In this episode of Spatial Experience Design, host Søren Vasø is joined by Christian Christensen, Chief Product & Technology Officer at MapsPeople, for a hands-on look at how AI can be applied to real-world spatial data. Using Gemini Flash 2.0 and a live MapsIndoors prototype, they explore how AI understands context, responds to open-ended queries, and adapts across different environments without structured inputs. From booking meeting rooms to locating vegan lunch options, the demo reveals practical, scalable use cases that go far beyond basic search. Whether you're in workplace strategy, product design, or just AI-curious, this conversation breaks down what’s actually possible today—and what to watch next.
Key Topics:
A lot of companies are wondering how to “use AI” right now. But the question that matters more is this: Can it actually do something useful with your data—today?
Our Chief Product & Technology Officer, Christian, built a working demo over a weekend—connecting Gemini Flash 2.0 to MapsIndoors and feeding it real spatial data.
No perfect inputs. No curated tags. Just the scattered, semi-structured information most teams already have.
Then he hit “run.”
The result? Smarter answers, spatial awareness, and a glimpse at where AI is finally delivering actual value in environments like offices, stadiums, and public venues.
AI isn’t new. But three things have changed rapidly:
That last one’s a big deal. It means we no longer need to format every detail or build rigid logic trees. The model can infer what a user means, even when the language is messy or the request spans multiple steps.
In short: AI doesn’t just search anymore. It understands.
Here’s what the prototype could do with a real MapsIndoors setup:
One of the biggest unlocks is spatial awareness. The AI now knows what floor you’re on, which canteen you’re near, who you work with, and what’s available based on the time of day. For example:
What’s different here is that it actually supports people in the way that they interact with their environment. It’s the beginning of real user experiences that save time, reduce confusion, and make spaces feel more responsive.
You don’t need to fine-tune your own AI model or build from scratch. But you do need to make smart choices about:
If you’re thinking about how to integrate AI into your space, whether it's an office, campus, stadium, or mall, start by asking:
What makes this demo different is that it’s grounded in real problems—the kind that affect people’s time, confidence, and ability to navigate a space.
It's not about replacing maps. It's about making them feel useful in the moment:
The more context we layer in—from schedules and availability, to roles and permissions—the more helpful and human the experience becomes. Not robotic, but smarter.
AI isn’t the goal. Better answers are.
When context meets capability, it finally starts to click.
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