Operations & Scale

How Cloud Software Is Simplifying Airport Operations and Replacing Legacy Systems

As airports grow more complex, the real innovation lies in making their systems simpler, faster, and easier to act on

Updated

March 24, 2026 5:55 PM

An airplane parked at Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat Airport. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

Airports are some of the most complex systems in the world. Every day, they manage thousands of flights, passengers, crew schedules, gates and ground operations—all moving at the same time. But much of this still runs on older software that doesn’t connect well, making simple decisions harder than they need to be.

This is the gap companies like AirportLabs are trying to address. Instead of relying on multiple disconnected systems, their approach brings airport operations into one cloud-based platform. The goal is straightforward: take scattered data and turn it into something teams can actually use in real time.

In practice, this means combining core systems like flight databases, resource management and display systems into a single interface. When everything is connected, airport staff can respond faster—whether it’s adjusting gate assignments, managing delays, or coordinating ground crews. Rather than reacting late, decisions can be made as situations unfold.

Another shift is how this technology is built. Traditional airport systems often require heavy on-site infrastructure and long deployment timelines. In contrast, cloud-based platforms remove much of that complexity. Updates are faster, systems are easier to scale and teams spend less time maintaining servers and more time improving operations.

What stands out is the speed of adoption. Instead of multi-year rollouts, newer systems can be implemented in weeks, allowing airports to see improvements much sooner.

At a broader level, this reflects a familiar pattern seen across industries. As operations become more data-heavy, the advantage shifts to those who can simplify complexity. In aviation, that doesn’t just mean better technology—it means making the entire system easier to run.

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Strategy & Leadership

Why TIER IV Is Backing a Taiwan Startup to Push Autonomous Driving Forward

Inside a partnership showing how open-source platforms and startups are scaling autonomous driving beyond the lab.

Updated

January 8, 2026 6:30 PM

A Robotaxi prototype developed by TIER IV. PHOTO: TIER IV

Autonomous driving is often discussed in terms of futuristic cars and distant timelines. This investment is about something more immediate. Japan-based TIER IV has invested in Turing Drive, a Taiwan startup that builds autonomous driving systems designed for controlled, everyday environments such as factories, ports, airports and industrial campuses. The investment establishes a capital and business alliance between the two companies, with a shared focus on developing autonomous driving technology and expanding operations across Asia.

Rather than targeting open roads and city traffic, Turing Drive’s work centres on places where vehicles follow fixed routes and move at low speeds. These include logistics hubs, manufacturing facilities and commercial sites where automation is already part of daily operations. According to the release, Turing Drive has deployments across Taiwan, Japan and other regions and works closely with vehicle manufacturers to integrate autonomous systems into special-purpose vehicles.

The investment also connects Turing Drive more closely with Autoware, an open-source autonomous driving software ecosystem supported by TIER IV. Turing Drive joined the Autoware Foundation in September 2024 and develops its systems using this shared software framework. TIER IV’s own Pilot.Auto platform, which is built around Autoware, is used across applications such as factory transport, public transit, freight movement and autonomous mobility services.

Through the alliance, TIER IV plans to work with Turing Drive to further develop autonomous driving systems for these controlled environments, while strengthening its presence in Taiwan and the broader Asia-Pacific region. The collaboration brings together software development and on-the-ground deployment experience within markets where autonomous driving is already being tested in real operational settings.

“This partnership with Turing Drive represents a significant step forward in accelerating the deployment of autonomous driving across Asia”, said TIER IV CEO Shinpei Kato. “At TIER IV, our mission has always been to make autonomous driving accessible to all. By collaborating with Turing Drive, which has demonstrated remarkable achievements in real-world deployments in Taiwan, we aim to deliver autonomous driving that enables a safer, more sustainable and more inclusive society”.  

“We are thrilled to establish this strategic alliance with TIER IV, a global leader in open-source autonomous driving”, said Weilung Chen, chairman of Turing Drive. “In Taiwan, autonomous driving deployment is gaining significant momentum, particularly across logistics hubs, ports, airports and industrial campuses. By combining our field expertise with TIER IV's world-class Pilot.Auto platform, we aim to accelerate the development of practical, commercially viable mobility services powered by autonomous driving”. Overall, the investment highlights how autonomous driving in Asia is being shaped by operational needs and gradual integration, rather than headline-grabbing demonstrations.