Skip to main content

Motability gives grant to TRL and RiDC for accessibility research

Focus is development of accessible automated transport for people with disabilities
By Adam Hill October 31, 2023 Read time: 3 mins
A Research Institute for Disabled Consumers panel member uses his car

Disability charity the Motability Foundation has awarded a research grant to develop accessible automated transport to Transport Research Foundation (parent company  of TRL) and Research Institute for Disabled Consumers (RiDC).

The research is designed to "understand the needs, perceptions and challenges faced by people with disabilities" in this area of transportation.

RiDC carries out practical evaluation of the accessibility and usability of transport services and modes including buses, taxis, and cars, as well as assistance needs and digital interfaces for passengers with various impairments and assistive technology. Thus the organisation will "ensure robust end-user engagement in the research".

Lisa Jones, director of charitable operations at the Motability Foundation, said the grant would "bring the voice of disabled people into the thinking on automated transport and ensure truly accessible solutions to the future of transport".

Key issues include disabled peoples’ perceptions of new forms of mobility, the challenges faced by disabled people in interacting with new automated transport technologies, and the potential benefits they offer.

The project will present examples of good practice and identify the requirements necessary to deliver the benefits of automation to all disabled people.  

“An array of innovations are emerging which are set to reinvent how we transport people and goods, such as driverless or remotely-operated passenger shuttles, fully- and partially-automated cars, buses and trucks – covering an array of use cases, technological maturities, benefits and challenges,” says Dr George Beard, head of new mobility at TRL. 

"One of the key potential benefits of automation – alongside safer, cleaner journeys – is to enable people who might previously have been excluded to travel or access goods or services in new ways. To best achieve that, accessibility has to be considered from the outset and that is what we’re aiming to achieve with this work”.  

Gordon McCullough, CEO at RiDC, says disabled people are "left behind when new innovations are developed, and we have seen this happen time and again with transport". 

He described the fact that disabled people are being consulted at the beginning of this design process for automated transport as "hugely encouraging".

The first part of the new research will be an evidence review, followed by engagement with charities and user focus groups and an end user survey using the RiDC Consumer Panel of 4,000 members to collect broader data.

The final part will be a series of usability and accessibility trials for disabled participants to evaluate the design of new tech.

TRL and RiDC will also "make use of their connections with existing automated vehicle trials that are running across the UK during the same period".

TRL says it hopes to invite disabled people to participate in trials at its London testbed, the Smart Mobility Living Lab (SMLL).

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Barcelona Innova Lab invites €200,000 sound judgments
    March 7, 2025
    24 March deadline for latest in Spanish city's mobility challenges
  • Public invited to take part in Greenwich driverless pod trial
    March 9, 2018
    Members of the public are invited to trial a fleet of driverless pods operating on a 3.4km route around Greenwich Peninsula as part of the £100m ($139m) Gateway project’s final phase. The pilot aims to understand the public acceptance of, and attitudes towards, driverless vehicles. The four pods will use advanced sensors and autonomy software to detect and avoid obstacles while carrying passengers. The vehicles, developed by Westfield Sportscars and Heathrow Enterprises, have no steering wheels or typical
  • Governments must look beyond short-term spending of public funds
    February 2, 2012
    Phil Pettitt, Chief Executive of innovITS, the UK's ITS Centre of Excellence, argues that governments need to look beyond the short-term when looking to pump-prime economic recovery with public funds. It seems, in the current economic climate, that a 'good' day is one in which no company is announcing job cuts or going into administration. Consumer demand is down and businesses are retrenching, cutting costs and fretting over the consequences of shrinking opportunities and order books. It has not been this
  • Timing is everything for EV charging
    January 23, 2020
    Electric vehicles are often promoted as a more sustainable alternative to diesel and petrol cars - but their arrival raises concerns about the strain which charging will put on the grid.