Google co-founder and Alphabet CEO Larry Page’s autonomous, all-electric flying taxi company unveiled its commercial plane late Monday.

Named “Cora,” the vehicle can “take off like a helicopter and transition to flying like a plane,” its creator, California-based Kitty Hawk, said on its website.

Cora, in development for eight years, is self-piloting, can fly faster than 150 kilometers per hour (93 miles an hour) and has a range of 100 kilometers (62 miles), according to the company.

In 2016, Page GOOGL, -1.44% invested in two flying car startups. One of those was Kitty Hawk.

The company said it is working with the New Zealand government to commercialize its air taxis. The affiliated New Zealand operator is called Zephyr Airworks.

“New Zealand’s Central Aviation Authority has the respect of the world-wide regulatory community. A people who embrace the future. And a dynamic economy that could serve as a springboard for Cora,” Kitty Hawk said in its release.

Kitty Hawk had previously tested another flying vehicle prototype called the “Flyer” last April, which looked less like a car, or a plane, and more like a jet ski.

Other companies, including Uber and Airbus AIR, -6.57% , are advancing commercialized flying taxis. Uber, through its Uber Elevate arm, has targeted Los Angeles, Dallas and Dubai for this service by 2020.

Uber Elevate’s Mark Moore, speaking at the SXSW conference, said Tuesday that test flights over next few years — which will be in Dallas — will be done in partnership with the Dallas/Fort Worth airport.

Moore argued that based on modeling, the economics of commercialized autonomous flying taxis make sense for them because many customers will take Uber cars to and from their Uber Elevate flying taxis, the Dallas Morning News’s Melissa Repko reported from the event, via Twitter.