Skip to main content

EasyMile resorts to AVs in Belgium

Company will provide unmanned shuttle service at Terhills complex in Flanders
By Adam Hill October 14, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Leisurely pace: the EasyMile AVs will replace a conventional bus service (© LRM)

Autonomous vehicle (AV) specialist EasyMile has won a project which could be worth €4 million for a fleet of fully-driverless autonomous shuttles to run at a Belgian tourist site, seven hours a day, four days a week.

The free-to-use shuttles will run on a 14km route without a human supervisor at a maximum speed of 20km/h from Monday to Friday from 9am - 4pm at the Terhills complex in Flanders, which comprises a hotel and resort.

“We will collect user data and feedback from users to substantiate the business case," says Tim De Ceunynck, project manager mobility at LRM, which owns Terhills.

"We expect the system to be competitive with a classic manned bus." A decision is expected in summer 2023.

The AVs replace an electric bus on the site "that suffers a low frequency, and isn't being used enough".

The service connects the old town of Kelheim with the Donaupark commercial area and serves a road network of almost 14 km in length. The vehicles will travel at a maximum speed of 20 km/h. Rides in the autonomous vehicles will be free. 

Waiting time for passengers at the various stops will be a maximum of 10 minutes, EasyMile says, and this can be expanded to half a dozen shuttles, serving each stop  every four minutes during the busiest hours of the day.

The service employs a smart fleet management and booking tool developed by Belgian company Ush, which belongs to the Lab Box start-up studio supported by D'Ieteren Automotive, which has been part of all autonomous shuttles deployments on public roads in Belgium.

Tom Vanham, general manager at LRM, insists: “For us, the shuttle system is not just a short-lived demonstration project, but an essential part of a complex mobility puzzle.”

Benoit Perrin, general manager of EasyMile, concludes: “The longevity and commercial nature of this service is a real tipping point for the viability of autonomous shuttles, and mobility overall."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Singapore ventures into AV technology
    August 29, 2014
    A new partnership, the Singapore Autonomous Vehicle Initiative (SAVI), announced by the Singapore government, together with the Land Transport Authority (LTA) and Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) will jointly oversee the setting up of a technology platform to spur research and development as well as the testing of autonomous vehicle (AV) technology, applications and solutions. A Committee on Autonomous Road Transport for Singapore (CARTS) will also be formed to chart the strategic dir
  • Transdev trials AVs on open roads in Montreal
    July 17, 2019
    Transdev is trialling two EasyMile autonomous shuttles in daily traffic conditions in Montreal, Canada, until 4 August. Arthur Nicolet, chief executive officer of Transdev Canada, says: “Each step of this deployment allows us to address technological challenges, as well as to test consumer acceptance of these new modes of transport.” Transdev says the shuttle will cross intersections equipped with intelligent traffic signals with which they will communicate, thereby providing a service between Olympi
  • Cash for Southern Nevada bus rapid transit
    April 25, 2024
    Maryland Parkway Bus project received $150m from the US government
  • CES 2023: Innoviz lights up Loxo
    January 4, 2023
    Electric AV delivery specialist Loxo plans to use InnovizOne Lidar sensor in vehicles