Skip to main content

Three driverless shuttles for Sunderland's roads this spring

UK city has partnered with Aurrigo, Angoka, Stagecoach and CCAV for deployment
By Adam Hill March 21, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Welcome to Sunderland: driverless transportation on the horizon

The UK city of Sunderland is to introduce three driverless shuttles on public roads in spring this year.

Sunderland Advanced Mobility Shuttle (Sams) is one of six successful CAM Deployment UK projects from the Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (CCAV) Deployment competition. 

It has been awarded £3m by the government, matched by industry to a total of £6m, as part of the CCAV’s Connected and Automated Mobility programme which is supported by Innovate UK and Zenzic.

Sunderland City Council's initiative is in partnership with Aurrigo, Stagecoach, Angoka, Newcastle University, Swansea University and Boldyn Networks.

Designed by Aurrigo, the zero-emission vehicles will run with an attendant on board, transporting passengers between Sunderland Interchange, the University of Sunderland City Campus and the Sunderland Royal Hospital. 

One aim of the project is to develop and demonstrate a cyber secure remote supervision protocol - an important step towards commercial deployment.

The shuttle will run along an intelligent transport corridor, enabled by 5G small cells which are being installed by Boldyn Networks.

Training of on-board attendants begins in April, while preparations to map the shuttles' routes are also underway.

Patrick Melia, chief executive at Sunderland City Council, says the city is heading "towards a more connected and sustainable future".

Richard Fairchild, chief operations officer at Aurrigo, says Sunderland "is poised to emerge as a trailblazer in the realm of self-driving transportation, setting a precedent for other cities to follow in the quest for smarter, more efficient mobility solutions".

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK city pilots I2V technology
    April 27, 2015
    New technology which communicates between traffic signals and motorists to help the way they drive is being rolled out across Newcastle as part of a joint cooperative project with Siemens. In the first pilot of its kind in the UK, the system links an in-vehicle communication system directly with the city’s urban traffic management centre (UTMC), the infrastructure will ‘communicate’ directly with motorists, giving certain vehicles priority at junctions. Initially, the system has been fitted to non-emerge
  • Partnership offers electric shuttle services for campus transportation
    March 15, 2017
    Car-sharing and ridesharing services provider RideCell is to partner with Auro Robotics, maker of driverless zero-emission shuttles to deliver autonomous transportation solutions to universities and corporate campuses. RideCell also provides a fleet management infrastructure that enables Auro to maintain its autonomous fleets across multiple university and corporate customers. The RideCell mobility platform allows students and faculty to request a shuttle on demand, and also provides important benefits f
  • PTV helps drive Essen’s Como project
    April 22, 2024
    Digital traffic control centre will aggregate all relevant traffic data in German city
  • Connecticut public transit buses to go Robotic
    June 30, 2020
    Service will be first in US to run automated buses on a fare-paying route