There’s a robot serving Korean fried chicken at a restaurant in Aurora

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Most of us wouldn’t expect our first interaction with a robot to be at a Korean fried chicken joint. But, then, that’s how the robots will eventually win: by surprising us while we’re eating.

Since May 26, “Kitty” the robot has been picking up plates at the counter and delivering them to customers inside bb.q Chicken at 2495 S. Havana St., which is the first of four planned metro Denver locations for the South Korea-based fast-casual chain.

The second location, at 9234 Park Meadows Drive in Lone Tree, opened on Saturday; a third, at 1360 Grant St. in Denver, opens next weekend. The final store will be in Littleton.

All four will serve the same menu — mostly wings and boneless “wings” with a variety of sauces, along with sides and beer — and appeal to a K-pop crossover crowd, as well as families and office workers during the daytime and young adults who want to hang out in the evenings.

The other three locations probably won’t have robots — at least not for awhile — but for franchise owner Jay Park, employing a robot made a lot of sense.

Server Priscilla Tanpubolon places the food ...

Kathryn Scott, Special to The Denver Post

Server Priscilla Tanpubolon places the food orders on the shelves of “Kitty” the robot for delivery to customer’s tables at bb.q Chicken on July 26, 2022 in Aurora.

“She’s our hardest worker,” he said with a laugh. “Actually, the intention of the robot is to help our servers, but it has also attracted a lot of attention from customers. It’s pretty cool.”

Park designed the interior of the restaurant with the robot — which uses a lidar sensor like the ones in self-driving vehicles to get around and to stop and to start — in mind. The floors are polished concrete so that Kitty will remain stable, while the booths are arranged in a way that allows her to make her way around and still get back to the food window and to her charging station where she can power up at the end of the day. At lunchtime, the restaurant only needs two staffers in the front of the house since Kitty is able to deliver a lot of the food.

“Having a robot is not simple, but we are very comfortable using it,” Park added. “We have been using it every day from morning to night. It has been doing really well.”

Built by a Chinese company called Pudu Robotics, Kitty came at a cost of $13,000, Park said. Similar delivery robots have been used at a handful of other restaurants in the United States, like Ari Korean Barbecue in Texas, but they are more widely used in China and Korea.

Korean fried chicken, which can be spicy or sweet depending on the sauces, has become hugely popular in Denver over the past few years as national chains like bb.q Chicken and Bonchon, which is also based in South Korea, have moved in. In fact, Bonchon, which has about 115 locations in the United States, opened its third Colorado location, at 3970 Buchtel Blvd., in June.

Other recent Korean fried chicken openings include WingWok in Centennial and Mono Mono’s fourth location in Lakewood’s Belmar. The Korean fried chicken chains Angry Chicken and Cupbop also have locations in Aurora, along with several locally owned stores.

“KFC no longer stands for Kentucky fried chicken. It stands for Korean fried chicken,” joked Mike Lee, who owns the franchise on Grant Street.

Bb.q chicken has hundreds of locations in South Korea and often appears in TV shows and other media — something that has crossed over into the United States now that K-pop culture and Korean TV shows like “Squid Game” have become so popular here with young adults, Lee said.

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