Mini-Bee Hybrid VTOL
Humanitarian mission context
RED VTOL ONG · ALTEN SOLIDAIRE · SCHOOL CENTRALE LILLE
A deployable hybrid VTOL designed for fast humanitarian response.
Mini-Bee is an ultra-light hybrid VTOL multicopter concept developed to support rapid medical evacuation, light cargo transport, field access, and emergency utility missions in remote or infrastructure-constrained environments.
The concept focuses on off-airport accessibility, fast assembly, low logistical burden, and a mission profile tailored to humanitarian and emergency operations outside conflict zones.
2 persons
on board
18 rotors
distributed lift
TRL 4
demonstrator stage
Why this concept matters
A humanitarian aircraft concept built around fast access and low logistics burden.
Humanitarian teams often need a platform that can move quickly, land vertically, carry one additional person or essential equipment, and be deployed without the heavy logistics burden of a conventional helicopter.
01
Medical support
The platform can support light air ambulance and urgent medical access missions, including the transport of a pilot plus a medical professional or a stabilized patient depending on mission configuration.
02
Remote access
Vertical take-off and landing capability reduces dependence on prepared runways and enables operations closer to isolated villages, field hospitals, and emergency work sites.
03
Rapid deployment
The aircraft is designed for modular shipment in LD3-compatible logistics volumes, enabling transport by civil cargo aircraft and assembly directly on the tarmac.
Reference configuration
A two-person hybrid multicopter architecture.
160 km/h
Cruise speed
450 km
Target range
700 kg
MTOW
100 kW
Cruise power
18 rotors
Distributed rotor layout
2 seats
1 pilot + 1 passenger
The current project reference is a two-person hybrid multicopter architecture with a Rotax 916 iS, twin high-voltage electric machines in the hybrid chain, computerized flight controls, and a modular frame intended for rapid field deployment.
Mission families
Three mission families for humanitarian field operations.
The humanitarian study identifies several mission families where a light hybrid VTOL can provide practical value.
01 — Sanitary and medical missions
Carry medical supplies, move a doctor or medic, evacuate a sick or injured person, and support fast localization or reconnaissance in difficult terrain.
02 — Educational and training missions
Transport teachers, trainers, and educational equipment to remote communities where access time and road infrastructure are major constraints.
03 — Solidarity worksites and field logistics
Move personnel, tools, selected materials, and emergency support items for construction, repair, and humanitarian infrastructure operations.
Common operational needs
Designed around practical deployment constraints.
01
Fast field readiness
The aircraft should be operational quickly after transport, with a practical assembly process and low infrastructure dependency in the destination area.
02
Accessible operation
Pilot workload should remain compatible with simplified handling objectives, assisted flight controls, and practical mission use.
03
Safety and resilience
The concept emphasizes crash-resistant structure, distributed lift, emergency systems, and a hybrid architecture intended to improve mission robustness.
Key differentiators
Three differentiators for low-footprint humanitarian aviation.
A
Hybrid propulsion approach
A thermal engine and electric propulsion chain are combined to target useful range while supporting distributed lift and modern flight-control logic.
B
Distributed rotor redundancy
Eighteen rotors contribute to lift distribution, control authority, and a different safety logic compared with a small conventional single-main-rotor helicopter.
C
LD3-compatible deployment
The project includes a packing strategy based on modular transport volumes so the aircraft can be shipped by civil cargo means and assembled close to the mission area.
Development direction
Demonstrator-level consolidation before detailed validation.
The current step is focused on demonstrator-level technical consolidation and preparation for more detailed validation work.
Current stage — TRL 4 demonstrator
The Mini-Bee is currently positioned at demonstrator stage, with work centered on technical maturation, subsystem integration, and collaborative development.
2025–2026 — Ground validation and detailed design
Priorities include detailed structural and equipment definition, development of the 18-rotor FCU, ground bench testing with the Rotax 916 iS and associated avionics, and hybrid power-generation testing.
Collaboration — Academic and industrial participation
The project follows an open-innovation approach involving academics, industrial contributors, technical support organizations, and a collaborative documentation environment.
Communication overview
Mini-Bee Hybrid VTOL for humanitarian missions.
This English context page is inspired by the humanitarian mission study and official project material. It is intended as a communication-oriented overview rather than a certification or operating document.
