Skip to main content

Volvo Group developing safety systems at new test track

AstaZero, the world’s first full-scale test track for active automotive safety located in Borås, Sweden has officially opened. The 2000,000 square meters testing area simulates cities as well as multilane motorways and rural roads with intersections. It is here that the Volvo Group will test and develop future safety solutions for heavy vehicles. The Volvo Group claims its vision is to have no Group vehicles involved in traffic accidents and the Group’s safety experts have studied data from traffic acci
August 22, 2014 Read time: 2 mins

AstaZero, the world’s first full-scale test track for active automotive safety located in Borås, Sweden has officially opened. The 2000,000 square meters testing area simulates cities as well as multilane motorways and rural roads with intersections. It is here that the 609 Volvo Group will test and develop future safety solutions for heavy vehicles.

The Volvo Group claims its vision is to have no Group vehicles involved in traffic accidents and the Group’s safety experts have studied data from traffic accidents since the 1960s. Their analysis shows that many accidents can be avoided or mitigated before they even occur, by using active safety systems.

Active safety systems prevent accidents by supporting the driver, for example, by providing information or reacting before the driver does. Examples of active safety systems developed by the Volvo Group include collision warning with emergency brake and lane change support.

The AstaZero proving ground has been built and developed in close cooperation with the Volvo Group, with the purpose of testing active safety innovations in full-scale test environments. The testing area nearly six kilometres of rural road with intersections, street lights and bus stops, as well as a city environment where vehicles can be tested in authentic scenarios involving other vehicles in heavy traffic, cyclists and pedestrians, a multilane motorway and an area for high-speed testing. The infrastructure enables connected vehicles to communicate with each other as well as with the surroundings.

“AstaZero gives us a unique advantage when developing the safety systems of the future. By using the proving ground’s sophisticated equipment and advanced test environments we will become even better at mitigating real life accidents,” says Peter Kronberg, safety director at the Volvo Group.

“The cooperation between the industry, the public sector and academia is becoming increasingly more important for Sweden. It is by combining our resources that we will solve the problems of today’s society”

AstaZero is owned by the 5781 SP Technical Research Institute of Sweden and Chalmers University of Technology. The Volvo Group is one of the facility’s industrial partners.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • TRW showcases driver assist systems
    June 5, 2014
    TRW Automotive demonstrated its driver assist systems (DAS) and outlined expected trends in sensor technologies during the company's recent bi-annual Ride and Drive event at the Hockenheimring in Germany. According to Andrew Whydell, TRW Electronics’ director of product planning, DAS has and will continue to be a focal point for the automotive industry as governments and industry bodies strive to reduce road fatalities worldwide. For example, the European New Car Assessment Program (EuroNCAP) and the Ins
  • In vehicle systems allow drivers to provide travel information
    July 27, 2012
    The use of a Vehicle Data Translator will allow every vehicle on a given segment of road to contribute to a highly accurate, readily accessible source of localised weather information, thus improving safety in all conditions. Sheldon Drobot and William P. Mahoney III, US National Center for Atmospheric Research, Paul A. Pisano, USDOT/Federal Highway Administration, and Benjamin B. McKeever, USDOT/Research and Innovative Technology Administration, write. On the morning of June 10 2009, under the cover of den
  • Need for harmonisation in ITS standards
    February 1, 2012
    As the calendar rolls over, and we hop from continent to continent and World Congress to World Congress, where Memoranda of Understanding and cooperation agreements are the headline news, it is easy for those not intimately involved to forget that standards definition is a well-nigh continual process. Significant progress has been made in recent months towards achieving the critical mass and economies of scale which are going to drive development and deployment in, amongst other things, cooperative infrastr
  • TRC to open C/AV testing facility in Ohio
    July 22, 2019
    The Transportation Research Center (TRC), an automotive proving ground in North America, has opened a connected and autonomous vehicle (C/AV) testing facility in Ohio. The $45 million site, called SmartCenter, is to test advanced automotive and mobility technologies in a repeatable real-world environment before vehicles are deployed on public highways. Governor John R. Kasich says the centre will allow researchers, developers and manufacturers “to test, build, and deploy advanced mobility solutions