×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Friday
19
Dec 2025
weather symbol
Athens 12°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> Travel

Persephone, the robot guide, leads visitors in a Greek cave

The robot was built by the National Technology and Research Foundation and cost 118,000 euros ($139,000)

Newsroom October 27 09:18

Persephone is a tour guide in Greece, but perhaps not the type people are used to.

Billed as the world’s first robot tour guide inside a cave, Persephone has been welcoming visitors since mid-July to the Alistrati Cave in northern Greece, 135 kilometers (84 miles) northeast of the city of Thessaloniki.

The multilingual robot covers the first 150 meters (roughly 500 feet) of the part of the cave that is open to the public. In the remaining 750 meters (2,400 feet), a human guide takes over.

The robot was named Persephone because, according to one version of the ancient Greek myth, it was in a nearby plain that Pluto — the god of the underworld who was also known as Hades — abducted Persephone, with the consent of her father Zeus, to take her as his wife.

The robot can give its part of the tour in 33 languages and interact at a basic level with visitors in three languages. It can also answer 33 questions, but only in Greek.

Nikos Kartalis, the scientific director for the Alistrati site, had the idea of creating the robot when he saw one on TV guiding visitors at an art gallery. Seventeen years later, “we got our funds and the robot guide became a reality,” Kartalis told The Associated Press.

The robot was built by the National Technology and Research Foundation and cost 118,000 euros ($139,000).

“We already have a 70% increase in visitors compared to last year since we started using” the robot, says Kartalis. “People are enthusiastic, especially the children, and people who had visited in the past are coming back to see the robot guide.”

“It is something unprecedented for them, to have the ability to interact with their robot by asking it questions and the robot answering them,” he said. “Many foreign visitors couldn’t believe Greece had the capacity to build a robot and use it as a guide in the cave.”

The robot moves along a walkway, passing through an ornate landscape of stalactites and stalagmites. These varied formations can reach 15 meters (50 feet) tall and are seen throughout the cave’s nearly 1 kilometer (1.6-mile) walkway, which is accessible to people with limited mobility.

“This cave is one of the most beautiful, not only in Greece but in Europe, as well,” says Kartalis. “It has stalactites and stalagmites in many shapes and colors, even red.”

He said the cave was 3 million years old and was first explored in 1974 by the Hellenic Speleological Society and a team of Austrian speleologists. It opened to visitors in 1998.

Persephone, with a white body, black head and two luminous eyes, moves on wheels, guiding visitors to the first three of eight stops along the walkway. She can do two more stops, but her low speed slows down the tour, which is conducted in three languages simultaneously. Persephone’s creators are considering ways to speed her up.

See Also:

Mutual Defense Cooperation Agreement enhances US Army and Greek Partnership

The robot’s begins by saying: “My name is Persephone, I am the daughter of the goddess Demeter and the wife of Pluto, the god of the underworld. I welcome you to my under Earth kingdom, the Alistrati Cave.”

Many visitors are intrigued by the robot guide.

“It was surprising for me. I’ve never experienced such a thing. Actually, honestly, I prefer a live guide, but it’s interesting doing it this way. And I like the pace of the robot. It goes slower, so I can look around,” said Patrick Markes, a Czech visitor.

Markes listened to the first three stops from the robοt in his native language and the rest in English from a human tour guide.

“I should thank Persephone, our robot, she said very fine things,” said Christos Tenis, a Greek visitor. “I’m impressed by the cave. Of course, we had a flawless (human) guide, she explained many things. I’m very impressed.”

Persephone is not the only technology used inside the cave. There’s a cellphone app in which a visitor, scanning a QR code, can see the Alistrati Beroni. That’s a microorganism that is only found in this cave, in the huge mounds of bat droppings left behind when the cave was opened and the bats migrated elsewhere.

Evdokia Karafera is one of the tour guides who partners with the robot.

“It is helpful, because it speaks many languages. There’s just a little delay in the touring,” she said. “Most find it fascinating, especially the children, and find it interesting that it speaks many languages.”

>Related articles

Charitsis: The government is making determined efforts to enrage farmers

Archbishop Ieronymos’ Christmas message: “Let us turn our thoughts to the Infant of Bethlehem”

The investigation into the “filling in” at Tempi concludes with Triantopoulos’ testimony

Karafera insisted, however, that human tour guides cannot be completely replaced.

“Robots, at some point in the future, will take over many jobs. But I believe they cannot replace humans everywhere,” she said. “(Visitors say) ‘the robot is interesting, original, but can’t substitute for the human contact with the guide and the conversation we can have on the way back’”.

Source: AP

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#AI#artificial intelligence#cave#greece#persephone#robot#science#technology#tour#tour guide#tourism#travel#visit
> More Travel

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

Timothée Chalamet reveals he trained in table tennis for seven years for his new film “Marty Supreme”

December 18, 2025

Kimberly Guilfoyle attends Panathinaikos vs. Hapoel Tel Aviv game at OAKA

December 18, 2025

End of the game – Panathinaikos 93-82 Hapoel (updated)

December 18, 2025

EU leaders discuss use of frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine

December 18, 2025

EYDAP: Submitted a proposal to the Regulatory Authority on water tariff increases

December 18, 2025

Bravo Italia! Italian cuisine joins UNESCO – 10 iconic recipes

December 18, 2025

In a period of increased influenza activity in Greece, recommendations from the EODY

December 18, 2025

Russian Railways’ debt at 50 billion euros, government order to sell skyscraper in Moscow

December 18, 2025
All News

> World

EU leaders discuss use of frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine

Belgium’s legal concerns and Hungary’s veto complicate efforts to finalize EU financing for Ukraine

December 18, 2025

Russian Railways’ debt at 50 billion euros, government order to sell skyscraper in Moscow

December 18, 2025

13-year sentence by a Russian court for a Briton who fought for Ukraine

December 18, 2025

Archdiocese of New York: The Pope replaces Trump ally Dolan with a fellow New Yorker

December 18, 2025

Hungary: Child protection scandals and the state of the economy weaken Orbán ahead of elections

December 18, 2025
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2025 Πρώτο Θέμα