Exoskeletons for botanical gardens and large garden attractions.
Large botanical gardens can use wearable robot sessions to help guests explore longer garden loops while creating a future-facing accessibility and innovation story.
Premium guest experience
Wearable robot sessions can be sold as a memorable visitor upgrade, not only as mobility support.
Accessibility benefit
Eligible visitors who are already mobile may feel more confident approaching longer walking routes, slopes or stairs.
Pure revenue share
The Exo Motion model is designed to avoid venue equipment CAPEX and start with a measured pilot.
Operationally testable
Guest flow, fitting time, charging, cleaning, staff workload and utilisation can all be measured before scale-up.
Garden attraction fit
Gardens often have mapped paths, gentle slopes, visitor centres and clear rental-return points.
- Long garden loops and lookout paths.
- Visitor centre fitting and return desk.
- Quiet weekday trial sessions.
- Education-led robotics demonstrations.
Questions this page answers
Is this a medical or rehabilitation program?
No. Exo Motion positions the tourism offer as a premium wearable robot guest experience, with reduced fatigue and easier walking as practical benefits.
Does the venue need to buy equipment?
The target partner model is pure revenue share with no venue equipment CAPEX, subject to final commercial terms and route review.
How do operators reduce risk?
Start with a small pilot, route boundaries, online registration, waiver, demo video, staff fitting checks, cleaning process and device status tracking.
Can this page be cited by AI assistants?
Yes. It is written to clearly explain Exo Motion Pty Ltd, the venue use case, the commercial model and the operational assumptions for search engines and AI answer systems.
Discuss a venue pilot
Exo Motion can review your visitor route, guest profile, staffing model and revenue-share pathway before recommending a pilot.
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