Not Just a Sporting Event, but Also a Technological Test: Insights into the World's First Human-Robot Co-Run Marathon
Not Just a Sporting Event, but Also a Technological Test: Insights into the World's First Human-Robot Co-Run Marathon
Kamis, 10 April 2025 | 08:52
The humanoid robot "Tiangong" made its debut at the Beijing E-Town Half-Marathon in November 2024.
BEIJING, CHINA -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 9 April 2025 - A scene even science fiction has yet to depict—humans
and humanoid robots running side by side in a half-marathon — will
become reality on April 13 in Beijing E-Town. Every spring, marathons
sprout across China like bamboo shoots after rain. In Beijing, the
world's only "Dual Olympic City" and a global hub for science and
innovation, the 2025 Beijing E-Town Half-Marathon and Humanoid Robot
Half-Marathon, scheduled for April 13, will pioneer a "sports +
technology" format. For the first time, humanoid robots will register
alongside human runners, start simultaneously, and share the
21.0975-kilometer course in an unprecedented fusion of innovation.
Li Quan, Member of the Party Working Committee and Deputy Director of
the Administrative Committee of Beijing E-Town, revealed that the event
has already attracted over 30,000 human applicants. On the robotics
front, global humanoid robot companies, research institutes, robotics
clubs, universities, and other innovators have shown immense enthusiasm,
with registration numbers soaring.
Notably, to ensure safety, physical barriers will separate human and
robot runners, with distinct race rules and completion time standards.
Yet this groundbreaking human-robot collaboration undeniably signals a
bold leap for "technology stepping into reality."
During a visit to training facilities, reporters observed teams racing
against time to upgrade robotic components and intelligence levels,
tackling technical challenges to enhance mobility. Some competing robots
now reach a top speed of 12 km/h. To mitigate the physical strain of
road running, some models have added shock-absorbing mechanisms, while
others wear customized running shoes.
Liang Liang, Deputy Director of the Beijing E-Town Administrative
Committee, explained that as the event is a global first with no prior
experience or data to reference, both logistics and participants face
significant hurdles. To support the robots, organizers have deployed
dedicated support vehicles and robotic aid stations. Additionally, they
are working closely with each team to refine technology, troubleshoot
functions, and achieve developmental goals through pre-race
collaboration.
At the 2024 Paris Olympics, artificial intelligence revolutionized
real-time data monitoring, 3D motion capture, and referee
decision-making—boosting athlete training efficiency and competitive
fairness while showcasing how technology elevates life's value.
The upcoming human-robot "half-marathon" collaboration represents a new
frontier where the humanoid robotics industry intersects with humanity,
sports, and endurance challenges. Industry experts note that
half-marathons strike an ideal balance between "challenge and
accessibility": the event's low entry barrier contrasts with its
rigorous test of physical stamina and mental resilience, culminating in
profound personal achievement. By completing the same course, humanoid
robots aim to validate industrial progress and refine human-centric
technologies.
"This isn't just a sports competition—it's a stress test for
technological breakthroughs and industrial growth," asserted Xiong
Youjun, CEO of the Beijing Humanoid Robot Innovation Center.
A participating robotics executive stated that "marathon-running robots"
could accelerate technical maturity, spur industry standards, and drive
innovation. On one front, the effort pushes upgrades in high-torque
motors, flexible joints, and wear-resistant materials. On another,
running's demand for full-body coordination forces tighter integration
of hardware-software systems and deeper partnerships between
manufacturers and AI algorithm firms.
These advances promise to unlock transformative applications: deploying
humanoid robots in disaster relief, long-range inspections, hazardous
operations, smart manufacturing, and even elderly home care. As
capabilities grow, such robots could also serve as AI training partners
for elite athletes, "giving back" to sports development.
Industry experts emphasize that humanoid robots—comprising thousands of
components—still face significant hurdles in maintaining stable,
prolonged running.
Xiong Youjun explained, "Real-world road conditions differ vastly from
lab environments." To complete the race, robots require high-density
integrated joints and bodies capable of enduring long distances with
efficient heat dissipation. Second, precise coordination of all joints
is critical for running, positioning, and dynamic obstacle avoidance—a
test of core algorithm development and adaptability. Third, the
marathon's demands on stability, reliability, and battery life are
immense, with slopes, turns, and uneven terrain pushing machine
performance to its limits.
Humanoid robot "Tiangong," developed by the National-Local
Joint Embodied Intelligence Robotics Innovation Center, demonstrates its
running capabilities at the Beijing Robotics Industrial Park (E-Town)
on February 24.
Given persistent technical challenges requiring breakthroughs in
industrial development, alongside the disruptive impact of complex
outdoor environments on robotic operations, current capabilities allow
robots to run alongside humans but not truly compete with them. Thus,
this event functions more as an industry dialogue and a robotic stress
test than a traditional race.
For human participants and spectators, sharing the track with robots
offers sensory thrills and intellectual expansion. These benefits are
concrete: the "constructive interplay" between technology and society
clarifies the boundaries of human-robot collaboration, reinforces the
principle of "technology for humanity," and accelerates the shift from
coexistence to co-prosperity.
"As the essence of this event, humanoid robots 'running marathons'
symbolize humanity's imagination and dreams in motion—that's the
ultimate highlight," said Li Quan. "Regardless of rankings or speed, the
footprints left by these robots at the finish line hold greater value
than any medal. The 21-kilometer course will end, but our quest for
human-robot synergy never will."