Lilium, the German aviation startup taking off to bring flying taxis to the skies by 2025, has added a extra $35 million to its pot, taking its sequence C round of funding to round $275 million following the initial investment it announced attend in March. An particular person accustomed to the matter confirmed that this extension has now nudged the firm into unparalleled-lined “unicorn territory, with a valuation in excess of $1 billion.

The most fresh money injection used to be made totally by Baillie Gifford, a Scottish investment firm that has previously backed companies including Tesla, SpaceX, Amazon, and Airbnb, and it comes at a turbulent time for the transport industry. The COVID-19 crisis has hit breeze-hail products and services, with Uber having to adapt its alternate and save its enormous transport network to totally different makes use of; in the intervening time, scooter and bike transport investments have surged as cities reclaim roads from autos to designate extra room for pedestrians and cleaner private transport. For a firm akin to Lilium, this transition is also congruous to its plans, although Lilium’s rivals is extra liable to be intercity transport akin to trains and buses.

“If the leisure, the transfer to extra sustainable modes of transport highlights the public appetite for a commerce in the capability we recede,” a Lilium spokesperson told VentureBeat. “That acknowledged, our focal level is no longer on offering journeys within one city, nonetheless moderately connecting cities, cities, and villages with each totally different. With a unfold of 300km we’re ready to join entire regions, bringing excessive-tempo connectivity to areas that don’t have it, with out the necessity for costly infrastructure.”

Based out of Munich in 2015, Lilium is building compact all-electric jets that preserve off and land vertically, with problem for a driver and four passengers. This bypasses the necessity for costly, problem-ingesting runways, and landing pads also can even be positioned in any urban atmosphere, including rooftops and quaysides. Customers beckon a breeze via an Uber-trend cellular app.

Above: Lilium Landing Pad (Mockup)

Furthermore, on condition that Lilium’s focal level lies squarely in native regional recede, this positions it well for a international where infamous-border creep is also extra frictional. Right here is significantly distinguished at a time when many companies in the aviation industry are on the level of crumple.

Lilium acknowledged that it has managed to remain fully operational at some stage in the pandemic, with quite lots of the firm working remotely — and most of its key longer-term timescales remain unchanged. “We’re lucky that we’re at a stage of our trend where unparalleled [of our] work also can even be performed from dwelling, as it is centered on the trend of our eventual serial aircraft,” the spokesperson acknowledged. “Whereas COVID-19 will have some impact on timescales within this year, we remain no longer off course for beginning industrial operations in 2025. We additionally acknowledge that we’re lucky to have necessary funding secured, given the challenges facing the aerospace market for the time being.”

Other companies working in direction of a the same future encompass fellow German startup Volocopter, which these days closed a fresh $40 million investment, taking its total funding to $132 million, and touted a doable IPO.

With one other $35 million in the bank, Lilium has now raised extra than $375 million since its inception, and it’s well-financed to continue building its Lilium Jet and prepare for the “serial production” at its original manufacturing hub in Germany that it unveiled final year.

Join Funding Weekly to begin your week with VB’s high funding stories.