Skip to main content

Akara Robotics cleans up with robots in UK hospitals

Akara Robotics cleans up with robots in UK hospitals

Dublin-based start-up Akara Robotics has provided two UV decontamination robots to a UK hospital to clean wards and operating theatres.

The business, which spun out of Trinity College Dublin (TCD), will aid staff at the Friarage Hospital in cleaning its wards and operating theatres more efficiently and in a quicker amount of time.
It is arguably best known for its robot creation known as Stevie, which is designed to be an assistant in elder care facilities.

The decontamination robots, which won the best newcomer award at the Infection Prevention Society Conference 2024, can now be seen in the hospital’s clinical decisions unit, wards and operating theatres.

In 2021, Akara trialled cleaning robots at Midlands Regional Hospital Tullamore. In 2022, the company took cleaning robots to the UK in a trial at the endoscopy unit of Royal Cornwall Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
For the new set-up on the Friarage, frontline staff at the hospital and Akara have created a specialised workflows app with the aim of removing the need for paper checklists and to provide real-time alerts when rooms are available, in an effort to improve efficiency.

Niamh Donnelly, Akara’s co-founder and chief robotics officer, said that Akara’s robots build on more than a decade of robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) research conducted at TCD.
Explaining how the two robots function, Donnelly added: “Unique AI capabilities give our robots the ability to operate autonomously, which enables them to navigate and decontaminate clinical rooms based on a programme of cleaning instructions that they are given.

“We are extremely proud to see our robots working in a hospital setting. It’s wonderful to know that they are making a real difference in helping to keep patients safe and serves as great vindication for all the hard work the team has put in over the years.”

James Dunbar, consultant in infection and general medicine and chair of the Friarage Clinical Collaborative, said: “Microbes with resistance to antibiotics are probably the biggest emerging challenge in healthcare today. Our main defence is cleaning and decontamination. Last year our pilot study using Akara technology had amazing results.”

Akara has also announced plans to expand its presence in the US healthcare market, while simultaneously scaling operations in Europe. In addition, the company is preparing to formally launch a new product next year.
Earlier this year, Akara was accepted into the Techstars Healthcare Accelerator in Los Angeles. Following the successful completion of their first trial in a US hospital, Akara has gained early traction in the American market.

The company was among those recognised in the prestigious Forbes 30 Under 30 Europe ranking published in April.

Ciarán Mather
This article originally appeared on
www.siliconrepublic.com and can be found here

You Might Also Be Interested In

  • 6 minute read
  • Published 02/07/2025

Positive FDI performance in first half of 2025 as 179 investments set to deliver significant impact across the country with the potential to create more than 10,000 jobs – IDA Ireland

Foreign Direct Investment held firm in the six months to June 2025, with substantial investment in critical areas such as R&D, digitalisation, sustainability, and talent development driving growth across Ireland’s priority sectors and regional locations, IDA Ireland has reported today as it publishes its midyear results alongside the organisation’s Annual Report 2024.   

Read more
  • 4 minute read
  • Published 26/06/2025

Astellas enhances Operations across Ireland with new projects in Kerry and Dublin

IDA Ireland today welcomes the commitment by Astellas, one of Japan’s largest life sciences companies and a leading developer and manufacturer of pharmaceutical products globally, to deliver a series of significant investments across its Irish operations.

Read more