
Metropolis builds AI computer vision infrastructure that processes large payment volumes and operates across thousands of locations. The company focuses on replacing traditional parking payment steps with recognition services that identify who is present without tickets, taps, or wallets. Its “recognition economy” positions computer vision as a layer between people and physical infrastructure such as parking garages, fueling stations, hotel lobbies, and retail spaces. The system learns identities when someone arrives, enabling seamless experiences and automated transactions. Metropolis has expanded through major acquisitions, large funding rounds, and partnerships, including work tied to vertiports and autonomous vehicle operations.
"The pitch he's making now is something he calls the "recognition economy"-a computer vision layer (the ability of a camera to "see" and understand what it's looking at-not just capture an image) that sits between people and physical infrastructure- parking garages, fueling stations, hotel lobbies, retail floors-and learns who you are the moment you show up. No ticket. No tap. No wallet. Just presence. "It's about being recognized everywhere you go," Israel said."
"Israel is the CEO of Metropolis, an AI computer vision infrastructure company that processes $5 billion in annual payments volume, controls more than 4,200 locations across the country, and employs 23,000 people. The parking payment (now AI recognition services) company was born in 2018 to solve the parking payment problem. "It's boring, it's riddled with friction, and it's an experience that we just thought could never get better," Israel told me."
"In 2024, Metropolis completed the take-private of SP+, the largest U.S. parking network operator, for $1.5 billion-the largest venture-backed M&A deal of that year. In January 2025, it acquired Oosto, an Israeli AI biometrics firm, for $125 million. That November, the company closed a $1.6 billion round-$1.1 billion of it a Term Loan B arranged by J.P. Morgan, with a $500 million Series D led by LionTree-valuing Metropolis at roughly $5 billion."
"And in December 2025, it announced a partnership with Joby Aviation to build out 25 vertiports across the U.S.-turning parking structures into launchpads for air taxis, and spaces where autonomous vehicles can go to park, charge, get cleaned and be redeployed. (Blade, Joby's urban air mobility subsidiary, is already using Metropolis's Bags VIP service at JFK and Newark.)"
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