News

Lowe’s Deploying 400-Pound Robots to Patrol Its Parking Lots

A major retailer is hoping the ultimate solution to preventing crime at its stores is hefty and egg-shaped.

Lowe’s (Mooresville, NC) is enlisting 400-pound security robots from a company called Knightscope to patrol parking lots at select stores, The Philadelphia Inquirer reports.

The robot rollout is a test the hardware retailer began in February. Stores in Pennyslvania, Washington state, California, North Carolina and Washington, D.C., are included in the pilot program.

Knightscope’s K5 model is equipped with 16 microphones, four wide-angle cameras and a range of “people detection” sensors that detect anomalies, which are then reported to Lowe’s central monitoring team, the article says.

Stacy Stephens, EVP and Chief Client Officer at Knightscope, told the outlet that while the K5 can detect a human being, it doesn’t have facial recognition. “They can see a person, but not who it is,” he said.

Stephens added that the autonomous robots are “looking for known threats, people to whom you’ve issued criminal trespass warnings, terminated employees or domestic abusers.”

“Safety is more than a priority at Lowe’s — it’s a core value for our company. To continue to drive safety in our stores, select locations are receiving a new security robot as part of a pilot project,” Scott Draher, VP of Asset Protection and Safety at Lowe’s, told Business Insider. “This pilot is part of Lowe’s continuing efforts to utilize new and innovative technologies to keep our associates and customers safe.”

Read more at The Philadelphia Inquirer.

VMSD Staff

Drawing on more than 125 years of history serving the retail design market, VMSD magazine provides retail professionals with the most up-to-date, innovative retail design ideas and industry news through its industry-leading magazine, website, social media channels and bulletins.

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