Business News

Aurrigo International celebrates 30th birthday with major recruitment drive

Published by
Peter Davison

Aurrigo International, one of the UK’s leading transport technology specialists, is celebrating its 30th year in business after securing its latest Government-backed project and announcing plans to create several autonomous technology jobs in the UK.

Coventry-based Aurrigo which designs, engineers, manufactures and supplies OEM products and autonomous vehicles, has been awarded a £0.7million grant through Innovate UK and the Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles Commercialising Connected and Automated Mobility competition.

This will be used to trial three of its self-driving zero emission Auto-Shuttles on roads in the North East between Sunderland Interchange, Royal Hospital, and the University of Sunderland City Campus.

It marks the latest stage in the development of the firm after it listed on the Alternative Investment Market in what was one of the few deals completed in 2022.

Originally called RDM Group, the company was set-up by David and Graham Keene after the former took voluntary redundancy from Rover Cars in 1993.

The brothers spent the first year managing the business from a home office, manufacturing automotive electrical products completing the paperwork and delivering them to a select, but high-profile batch of customers, before moving into a small unit where the company really started to take shape.

“A lot has happened over the last three decades and we are very proud that we still call Coventry ‘home’, and we still employ some of the outstanding staff that helped us in the early days,” explained David.

“Initially, we were very much focused on automotive wiring harnesses and exploring the world of telematics, which led to our tracking technology being used in the 2012 Olympic Games in London – a sign of how we were about to have a major say on the future of transport.

“In 2015, the UK Automotive Council - on which I attended right from the inauguration 15 years ago - announced the first major investment into Connected and Automated Vehicles and we saw this as the ideal opportunity to develop our first driverless vehicles in the form of two-seater pods.

“We built the drive-by-wire platform for the vehicles and tried to partner with an automated driving software stack provider, but this was not practical, so in 2018 we made the decision to bring everything in house to develop the software ourselves and Aurrigo was born.”

The last five years have seen Aurrigo International plc become one of the leading companies in the development of autonomous vehicles for first and last mile transport solutions and the world of aviation baggage movement.

Its listing on AIM raised £8 million to fund strategic expansion plans that has seen the workforce increase to 75 across its HQ in the UK and international offices in Australia, Canada, the US and Singapore, with a current recruitment drive set to attract more electronic and software engineers, manufacturing specialists and business development experts.

The decision to IPO on the London Stock Exchange is already paying off with Changi Airport Group (Singapore) Pte Ltd recently entering into a formal partnering agreement for the continued joint development and testing of the company's autonomous vehicles, Auto-Dolly, Auto-DollyTug and its airport simulation software platform Auto-Sim.

“The first six months of being on AIM have been very pleasing, with share price and market capitalisation increasing steadily. Our listing has given us a huge amount of credibility and will no doubt help us win contracts and expand internationally,” said David.

“30 years is a tremendous achievement and one we are marking with our staff, who have, and always will be, our biggest asset. It’s great that we still have people working here that have been with us from the early days.”

Peter Davison

Peter Davison is deputy editor of The Business Magazine. He has spent his life in journalism – doing work experience in newsrooms in and around Bristol while still at school, and landing his first job on a local newspaper aged 19. By 28 he was the youngest newspaper editor in the country. An early advocate of online news, he spent the first years of the 2000s telling his bosses that the internet posed both the biggest opportunity and greatest threat to the newspaper industry and the art of journalism. He was right on both counts. Since 2006 he has enjoyed a career as a freelance journalist. He lives in rural Wiltshire with one wife, two children, and three cats.

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