Kiwi Aerial Shots, a specialist in high-end aerial cinematography, has publicly launched the Immersive Condor, a custom-built heavy-lift drone engineered to capture unobstructed 180-degree field-of-view spatial video. The system represents a significant advancement for immersive storytelling in commercial drone cinematography.
The Immersive Condor’s defining feature is its camera-forward architecture. By positioning the camera rig ahead of the propellers rather than beneath the airframe, the drone delivers seamless 16K stereoscopic footage free from propeller interference. This configuration is paired with Blackmagic’s URSA Cine Immersive camera, a cutting-edge sensor designed specifically for spatial video applications. The resulting footage is optimized for Apple Vision Pro, Giant Screen cinema, and global dome projections—expanding the creative possibilities for immersive production pipelines.

Overcoming Physics Challenges in Heavy-Lift Drone Design
The development process required intensive R&D to solve a fundamental challenge: flying heavy cinema gear positioned forward of the drone’s center of mass introduces significant aerodynamic complexity. The Immersive Condor manages an 8kg camera payload while maintaining flight stability and control precision—no small engineering feat for a heavy-lift platform.
Critically, the system remains under the 25kg regulatory threshold, ensuring full compliance with European drone regulations for professional productions. This weight discipline allows operators to deploy the Immersive Condor on commercial shoots without crossing into restricted airspace classifications or triggering additional permitting requirements in many jurisdictions.
“This ‘battle-tested’ system allows filmmakers to achieve rock-solid, high-resolution spatial plates and immersive experiences that were previously impossible to capture from the air,” according to the company statement.
The practical implications are substantial. Operators can now capture spatial video plates—the foundational footage for immersive projects—from aerial perspectives previously limited to conventional camera systems. This opens workflows for virtual production, theme park attractions, documentary immersion, and emerging spatial cinema formats.
The Immersive Condor addresses a specific but growing gap in commercial drone cinematography: the intersection of heavy payload capacity, spatial imaging capability, and regulatory compliance. As spatial video production becomes more mainstream, purpose-built platforms like this heavy-lift drone are becoming essential production tools rather than experimental equipment.
More information is available from Kiwi’s website.
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Ian McNabb is a journalist focusing on drone technology and lifestyle content at Dronelife. He is based between Boston and NH and, when not writing, enjoys hiking and Boston area sports.







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