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    NOW BOARDING: AUTOMATION

    2 Texas airports employ futuristic robots to help clean up terminals

    John Egan, InnovationMap
    Apr 4, 2022 | 9:30 am
    Breezy One robot
    Six Breezy One robots have landed.
    Facebook/Build with Robots

    Some intriguing little creatures are making airport layovers in one Texas city a little more interesting — not to mention cleaner, which is of utmost importance in these COVID times.

    There are now six robots disinfecting George Bush Intercontinental/Houston Airport and William P. Hobby Airport in Houston. They stand four feet tall, measure 22 inches wide, and weigh about 265 pounds.

    Last year, the Houston Airport System spent close to $1 million for six Breezy One robots made by Albuquerque, New Mexico-based Build With Robots. The robots, each costing $160,000, now help the airports’ human crews keep the two airports sanitized.

    George Bush Intercontinental has four of the robots, and Hobby has two. So far, they're the only airports in Texas to employ the technology.

    “Breezy One is an autonomous disinfecting robot," according to Build With Robots. "It moves on its own and disinfects any route that someone chooses at the push of a button. It disperses a disinfectant fog which reaches all surfaces, penetrates fabrics, and even disinfects the air.”

    The robot disinfects germy surfaces such as tables, chairs, doorknobs, and keyboards. A Breezy One robot can decontaminate more than 150,000 square feet of space in one hour with a patented, environmentally safe disinfectant, purportedly eliminating 99.9999 percent of viruses and bacteria. New Mexico’s Sandia National Laboratories developed the disinfectant.

    Build With Robots, founded in 2017, launched Breezy One in 2020 at the Albuquerque International Sunport. The company developed the technology in conjunction with the City of Albuquerque’s Aviation Department. In January, Build With Robots announced it raised $5 million in funding. That was preceded by a seed round of about $1 million.

    Before the disinfectant-filled robots go about their work, members of the Build With Robots team map the buildings where they’ll operate autonomously. The team members then load the maps into the robots. The robots follow commands given by a facility’s custodial team.

    Traci Rutoski, manager of custodial services at Hobby, says Build With Robots “is providing us with the best tools to keep our passengers, employees, and stakeholders safe.”

    Sam Rea, terminal manager at George Bush Intercontinental, says the Breezy One robots have enabled the airport to step up cleanliness in the COVID-19 era.

    “With the onset of the pandemic, we needed to explore new and innovative solutions so that when people come through the airports, whether for work or travel, they feel safe and secure,” Rhea says in a news release.

    Aside from the Houston Airport System and the Albuquerque airport, customers of Build With Robots include HVAC manufacturer Goodwin’s 4.2-million-square-foot operation at Daikin Texas Technology Park in Waller, Mount Vernon ISD in East Texas, the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, and Albuquerque’s Electric Playhouse amusement center. The robots, which can be purchased or leased, are designed to sanitize airports, arenas, stadiums, school buildings, and other heavily trafficked places.

    ---

    This article originally appeared on our sister site InnovationMap.

    technologyscience
    news/travel

    Goals

    Dallas scores New York Times honor as a top travel destination in 2026

    John Egan
    Jan 7, 2026 | 4:28 pm
    Dallas skyline with reflection
    joe daniel price/Getty Images
    undefined

    The influential New York Times thinks tourists will get a kick out of Dallas in 2026. Big D ranks sixth on the Times’ new list of the 52 top travel destinations for 2026.

    Why Dallas? The Times emphasizes DFW’s status as a host of nine FIFA World Cup matches this year — more matches than any other North American host. Furthermore, Arlington’s AT&T Stadium, which can accommodate about 94,000 fans for a World Cup match, offers more seating than any other 2026 venue.

    “That means, at least in theory, Dallas offers nearly 850,000 chances to catch the competition across five group stage matches, two round-of-32 matches, one round-of-16 match and one semifinal match,” The Times notes.

    Matches will be played from June 14-July 14 at AT&T Stadium.

    If you’re unable to snag a World Cup ticket, The Times recommends visiting the World Cup fan festival at Fair Park, an event that’ll offer live music and retail-time viewing of soccer matches. The fest is expected to draw an estimated 100,000 soccer fans per day.

    Another World Cup alternative pointed out by The Times: Halperin Park. The elevated park, adjacent to the Dallas Zoo, will span I-35E and reconnect a divided Oak Cliff neighborhood. The park’s three-acre first phase, scheduled to open this spring, carries a price tag of $112 million.

    One local event The Times didn’t mention is an exhibition opening June 13, the day before the Cup’s kickoff, at Dallas’ African American Museum. Mandela: The Official Exhibition will celebrate the life and legacy of human rights champion and one-time soccer player Nelson Mandela, the late South African president.

    Dallas-Fort Worth is projected to see a $400 million economic impact from the nine local Cup matches. In all, 16 North American locales are hosting Cup matches this year.

    “There is no greater sporting event in the world than the FIFA World Cup, and there is no greater place than Dallas to host it,” Monica Paul, executive director of the Dallas Sports Commission, said in a 2024 news release. “The matches will bring unprecedented attention to Dallas, attracting hundreds of thousands of fans to our region for the largest and most inclusive World Cup in the tournament’s rich history.”

    Dallas isn’t the only place in the U.S. to be recognized by The New York Times as a top travel destination for 2026:

    • Eighth-ranked Route 66, which marks its 100th anniversary this year. A 178-mile portion of the iconic highway winds through the Texas Panhandle.
    • 16th-ranked Los Angeles, which is hosting eight World Cup matches this summer.
    • 19th-ranked Memphis, Tennessee, where the redesigned Legacy Building at the National Civil Rights Museum will be unveiled this spring. The Legacy Building is the former boardinghouse where Dr. Martin Luther King’s assassin lay in wait across from the Lorraine Motel.
    • Southwest Florida’s 26th-ranked Sanibel and Captiva islands, where many establishments underwent renovations in the wake of hurricanes in 2022 and 2024.
    • Chicago’s 27th-ranked Hyde Park, where the Obama Presidential Center is scheduled to open this year.
    • 30th-ranked Portland, Oregon, where an indoor food market, an expanded art museum, and a new WNBA team are debuting in 2026.
    • Alaska’s 33rd-ranked Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, a pristine wilderness that covers 19.6 million acres, and has no roads, established trails, or cellphone service. Last year, the U.S. Interior Department authorized oil drilling at the refuge.
    • 36th-ranked Medora, North Dakota, where a library dedicated to President Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt, an ardent conservationist, opens this year. The library overlooks Theodore Roosevelt National Park.
    • 40th-ranked Deer Valley, Utah, a ski resort that’s undergoing a major expansion.
    • 42nd-ranked Bentonville, Arkansas, home to the world headquarters of Walmart and an expanding Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, founded by Fort Worth billionaire and Walmart heiress Alice Walton.
    • 50th-ranked Virginia Beach, Virginia, which is hosting the first-ever Super Girl Festival, an all-female sports extravaganza. Another draw is the $350 million Atlantic Park Surf wave pool, which opened in 2025.
    • 51st-ranked Big Sur, California, where a landslide-damaged stretch of picturesque Highway 1 is slated to reopen in March.
    world cupnew york timesrankingstravellists
    news/travel
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