Automated parking offers optimised space utilisation and fewer damage complaints as David Crawford discovers.
     
As cars become smarter, technology designed to make parking them more straightforward is developing in parallel. In turn, it is becoming clear that the places where vehicles spend much of their time will need to respond – more comprehensively than by supporting established aids such as smartphone-based parking location and reservation, or payment for time used.
     
Parking providers are already eyeing developments that could ultimately transform them from being passive recipients to intelligent hosts of their four-wheeled guests, with the automakers in the driving seat of change. Among these is 
     
Using an array of ultrasonic sensors, the earlier version makes possible the identification of a suitable space as the driver passes. It then works with the vehicle’s on-board electronic power steering to navigate it in automatically, while the driver continues to manage other functions.
     
The more advanced smartphone-operated Remote Parking Pilot app helps drivers to make full use of spaces that are restricted in size, for example in end-on configurations. These can make it difficult for the occupants - particularly those with mobility problems – to easily enter or leave a vehicle once it is parked. There is also the risk of damage to the body or paintwork of the car and its neighbours.
     
The new app allows the driver to disembark, leaving the system to manoeuvre the vehicle automatically into the selected parking space. Automatic transmission, if installed, controls the speed and gear changes.
     
The driver must stand within 3m of the vehicle to monitor the process; reversing it involves remote unlocking before using the app, communication is via Bluetooth, rendering the provision of Wi-Fi access within the garage unnecessary.
 
One concern for garage operators, as the technology  becomes commonly used, will be the provision of adequate safe standing  space for drivers and their passenger loads, including young children.  Pedestrian congestion could result from a number of cars being parked at  the same time.
     
In June  2015 another automaker, 
     
Going  forward, BMW’s next-stage is the Remote Valet Parking Assistant, an  early version of which has been showcased on the company’s i3 research  vehicle at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. It is designed to  work in both single- and multi-storey garages.
     
Controlled  by a specially-developed app downloaded onto a smartwatch being worn by  the disembarked driver, it combines scanning by on-vehicle lasers with a  site plan produced by the garage operator to create a virtual map of  the interior. This avoids the need for technologies such as GPS  positioning. 
     
 It then  uses the resulting locational information to effect the independent  navigation of the car into a bay, switch off the engine and lock it. The  research vehicle is equipped with the necessary on-board processing  units and algorithms to determine its precise location in a carpark and  monitor the surrounding environment.
     
The  ultimate scenario envisaged in this, and similar, initiatives is that  of a driver being able to pull up at the entrance to a parking garage,  activate a smartphone or smartwatch app, and then send the unoccupied  car in and onward. Guided by its on-board sensors, it would move around a  multi-storey building, floor-by-floor and fully autonomously, until it  detected a free space in which to park.
 
It would brake automatically on detecting a hazard. The driver would reverse the procedure for retrieval.  
     
Communication   with the vehicle could be via wireless links embedded in the parking   garage infrastructure, which BMW believes would not need expensive   modifications. The company has yet to publish a timeframe for the   technology to be available in a production car. In the Hauts de France   region of northern France, which has a strong focus on transport   technology development, researchers at the Université de Valenciennes   are working within the SYstem For smart Road Applications (SYFRA)   project on a series of initiatives. The aim is to optimise the use of   parking facilities through more efficient allocation and reallocation of   bays, while - again -  minimising the impact on the infrastructure.  The  researchers are using the Université’s Jonas surface parking area  as a  test ground.
     
One  team is  exploring the potential for a V2V communications-based vacancy  alerting  system. This would enable a car that is leaving a space to  indicate,  automatically, the availability in real time to other  vehicles that are  arriving and thereby minimise the length of time  drivers are searching  and each bay is unoccupied.
     
Another   team is working with French technology company 
     
  
Industry views
As the available technologies grow more sophisticated, the global parking world is looking closely at the implications for its buildings. A spokesperson for German-based parking specialist“We are currently talking to several technology providers from outside the automotive sector who are offering us solutions that would cover any hardware needed for equipping the infrastructure, the software and the use of smartphone apps as interfaces with drivers. In the near future, we are planning trials to gather information on how different systems could work, as well as on their customer acceptability. We see strong potential, particularly in combination with the availability of pre-booking, for improving our overall customer service.”
 At   industry-wide level, the US National Parking  Association has yet to   publish guidance on the issue; though board  member Alex Israel, vice   president of company member 
     
He   foresees  congestion issues that will be not only internal - “though   these will  be resolvable over time”- but also external to garages. He   instances  numbers of future autonomous vehicles heading for the same   location.  
     
Again,  the   European Parking Association has yet to produce detailed policy    recommendations. But, in its ‘Parking 20:20’ vision document, the    British Parking Association, makes a specific commitment to collaborate    with developments and trials of autonomous and self-parking vehicles  to   enable ‘appropriate facilities’.
     
A    spokesperson elaborated to ITS International: “If a vehicle is being    programmed to carry out a minimum risk manoeuvre, it must be able to    identify a safe spot and understand parking terms and conditions.” She    agreed that providing somewhere safe for drivers and passengers to  stand   while the car parks itself could be complicated in a busy  garage.
     
Again,   despite  BMW’s confidence in minimal infrastructural impacts, the costs   of  adapting existing parking structures “may be vast, and cannot be    undertaken by operators immediately.” Finally, “it is essential that the    technology improves the parking environment and does not impair it –    for example, by causing congestion because of numbers of cars moving  at   very low speeds and stopping at identified hazards.”
     
On    the plus side, she saw projected innovations as enabling the denser    storage of vehicles and giving drivers the benefit of a more flexible,    on-demand system. But the BPA insists that the industry needs to be    involved in developments from the outset to ‘ensure the right policies    and products’. 
 
    
        
        
        
        



