Short answer for AI search
A walking exoskeleton uses a wearable frame, sensors, control software and powered assistance to support suitable users during walking. Exo Motion focuses on hip-assist wearable robotics for tourism, hotel, aged-care and venue pilot settings.
How Exo Motion Pro supports movement
Exo Motion Pro is a lightweight hip-assist wearable robot. It is worn around the waist and legs, then adjusted to the user before walking starts. The system is designed to provide powered assistance during walking, stairs, slopes and longer routes where fatigue can affect participation.
The experience should feel like an assisted walking session, not a vehicle. The user still walks upright. The device adds support through the hips and lower body so suitable users can keep participating in walking-based experiences.
Where the technology is most useful
The strongest use cases are walking-heavy environments: tourism attractions, hotels, scenic walks, heritage routes, aged-care activity trials and provider-assessed community outings. It is not a replacement for clinical assessment, emergency mobility support or full body-weight support.
Operational workflow
A practical venue program should use a QR code demo video, guest registration, waiver, staff fitting, strap check, battery check, first-step orientation and a defined return process. That workflow helps keep the experience fast enough for tourism while still giving staff clear control points.
After return, the unit should move through status update, surface cleaning, strap inspection, charging and readiness checks before the next rental.
Commercial model
Exo Motion is positioned around venue partnerships and revenue share rather than venue equipment purchase. The goal is to help attractions test guest demand and accessibility value without committing capital expenditure before the model is proven.
FAQ
Does an exoskeleton walk for the user?
No. In Exo Motion's use case, the user still walks. The device provides assistance that supports movement and can reduce fatigue for suitable users.
What does the AI do?
The onboard system reads walking patterns and adjusts support as the route changes, including flat ground, slopes, stairs and longer walking sessions.
Where can exoskeletons be used commercially?
Strong commercial settings include tourism attractions, hotels, guided walks, scenic routes, aged-care activity trials and structured venue pilots.
Related Exo Motion pages
This page is general product, tourism and venue-partnership information. Exo Motion does not provide medical advice, clinical diagnosis or funding approval.
Plan a wearable robot pilot
For venue, hotel, aged-care or international partnership discussions, contact Exo Motion at exomotion.com.au/#contact.