fast-charging networks to increase utilization rates for EV infrastructure operators while giving autonomous fleets access to distributed servicing.
Aseon operates these pods as a managed network rather than selling hardware, allowing fleet operators to access infrastructure on a usage basis. The model places infrastructure within roughly one mile of vehicles, bringing servicing up to 15 times closer to the operating zone and eliminating long, unproductive trips. The company estimates its infrastructure can reduce reset costs by approximately 50% and cut downtime by up to 65%, while increasing revenue per vehicle by more than $50,000 annually.
“Autonomous vehicles aren’t failing on the road — they’re failing in the parking lot,” said Dan Keene, co-founder of Aseon Labs. “Every time a vehicle leaves its service area, that’s lost revenue. When you bring servicing into the operating zone, you fundamentally change the economics of the entire system.”
Aseon is creating a new category: autonomous fleet infrastructure. Similar to how EV charging networks and telecom systems became foundational layers for modern cities, Aseon’s distributed service nodes are designed to support continuous, high-density autonomous operations without reliance on centralized facilities.
The company is currently engaged with autonomous vehicle operators and major infrastructure partners, including leading EV charging network providers and commercial real estate stakeholders, and has begun allocating early pilot deployments. Aseon Labs is led by repeat founders George Kalligeros and Dan Keene, who previously built and scaled one of the world’s largest battery-swapping networks for shared micromobility through their company Pushme, which was acquired by TIER. The platform expanded to more than 5,000 locations across 40 cities globally, supporting hundreds of thousands of vehicles, with TIER raising over $600 million from investors including SoftBank, Goldman Sachs, and Ford.
As the autonomous vehicle market enters a period of rapid expansion, the absence of scalable, in-city infrastructure is becoming increasingly visible. Without it, fleet utilization declines, costs rise, and growth slows. Aseon’s vision is to deploy thousands of reset pods across major urban environments, forming a dense, distributed infrastructure network embedded directly into the fabric of cities. In that future, autonomous vehicles no longer pause for operations — they remain in motion, supported by infrastructure that is always present, always nearby, and largely invisible.
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