THE ENTRY PROTOCOL

Buildings need an interface.

Every delivery needs two things: programmatic entrance access and clear final-100‑ft navigation. Today, neither is solved.

Humans improvise. What would robots do?

Apartment deliveries take 3x longer than other deliveries. Every building is turning into a small logistics hub — and the interface between the curb and the door is the next thing to get built.

phase 01 · parking

Hardware in every building.
Software in every carrier.
One Entry.

001 · hardware onentry/edge

Access

Retrofit hardware installed inside the building. Opens the right door for verified couriers — no buzzer, no lockbox, no shared code.

002 · software onentry/sdk

SDK

Embedded in driver apps. Returns the route, the rules of the building, and a one-time unlock token bound to this trip.

003 · operator onentry/console

Dashboard

For the property. A live drop log, photo proof on every visit, and a floor-plan zone editor for parking, doors, and drop spots.

The volume
is here.

Apartments are becoming high-traffic logistics hubs.

us · parcels · 2024
0billion
U.S. parcels shipped in 2024. 35% terminate in multifamily residentials — and that's just packages. Add food, groceries, services, and robots.
src · pitney_bowes · psi
us · apartments · 2026
0million
U.S. apartment units — and 19% more needed by 2035. Buildings designed for tenants, not for the delivery economy that now serves them.
src · nmhc_naa · 2035
autonomy · cumulative
0million
Autonomous deliveries by Starship. None can enter a building or navigate to a unit. Robots stop at the curb — we bridge curb to door.
src · starship_tech
The same infrastructure — for any service that needs to enter, human or robot.
coming soon

on entry, one entry.