Public fitness infrastructure has a longstanding problem: it collects no information. A pull-up bar records nothing. A painted track tells an operator nothing about who used it, when, or whether it was worth the installation budget. Yingmi's Outdoor AI Running Trail System is a direct answer to that gap — a networked, sensor-equipped trail platform that turns an ordinary running path into a live fitness environment, without requiring users to bring a device, wear a tracker, or create an account before they start.
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The central design decision behind the system is contactless operation. At each smart terminal along the trail, users place their hand on the sensor panel and the unit reads heart rate, blood oxygen saturation, and body fat index within seconds. No phone pairing, no wristband, no registration step. Those readings feed into an on-screen assessment alongside whatever the session has generated — laps, distance, estimated calorie burn, current pace.
For a public outdoor setting, this matters more than it might seem. Wearable-dependent systems exclude the casual user who showed up without gear. Account-gated systems create friction that most people skip. Removing both barriers makes the trail usable by whoever happens to be there — the retiree doing a slow lap, the school group on a fitness test, the office worker on a lunch run.
Users who want to track progress over time can register a profile. The system stores session history, monitors trends across visits, and flags readings that fall outside normal ranges — relevant context for older users or those managing chronic conditions.
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Individual fitness machines serve one user at a time. This system runs in the background for everyone on the trail simultaneously, without any single user having to activate it for others to benefit.
Terminal stations sit at intervals along the route, spacing and count set by trail length and expected traffic. Each unit runs independently but connects to a shared backend over 4G/LTE or Wi-Fi. An operator managing multiple sites can monitor all of them from one dashboard — live usage, station health, fault alerts, and aggregate fitness data across the user base.
The hardware is rated IP65. Displays use tempered glass bright enough for direct sunlight; enclosures are built for corrosion resistance in coastal and humid environments. Where grid power is unavailable — a trail through a nature reserve, a remote campus section — solar-assisted configurations are an option.
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A live leaderboard at each station shows daily and weekly rankings by distance and calorie output. Operators can set community challenges — a shared distance goal for the month, a group target tied to a local event — and push them across every display on the trail at once. Users who may never interact directly end up running toward the same number.
After a session, scanning a QR code at any station brings up a workout summary on the user's phone. No app download needed. For facilities with their own resident or member app, the platform supports integration so summaries go there instead.
One reason public fitness infrastructure goes underused is that nobody tracks whether it gets used at all. Equipment is installed, a ribbon is cut, and usage data never reaches the people who approved the budget.
The Yingmi platform changes that. Operators receive anonymized aggregate reports: peak usage windows, average session length, station-by-station activity, fitness trends over weeks and months. A parks department can show city council real engagement numbers. A property manager can show prospective tenants actual usage figures rather than a rendering of someone jogging.
The data collects itself. It runs in the background and surfaces through the operator dashboard on whatever schedule the facility needs.
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Yingmi manufactures the system in Anhui Province and manages all export documentation internally. CE and RoHS certifications fully satisfy European market regulatory requirements. The company has established distribution networks across Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. All region-specific compliance matters—including public tender certifications, outdoor surface standards, and health data localization requirements—are addressed during the project scoping phase rather than post-contract.
Lead time for standard configurations ranges from 30 to 45 days from order confirmation to shipment. Inquiries should be directed to the official company channel, where the dedicated export team provides customized project quotes based on trail length, number of stations, power requirements, and localization scope.
Public fitness infrastructure has a longstanding problem: it collects no information. A pull-up bar records nothing. A painted track tells an operator nothing about who used it, when, or whether it was worth the installation budget. Yingmi's Outdoor AI Running Trail System is a direct answer to that gap — a networked, sensor-equipped trail platform that turns an ordinary running path into a live fitness environment, without requiring users to bring a device, wear a tracker, or create an account before they start.
![]()
The central design decision behind the system is contactless operation. At each smart terminal along the trail, users place their hand on the sensor panel and the unit reads heart rate, blood oxygen saturation, and body fat index within seconds. No phone pairing, no wristband, no registration step. Those readings feed into an on-screen assessment alongside whatever the session has generated — laps, distance, estimated calorie burn, current pace.
For a public outdoor setting, this matters more than it might seem. Wearable-dependent systems exclude the casual user who showed up without gear. Account-gated systems create friction that most people skip. Removing both barriers makes the trail usable by whoever happens to be there — the retiree doing a slow lap, the school group on a fitness test, the office worker on a lunch run.
Users who want to track progress over time can register a profile. The system stores session history, monitors trends across visits, and flags readings that fall outside normal ranges — relevant context for older users or those managing chronic conditions.
![]()
Individual fitness machines serve one user at a time. This system runs in the background for everyone on the trail simultaneously, without any single user having to activate it for others to benefit.
Terminal stations sit at intervals along the route, spacing and count set by trail length and expected traffic. Each unit runs independently but connects to a shared backend over 4G/LTE or Wi-Fi. An operator managing multiple sites can monitor all of them from one dashboard — live usage, station health, fault alerts, and aggregate fitness data across the user base.
The hardware is rated IP65. Displays use tempered glass bright enough for direct sunlight; enclosures are built for corrosion resistance in coastal and humid environments. Where grid power is unavailable — a trail through a nature reserve, a remote campus section — solar-assisted configurations are an option.
![]()
A live leaderboard at each station shows daily and weekly rankings by distance and calorie output. Operators can set community challenges — a shared distance goal for the month, a group target tied to a local event — and push them across every display on the trail at once. Users who may never interact directly end up running toward the same number.
After a session, scanning a QR code at any station brings up a workout summary on the user's phone. No app download needed. For facilities with their own resident or member app, the platform supports integration so summaries go there instead.
One reason public fitness infrastructure goes underused is that nobody tracks whether it gets used at all. Equipment is installed, a ribbon is cut, and usage data never reaches the people who approved the budget.
The Yingmi platform changes that. Operators receive anonymized aggregate reports: peak usage windows, average session length, station-by-station activity, fitness trends over weeks and months. A parks department can show city council real engagement numbers. A property manager can show prospective tenants actual usage figures rather than a rendering of someone jogging.
The data collects itself. It runs in the background and surfaces through the operator dashboard on whatever schedule the facility needs.
![]()
Yingmi manufactures the system in Anhui Province and manages all export documentation internally. CE and RoHS certifications fully satisfy European market regulatory requirements. The company has established distribution networks across Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. All region-specific compliance matters—including public tender certifications, outdoor surface standards, and health data localization requirements—are addressed during the project scoping phase rather than post-contract.
Lead time for standard configurations ranges from 30 to 45 days from order confirmation to shipment. Inquiries should be directed to the official company channel, where the dedicated export team provides customized project quotes based on trail length, number of stations, power requirements, and localization scope.