QRKY.ai Deployment at Bengaluru Airport T2 Delivers 3X Passenger Engagement Through Intelligent QR Infrastructure

Bengaluru, India June 08: Bengaluru’s Kempegowda International Airport Terminal 2 (BLR T2) has become the site of a new media technology, demonstrating how intelligent passenger interaction infrastructure can significantly enhance traveler engagement.

QRKY.ai, the AI-powered engagement platform developed by QRPlus LLC, USA, announced results from a five-month deployment of its image-embedded “Art QR” installations at BLR International T2 terminal’s award-winning “Terminal in a Garden.” The deployment was designed to encourage travelers to engage with the terminal’s botanical experience through visually integrated QR touchpoints positioned across key viewing areas as they wait for their flight to depart.

Between December 2025 and April 2026, the installation recorded:

●       4,029 total scans

●       2,943 unique users

●       Engagement from travelers across 43 countries

●       An average of 28.8 scans per day — nearly three times higher than conventional QR benchmarks for similar airport environments

Unlike traditional QR signage, the QRKY deployment embeds scannable codes directly into artistic visual compositions designed to blend into the terminal architecture and passenger experience.

“Consumers spend a lot of time at airports in transit areas. Bangalore International Airport has a unique “Terminal in a Garden” experience area that attracts visitors.  “QRKY.ai has helped enhanced their engagement by creating attractive QRs that point to the flora and fauna information at the garden,” said Mr. Anand Basu, Co-founder at QRKY.ai.  “The installation data suggests that 3X more scans happened from visitors of 43 countries over a 5 month period.” he added.  “This deployment shows that when interaction infrastructure is designed thoughtfully, it can enhance engagement, driving superior ROI,” he added.

The deployment produced unusually consistent engagement patterns throughout the 147 days. More than 87% of measurable days exceeded expected scan benchmarks for standard QR installations, indicating sustained organic interaction rather than short-term novelty effects.

For airport operators and commercial teams, the findings point to a growing opportunity around passive digital engagement infrastructure in high-dwell transit environments.

The deployment also surfaced international passenger analytics associated with larger mobility intelligence systems. International engagement increased steadily during the campaign, rising from 8% in December to 21% by February. Europe, APAC, and North America represented the strongest international engagement clusters.

The scan data additionally reflected India’s rapidly evolving telecom infrastructure:

●       70% of all scans originated from IPv6 networks

●       79% of Indian-origin scans used IPv6 connectivity

●       Safari and Chrome accounted for the overwhelming majority of user access across iOS and Android devices

The findings reinforce how frictionless, browser-native engagement experiences continue to outperform app-dependent interaction models in transit environments.

The results demonstrate how lightweight engagement infrastructure can function as a real-time behavioral indicator of changing passenger mobility patterns.

As airports globally continue investing in smart terminal ecosystems, the BLR T2 deployment highlights how physical-digital engagement systems may evolve beyond marketing applications into broader passenger intelligence infrastructure.