Skip to main content

Finnish city sets up robotic vehicle trials 

Test area will allow autonomous vehicles to be tested without human intervention
By Ben Spencer October 29, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Finnish city is also assessing the possibility of using autonomous buses to the support Tampere Tramway (© Allexxandar | Dreamstime.com)

The Finnish city of Tampere is allowing companies and research institutes to trial smart transport and autonomous vehicles (AVs) in a test area of its Hervanta suburb.

The Smart Tampere programme describes the Hervanta test area as “a private cloud-based LTE network built by Nokia.”

The plan is to allow companies, higher education and research institutions to test smart city products and services that utilise 5G technology and to develop a strategic development programme that encourages carbon neutral mobility in the region. 

The test area will allow autonomous vehicles to be tested without human intervention, Smart Tampere adds.

It was established with a range of partners which include engineering consultancy Ramboll and the VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland.

It has been developed as part of a European Regional Development Fund Project called Smart City Test Area – Towards Level 4 Automated Transport.

Level 4 describes autonomous vehicles which are able to intervene themselves - rather than the driver doing it - if there is a systems failure.

Atte Riihelä, project manager at Ramboll Finland, says: “Our international benchmark study found four factors that support success: the region’s high level of expertise, public support, political will, and a transport environment suitable for testing. All of these factors are present in the case of the test area in Tampere.”

Aside from this initiative, Tampere is looking into the possibility of using autonomous buses to complement services offered by the Tampere Tramway.

The city's Hiedanranta district is already testing autonomous buses with the aim of becoming a carbon-neutral area.

Related Content

  • February 9, 2017
    PTV sets its sights on Smart City solutions
    Making a city smarter not only relies on understand technological opportunities but also human decision-making, as Miller Crockart explains. Cities are about people – a fact that can easily be forgotten when experts talk about roads, healthcare and education as though they are abstract and unconnected monoliths rather than things people use. Understanding how and why people use services is vital for making decisions on how they can be optimised for maximum efficiency across inter-connected networks that for
  • September 19, 2019
    5G smart light poles extend from Nokia campus
    A collaboration led by Nokia Bells is extending smart poles beyond the LuxTurrim5G project in the Finnish city of Espoo to a nearby residential area called Kera. The LuxTurrim5G project seeks to develop and demonstrate a fast 5G network based on smart light poles at Nokia’s campus. The new smart poles will support Sensible4’s autonomous bus Gatcha operating between this area and Kerra railway station. Juha Salmelin, LuxTurrim5G project coordinator from Nokia, says: “During the project, we have learned a
  • May 31, 2022
    5G-Routes seeks cross-border connections
    European CAM initiative test cases include VRU alerts and truck platooning in Latvia
  • July 16, 2021
    Bringing the Internet of Mobility to life
    As we chart our route to the ITS World Congress in Hamburg, a recent Ertico-ITS Europe webinar explored the future of connectivity including policy, infrastructure and security