Skip to main content

Florida AV project takes new turn

Yunex and Florida DoT make headway in university driverless shuttle initiative
By Adam Hill June 28, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Yunex RSU2X's were fitted to infrastructure to better guide Transdev EasyMile AVs (image credit: Yunex Traffic)

Yunex Traffic, Florida DoT, and the University of Florida Transportation Institute are working together on an autonomous vehicle (AV) project on the university's Gainesville campus.

Two Transdev EasyMile driverless shuttles ferry students around and are now able to make left and right turns, as well as stop and go in coordination with traffic signals.

The vehicles are fitted with Yunex on-board units (OBUs) which interact with roadside units (RSUs) mounted on traffic signal poles or mast arms. 

Florida DoT funds the initiative, known as the Trapezium Project, which also includes the university's I-Street Living Lab and Gainesville’s regional transit system.

Iouri Nemirovski, Yunex's product manager for the RSU2X, says: “This is a tremendous example of smart city operations."

“At Yunex, we believe technology should work for people and not the other way around. Giving students and faculty an efficient, safe and environmentally friendly mobility option hits all of our pillars, and we’re very proud to be part of this effort.”
 
The shuttle programme grew out of Florida DoT research to deploy 71 Yunex OBUs in university and City of Gainesville vehicles, designed to interact with Yunex RSUs deployed in and near the campus.

Yunex also provided its proprietary Sitraffic Concert advanced traffic management system, and operational support, and subcontracted road safety firm Brandmotion to install the equipment.
 
Yunex says the results were positive, with drivers reporting "much greater situational awareness and a high interaction rate between their OBUs and RSUs throughout campus".

Sanjay Ranka, professor at the university’s Department of Computer & Information Science & Engineering, said of the project: “Our long-term objective is to leverage big data analytics and artificial intelligence to use the information collected for both improving safety and traffic operations.” 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Here are the ITS America Awards finalists
    December 7, 2021
    The Best of ITS and Best of Mobility on Demand (MOD) finalists have been selected by a distinguished panel and now the winners will be judged LIVE - by you, the attendees!
  • New EU project to develop an 'internet of mobility'
    February 6, 2013
    Over the next three and a half years, the US$21.1 million Mobinet project aims to capitalise on the widespread growth in smartphones, mobile data services, and cloud-based computing to launch a new generation of travel apps for European citizens, and transport services for businesses and local authorities. Intelligent transport services (ITS) apply leading-edge mobile communications and information technology to make travel safer, smarter and cleaner, but the challenge is to deploy these Europe-wide and to
  • Whitney Nottage: "Everyone in our industry should be advocates for ITS!"
    May 14, 2025
    Q-Free’s Whitney Nottage talks to Adam Hill about the importance of getting youngsters enthused about engineering – and about how the ITS sector could do with more collaboration
  • Ford Opens new Silicon Valley research centre
    January 26, 2015
    Ford’s newly opened Research and Innovation Center Palo Alto, US, will drive the company’s innovation in connectivity, mobility, autonomous vehicles, customer experience and big data, it says. The new research centre will continue the company’s work on autonomous vehicles, including ongoing work with University of Michigan and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It will also expand collaboration with Stanford University that started in 2013 and will contribute a Fusion autonomous research vehicle to t