DroneShield Partnering With Kansas City Police On A Multi-Site Urban Airspace Security Deployment.
DroneShield Partnering With Kansas City Police – DroneShield is supporting a multi-site urban airspace security deployment ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026, with a system designed to deliver persistent low-altitude awareness across the Kansas City metropolitan area.
The initiative, led by the Kansas City Police Department in partnership with Airspace Link’s AirHub Portal and regional public safety stakeholders, brings together distributed radar, RF-based drone detection and coordinated airspace management across multiple jurisdictions.
For Australian readers, this initiative is another nudge. In ANZ drone mitigation deployments tend to be site-based and reactive, while this US project treats drone activity as a shared, regional risk that requires continuous visibility and coordination.
DroneShield’s role in the deployment is as the primary detection and response layer, using RF sensing, sensor fusion and counter-UAS capabilities to support real-time awareness across the operating environment. The system is designed for complex urban conditions where authorised drones, emergency services aviation, media platforms and unauthorised activity may all be present at the same time.
The architecture integrates Echodyne radar with DroneShield’s RF detection capability, creating a layered sensing approach that supports continuous tracking and identification across a wide area. This is combined with AirHub’s coordination platform, allowing multiple agencies to share a common operating picture and manage airspace activity in real time.
“Ten years ago, most cities weren’t thinking about drone threats at this scale, Kansas City is now helping pioneer a layered airspace security model built for the realities of modern urban environments,” said Tom Adams, director of public safety at DroneShield.
“Protecting FIFA World Cup 2026 requires a new level of airspace coordination,” added Major Greg Williams of the Kansas City Police Department.
“Kansas City is building a long-term framework that helps public safety agencies safely manage growing drone activity across the metro area.”
DroneShield Partnering With Kansas City Police
Unlike traditional single-site deployments, the Kansas City model is built around regional coverage, linking multiple detection nodes and agencies into a coordinated system. The intent is not just event security, but an operational framework that can persist beyond the tournament.
“Maintaining visibility across complex urban airspace environments requires persistent awareness and layered sensing capabilities that can support dynamic operational conditions,” said Eben Frankenberg, CEO at Echodyne.
Meanwhile Michael Healander, co-founder and CEO of Airspace Link said the solution was foundational infrastructure for the future of coordinated urban drone operation.
“What Kansas City is building is larger than a World Cup security deployment,” Healander said.
For integrators and end users in ANZ, the takeaway is less about the event and more about the notion of wide area operational awareness aligned with the protection of crowded places. It’s something the local industry – and local end users – seem a slow to embrace, despite clear risks.
You can learn more about DroneShield here or read more SEN news here.
“DroneShield Partnering With Kansas City Police On A Multi-Site Urban Airspace Security Deployment.”













