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Autonomous Vehicle Project Endeavour to go for its final on-road trial

Autonomous Vehicle Project Endeavour to go for its final on-road trial

UK-based Project Endeavour is concluding its multi-city demonstration of autonomous vehicle (AV) services by hosting passenger rides for the first time.

The aim of the final on-road trial in Greenwich, London, is to gain an understanding of the public perception of AVs.

Urban setting

More than 100 members of the public are able to schedule demonstration rides in Oxbotica’s vehicles, with consortium partners DG Cities surveying confidence and trust in the technology before and after to analyse perception of AV safety. The event also offers a virtual reality experience to explore what it’s like to be in an AV as it moves through a typical urban setting.

Ahead of the trials, the UK public said that in-vehicle safety and the safety record of the service provider were the top two most important considerations when choosing future mobility providers, ranking ahead of cost, cleanliness, and availability.

Oxbotica said post-trial data will be studied to understand if experiencing the technology improves the acceptance of AVs.

Launched in March 2019, Project Endeavour claims to be the UK’s first multi-city demonstration of autonomous vehicle services and capability. It began in Oxford, before visiting Birmingham, and ending in London.

According to Oxbotica, it is designed to accelerate the deployment of autonomous vehicle services across the UK by creating a flexible, scalable model that will make the deployment process quicker, easier, and more efficient – while maintaining the highest safety standards.

A fleet of six Ford Mondeo vehicles are being deployed during the demonstration to replicate how an autonomous mobility service may operate in an urban environment. The vehicles, integrated with Oxbotica’s autonomy software platform, are completing a five-mile urban route around Greenwich’s busy streets, giving partners the opportunity to model the complex and busy network and exposing the vehicle to varied traffic and weather conditions.

Oxbotica reports that transport planners and local authorities are also using the trials to understand how autonomy can fill mobility gaps in urban and rural settings, and how to support communities in accessing the new technology while playing a role in the long-term sustainability of cities.

“The results of the project will allow the project partners to further advance the deployment of AV services safely and at scale, addressing some of the major transport challenges cities face today and in the future,” said Trevor Dorling, managing director of DG Cities.

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“We are also excited that we are able to offer the public the opportunity to ride in one of the Project Endeavour autonomous vehicles during our trials in the Royal Borough of Greenwich. Their feedback will give us valuable insights on how we need to keep adapting both the technology and its deployment in cities in years to come.”

The Endeavour consortium, which is part-funded by the Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (CCAV) and delivered in partnership with Innovate UK, is being led by Oxbotica, in collaboration with DG Cities, Immense, TRL, BSI, and Oxfordshire County Council.

Project Endeavour has applied BSI’s (British Standards) safety case framework specification PAS 1881:2020 Assuring the Safety of Automated Vehicle Trials and Testing, which specifies requirements for operational safety cases for automated vehicle trials and development testing in the UK. Oxbotica claims it is the first company to have had its safety case assessed by BSI against the requirements of PAS 1881:2020.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Technology Express staff and is published from a syndicated feed)

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