BURDI Project Presents its Results: A Landmark Step for U-Space Implementation in Belgium and Beyond

Brussels — 23 October 2025 — Today and tomorrow, the BURDI (Belgium-Netherlands U-space Reference Design Implementation) project, a flagship European demonstration under the Connecting Europe Facility and supported by SESAR Joint Undertaking is presenting its results after three years of intensive development and real-world testing. BURDI’s outcomes and lessons learned are being featured at the SESAR Digital Sky Demonstrators Showcase conference, where European innovators are highlighting the next generation of U-space and ATM integration achievements.

BURDI coordinator Simon Devoldere of skeyes presents the results of the project at the joint final dissemination event at EUROCONTROL, Brussels.
BURDI coordinator Simon Devoldere, skeyes

Launched in November 2022, the BURDI project set out to design, test, validate and demonstrate a scalable, interoperable, safe, and socially acceptable U-space ecosystem over Belgian airspace (notably over Antwerp, Brussels, and Liège) with a cross-border orientation towards the Netherlands. The initiative brings together 18 partners and four affiliated entities from across the aviation, drone technology, infrastructure, and regulatory sectors.

Over the life of the project, BURDI achieved significant milestones. Amongst other things, the project partners:

  • Developed the first cross-border U-space reference design between Belgium and the Netherlands – a pioneering step for European interoperability
  • Developed a U-space Concept of Operations (ConOps) aligned with SESAR and CINEA requirements
  • Conducted airspace risk assessments, stakeholder coordination mechanisms, and multilevel governance frameworks
  • Executed demonstration flights, especially BVLOS (Beyond Visual Line of Sight) drone operations in the Port of Antwerp / Antwerp Harbour geozone, integrating drone operations into complex and real-world environments
  • Enabled a medical logistics trial: BVLOS drone flights between hospital sites in the Kempen region, reducing ground transport times from ~30 minutes to under 13 minutes
  • Contributed to weather information services for U-space, advancing regulatory feedback and future improvements to U-space service design
  • Engaged the drone community and ecosystem stakeholders, including surveys to assess U-space cost modelling and market uptake, to advance social acceptance.

With the project’s work coming to an end at the end of the year, the BURDI consortium will hand over its findings, validated methodologies, operational lessons and recommendations to European regulators, national aviation authorities, and the wider U-space community. The ambition is for BURDI’s results to act as a reference design for future U-space deployments across Europe.

Although the formal project is ending, the legacy of BURDI continues:

  • The ConOps, reference scenarios, risk assessment frameworks and coordination mechanisms developed under BURDI will be published and made available to the broader community.
  • Participating partners and national authorities will continue to evolve U-space implementation, scaling lessons learned toward operational adoption.
  • The data, use-case results, and feedback will inform upcoming regulatory updates and standardisation processes in the U-space/UTM domain.

About the BURDI project

The Belgium/Netherlands U-space Reference Design Implementation (BURDI) project supports the safe and sustainable integration of multiple drone operations, including BVLOS, within shared airspace alongside traditional manned aviation. It has received funding from the SESAR 3 Joint Undertaking (S3JU) under grant agreement no. GA – 101079693 – 21-EU-TG-BURDI. The S3JU receives support from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme and the S3JU members other than the Union. Find more information on www.burdi.eu.

About Alliance for New Mobility Europe

The Alliance for New Mobility Europe (AME) is a leading European association dedicated to advancing a large-scale market for the unmanned vehicle industry. AME brings together a diverse membership, from start-ups and scale-ups to established companies and universities, spanning across Europe and offering a comprehensive view of the unmanned mobility ecosystem. The association serves as a trusted resource for policymakers, regulators, industry and other relevant actors. AME has been a proud consortium partner of the BURDI project, leading the communication, dissemination, and exploitation work package. AME members Unifly and Unisphere are also consortium partners.

Contact

Simon Devoldere
BURDI Coordinator
skeyes
sde@skeyes.be

Anita Schneider
Alliance for New Mobility Europe
anita.schneider@mobilityalliance.eu
+32 451 03 37 89

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