LT350 Micro Warehouse Network Aims to Transform Parking Lots into Integrated Last-Mile Delivery Hubs
March 25th, 2026 10:00 AM
By: Newsworthy Staff
Auddia's LT350 platform integrates micro warehousing, autonomous vehicle charging, and AI logistics in parking lot canopies to address last-mile delivery challenges through coordinated drone, autonomous EV, and human courier networks.

Auddia Inc. announced the LT350 micro warehouse network, a patented canopy platform designed to transform parking lots into logistics infrastructure for last-mile delivery. The system integrates secure package lockers, vertical package elevators, drone charging cartridges, autonomous EV charging arms, and the PickDrop AI logistics engine into a single distributed node. This platform addresses the convergence of three industry trends: the shift toward distributed micro-fulfillment, the rise of hybrid drone and ground autonomous delivery networks, and the emergence of parking lots as underutilized logistics real estate.
The LT350 system includes ground-based locker arrays with both refrigerated and non-refrigerated options positioned where fuel pumps traditionally sit, allowing autonomous and human-operated vehicles to exchange packages. A patented vertical package elevator system moves packages between ground lockers and the canopy ceiling, enabling coordination between ground vehicles and autonomous drones. The PickDrop AI logistics platform dynamically routes packages across drones, autonomous EVs, human couriers, and LT350 canopy nodes, turning each canopy into a mini distributed warehouse.
Beyond logistics, LT350 canopies serve as distributed AI datacenter nodes, enabling autonomous vehicles to offload data, upload new models, and run inference workloads while performing delivery operations. This capability builds on LT350's previously announced distributed data-exchange architecture, allowing autonomous vehicle fleets to synchronize high-bandwidth sensor data and receive real-time model updates directly at the canopy edge. As drones and autonomous EVs approach an LT350 canopy, they gain access to high-speed data offload, local model distribution, low-latency inference, and secure vehicle-to-infrastructure connectivity through LT350's distributed compute fabric.
This integration positions LT350 canopies not only as logistics nodes but as critical digital infrastructure for the autonomous mobility ecosystem. The platform's solar-integrated canopy architecture combines modular battery storage and GPU cartridges in the ceiling, turning parking lots into AI data centers while strengthening local utility infrastructure. LT350 is one of three new businesses that would be combined with Auddia in the new McCarthy Finney holding company if Auddia's recently announced business combination with Thramann Holdings is completed.
LT350 founder Jeff Thramann stated that last-mile delivery is undergoing a structural shift, with retailers, logistics operators, and autonomous vehicle companies seeking infrastructure that reduces cost, increases reliability, and accelerates delivery speed. The LT350 canopy network aims to provide that foundation by integrating micro warehousing, drone infrastructure, autonomous EV charging, distributed data exchange, and AI-driven routing into a fully coordinated last-mile ecosystem deployed across the country's most ubiquitous real estate footprint. For information about LT350, please visit https://www.LT350.com.
Source Statement
This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by PRISM Mediawire. You can read the source press release here,
