Skip to main content

AV ride-pooling in Hamburg by 2025

VW, Moia and Argo AI's plan is important piece of future mobility 'puzzle', says German city
By Adam Hill September 17, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
VW's autonomous ID. Buzz AD vehicle will be at the heart of the new service (image credit:

Plans have been presented for Europe's first autonomous ride-pooling project, set to go live in Hamburg, Germany, by 2025.

The companies behind it - Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles (VWN), VW subsidiary Moia and Argo AI - laid out their blueprint for the service and revealed the prototype of VW's autonomous ID. Buzz AD vehicle, for which Argo AI developed the self-driving system.

The service is planned to run in the Hamburg districts of Winterhude, Uhlenhorst and Hohenfelde; Argo AI will start surveying the test area towards the end of the year.

Argo test vehicles will drive through the city in manual mode and record the road infrastructure and local traffic regulations in the test area, including location and distances of traffic lights, cycle paths and signage. 

Test drives with and without passengers will follow, prior to public operation.

“For Moia as a mobility service and fleet operator, autonomous driving is an important part of our business model," said CEO Robert Henrich.

"Cities all over the world want to make their traffic more efficient and more climate-friendly. Autonomous ride-pooling can improve urban mobility, increase road safety and thus make cities more livable places." 

The project "underlines the strategic change from an automobile manufacturer to a world-leading, software-driven mobility provider", says Christian Senger, head of autonomous driving at VWN.

“We have extensive experience in fleet operations," says Henrich. "Now we are automating the processes in the service, such as the interaction between driver and passengers, and the fleet management."

Hamburg is the host of next month's ITS World Congress.

Dr. Anjes Tjarks, the city's senator for transport and mobility change, welcomed the pilot project and said: “We want to make Hamburg Europe's digital model city in the transport sector."

"From my point of view, autonomous driving has huge potential, especially in the areas of ride-pooling and sharing. As the city of Hamburg, it is our declared goal to bring local transport to the area. If we tackle it properly together, the self-driving Moia can become a very important piece of the puzzle."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Peachtree trials smart traffic signal app
    March 4, 2022
    TravelSafely provides audible warnings to drivers about potential red-light running
  • VW switches to Qualcomm
    May 9, 2022
    System-on-chips will be used to help in providing assisted and automated driving
  • Willers brings Mobi shuttles to Singapore
    January 14, 2022
    Mobi uses Swat's AI technology, with optimal routing capability
  • Ohio cities sign up for AV testing
    December 7, 2018
    Marysville has become the latest urban area to join DriveOhio’s programme to test connected and autonomous vehicles (C/AVs). The suburb of Ohio state capital Columbus has plans to equip 1,200 vehicles with on-board units as part of the AV pilot created earlier this year by state governor John Kasich. Columbus itself has just been the recipient of a smart cities award for its ITS programmes and is among several cities to have signed up already to DriveOhio, along with Athens and Dublin. “Self-drivi