Skip to main content

Audi C-V2X tech to improve school safety

Georgia deployment to gain insight over distance needed around school zones and buses
By Ben Spencer April 8, 2021 Read time: 3 mins
Deployment will involve a Blue Bird school bus and an Audi SUV (image credit: Stephen Averett on behalf of Audi of America)

Audi of America has joined a collaboration to deploy Cellular Vehicle to Everything (C-V2X) technology to reduce vehicle hazards in the Fulton County School District in Georgia.

The automaker is working with Blue Bird, Applied Information, Temple and the Fulton County School System to demonstrate technologies that could help prevent accidents within school zones and when children are being picked up or dropped off at their bus stop. 

The partners are hoping to gain insights about the distance needed around school zones and buses to ensure the safety of children in a continuing effort to reduce accidents and fatalities. 

Figures from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reveal there were nearly 6,300 pedestrian fatalities in the US in 2018. Additional data shows on average approximately 131 children were killed and around 25,000 injured each year walking to and from school. 

Audi believes C-V2X can provide significant safety benefits to alleviate traffic risks facing vulnerable road users. 

The company points out stop-arm violations continue to be a danger to school children – when a driver speeds up or fails to stop when a school bus is flashing its red signal lights and extending its stop sign.

Trevor Rudderham, senior vice president product planning at Blue Bird, says: “This technology can help prevent accidents during student pick-up and drop-off, which is when students are most at risk. While more stringent stop-arm laws and even camera systems help bring awareness to school buses, C-V2X could be programmed to warn drivers of upcoming school bus stops.” 

Audi says C-V2X technologies use both direct (PC5) and indirect (Uu) low-latency cellular signals to communicate where people and vehicle sensors cannot always see, such as over hills or around curves or other vehicles.

This technology is scheduled for deployment in the district this Spring using a Blue Bird propane-powered school bus and an Audi e-sctron Sportsback electric sports utility vehicle (SUV).

An initial application from the programme is expected to warn drivers when they are approaching an active school safety zone or are exceeding the speed limit when children are present via instrument displays and audio alerts. 

When active, roadside units installed in flashing signs called school zone safety beacons will broadcast messages to development vehicles indicating the location of the school and the reduced speed limit. 

This deployment is aimed at alerting drivers to the changes in speed limit as school times change due to circumstances, such as half school days and early dismissals for weather. 

A second application will warn drivers when they are approaching a school bus stopped to pick-up or drop-off students.

Onboard units will broadcast C-V2X safety messages from school buses to C-V2X-equipped vehicles when the bus stop arm is extended to indicate no passing is allowed. The project is anticipated to be completed in the first half of 2021. 

The C-V2X technology was co-developed by the Volkswagen Group Innovation and Engineering Center in Belmont, California, and the Infrastructure Automotive Technology Laboratory. 


 

Related Content

  • ITS homes in on cycling safety
    April 9, 2014
    A new generation of ITS equipment is helping road authorities get to grips with cycle safety – and not a moment too soon as Colin Sowman discovers. Cyclists - remember them? Apparently not. At least not according to the OECD 2013 report Cycling, Health and Safety which contains the statement: ‘Cyclists are often forgotten in the design of the road traffic system’. Looking through the statistics that exist (each country appears to compile them differently) it is not difficult to see how such a conclusion cou
  • San Francisco addresses unsafe vehicle speeds
    July 7, 2021
    Quick-build projects are in Tenderloin district where pedestrians are frequently hit
  • Swarco underscores Scotland speed limit 
    June 23, 2021
    Swarco says VAS can provide information on traffic volumes and speeds
  • Deaths of US pedestrians rise sharply, says GHSA report
    April 2, 2019
    Pedestrian deaths across the US have risen to their highest number in nearly 30 years. Many factors are responsible - including the rise and rise of SUVs - according to a worrying new GHSA report ore pedestrians died on US roads last year than in any year since 1990. The Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA) suggests that 6,227 pedestrians were killed in 2018 – a 4% increase on 2017. Pedestrian deaths as a percentage of total motor vehicle crash deaths increased from 12% in 2008 to 16% in 2017, whi