Skip to main content

Autonomous vehicle takes to the road in UK

An autonomous shuttle is to take to the road as part of the UK GATEway Project (Greenwich Automated Transport Environment) research into public acceptance of, and attitudes towards, driverless vehicles. In the latest phase of the GATEway Project a prototype shuttle will begin driverless navigation of a 2km route around the Greenwich Peninsula, using advanced sensors and state-of-the-art autonomy software to detect and avoid obstacles whilst carrying members of the public participating in the research stu
April 5, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
An autonomous shuttle is to take to the road as part of the UK GATEway Project (Greenwich Automated Transport Environment) research into public acceptance of, and attitudes towards, driverless vehicles.

In the latest phase of the GATEway Project a prototype shuttle will begin driverless navigation of a 2km route around the Greenwich Peninsula, using advanced sensors and state-of-the-art autonomy software to detect and avoid obstacles whilst carrying members of the public participating in the research study.

Developed by British companies 8309 Westfield Sportscars, 8308 Heathrow Enterprises and 8307 Oxbotica, the shuttle has no steering wheel or typical driver controls and is the UK’s first fully automated shuttle vehicle. Over an eight-hour period of operation, a single shuttle will collect a massive four terabytes of data, equivalent to 2,000 hours of film or 1.2 million photographs.

To navigate this complex real-world environment, the shuttle will use Oxbotica’s Selenium autonomy software, along with onboard sensors, such as cameras and lasers, to locate itself in its map, perceive and track dynamic obstacles around it and plan a safe obstacle-free trajectory to the goal. High data-rate 3D laser range finders are used for obstacle detection and tracking, and an additional safety curtain is used for redundancy in order to maximise safety.

Whilst the GATEway vehicle is designed to operate without a human driver, a safety steward will remain on-board at all times, complying with the UK’s code of practice on automated vehicle testing.

The GATEway Project is led by TRL and funded by government and industry. It aims to demonstrate the use of automated vehicles for ‘last mile’ mobility, seamlessly connecting existing transport hubs with residential and commercial areas using a zero emission, low noise transport system. Research findings from the project will guide the wider roll out of automated vehicle technology in all forms of surface transport, including cars, lorries and buses.

Related Content

  • December 3, 2020
    Spin pledges £100,000 to mobility research
    Initial focus is on safety and will include data from Vivacity Labs' AI and IoT sensors 
  • February 27, 2017
    UK science centre gears up to become major driverless car test site following report’s findings
    A consortium led by services provider Amey and partners RACE, Oxbotica, Siemens and Westbourne Communications has published the findings of its research into public perceptions of driverless cars. The PAVE (People in Autonomous Vehicles in Urban Environments) project engaged with over 800 people face-to-face through exhibitions, street surveys and workshops with industry experts and 500 feedback forms were collected. The report, which was overseen by Westbourne Communications, indicates that most peop
  • August 11, 2017
    Victoria trials automated vehicles
    An automated vehicle trial is underway on the Monash-CityLink-Tullamarine corridor to help Victoria, Australia, prepare for the future of driverless vehicles. The Government is partnering with VicRoads, RACV and Transurban, to trial connected and automated vehicles from manufacturers BMW, Mercedes, Tesla and Volvo. The study will look at how to prepare road infrastructure, regulations and the community for the integration of this new technology into our transport system.
  • May 31, 2012
    Plextek’s Blighter radar improves perimeter security at London’s Heathrow Airport
    Plextek, the design house behind the Blighter electronic-scanning ground surveillance radar system, has announced today that its radar units have been deployed to enhance Heathrow’s perimeter security. The Blighter B400 series electronic scanning radars – with Frequency Modulated Continuous Wave (FMCW) and Doppler processing – form part of an integrated perimeter security system at Heathrow, developed and supplied to BAA, the airport operator, by Touchstone Electronics, a specialist security provider to the