Joby chooses home of the Wright Brothers over Monterey County as site for flying taxi production facility

MARINA – Beating out the city of Marina among others, Dayton, Ohio, was announced on Monday as Joby Aviation’s choice of where it plans to build its aircraft production facility, capable of delivering up to 500 aircraft a year and supporting up to 2,000 jobs.

Joby Aviation has been doing business in Marina for the past five years building and testing its electric vertical take-off and landing vehicles for commercial passenger service, and once considered Marina as one of five possible sites to build a 580,000-square-foot manufacturing facility.

Joby’s selection of Ohio’s Dayton International Airport as the site for its first scaled aircraft production facility followed an extensive competitive site selection process and is contingent upon standard due diligence, state and local approvals of incentives, permitting and other legal and regulatory matters as customarily accompany such investment projects, said the company in a press release.

“We’re building the future of aviation right where it all started, in Dayton, Ohio,” said JoeBen Bevirt, Founder and CEO of Joby in the release. “The Wright Brothers harnessed revolutionary technology of their time to open up the skies, and we intend to do the same – this time, bringing quiet and emissions-free flight that we hope will have an equally profound impact on our world.”

Joby’s production aircraft is designed to transport a pilot and four passengers at speeds of up to 200 mph, with a maximum range of 100 miles and a revolutionary quiet noise profile that is barely audible against the backdrop of cities. The company plans to operate these aircraft as part of aerial ridesharing networks in cities and communities around the world, starting in 2025, building on partnerships it has developed with Delta and Uber.

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Joby’s long-term investor, Toyota, which worked with Joby on the design and successful launch of the company’s Pilot Production Line in Marina, plans to continue to advise Joby as it prepares for scaled production of its commercial passenger air taxi in Ohio.

In June, Joby celebrated a milestone when it rolled out its first aircraft off its pilot manufacturing plant in Marina and announced it had received its Special Certificate of Airworthiness for that aircraft from the Federal Aviation Administration, allowing it to begin flight testing its first production prototype. The day was punctuated by an unmanned flight of the vehicle around the Marina airport.

The aircraft is expected to become the first-ever eVTOL vehicle to be delivered to a customer when

Source:: East Bay – Entertainment

      

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