Photo shows the robot coffee barista at the Wukesong Sports Center, Beijing. (Photo from
Yangcheng Evening News)
Robots just showed what they got at a 2022 Winter Olympics test event for ice hockey. From
making coffee to offering contactless deliveries, they made the games and the preparation work
much easier.
The test event “Experience Beijing” was held between Nov. 7 and 10 at Beijing’s Wukesong
Sports Center, also known as the Cadillac Center, where some of the Olympic ice hockey games
will take place in February the next year. The test event was joined by four men’s ice hockey
teams in Beijing.
During the event, a robot was employed as a coffee barista at the Wukesong Sports Center. It only
took four minutes for the robot to make a cup of pour over coffee.
“The robot has two 6-axis robotic arms and it can make different types of coffee. Its operation
stability enables it to ensure the same quality and taste for every cup of coffee it makes,” said Wei
Qing, technical manager of the Wukesong Sports Center.
To make the test event free from possible COVID-19 risks, the organizers of it divided the
Wukesong Sports Center into two parts – an inner section and an outer section, and the two
sections were isolated from each other. Technical materials, general materials, documents and
personal items needed by the staff in the inner section were transported by logistics robots and
smart delivery and collection cabins, in a contactless manner.
There was also a buffer zone between the two sections, and that was where the logistics robots
worked. Zhang Fan, logistics manager of the Wukesong Sports Center, said that each of the
logistics robots was able to carry 30 to 300 kilograms of cargos, and they could deliver the cargos
within the venue without any contact to the senders and receivers.
“They can go everywhere they want, and automatically sense and avoid obstacles around them.
Besides, these robots charge themselves automatically, and are able to intelligently plan their
routes. In this way, the contacts in the venue are reduced,” Zhang said.
The cargos transported by these robots were mostly materials in urgent demand, while those not-
so-urgent items were handled by smart cabins. The cabins were 214 centimeters in height, 87
centimeters in width, and 50 centimeters in length. They were placed in the buffer zone, too, with
two sides of them facing the inner section and outer section of the venue, respectively.
“Pick-up information is sent to the receivers in the inner section only after the senders outside
place the items in the cabin and close the doors. And that’s why the service is totally contactless,”
Zhang explained.
Services and logistics are important for holding the Olympic Games. The Wukesong Sports Center
has repeatedly run over procedures in over 30 aspects, including game organizing, venue
operation, infrastructure, pandemic control, accommodation and transport, as well as media
management.
“We made schedules and detailed plans for every task during the games,” said Shi Wei, deputy
service director of the Wukesong Sports Center.