Skip to main content

C/AVs could mean cheaper roads

The safety benefits of C/AVs have long been promoted – but research suggests they should also contribute to cheaper roads. David Crawford investigates the potential benefits in infrastructure costs Building narrower freeway lanes to accommodate the enhanced route-tracking capabilities of connected and autonomous vehicles (C/AVs), running in platoon conditions, could result in cost savings of £0.5 million (€0.56 million or US$6.5 million) for every km of road length built. Such benefits could be secur
October 28, 2019 Read time: 6 mins
Building narrower freeway lanes for C/AVs, running in platoons, could result in cost savings, experts suggest © Kittiphat Abhiratvorakul | Dreamstime.com
The safety benefits of C/AVs have long been promoted – but research suggests they should also contribute to cheaper roads. David Crawford investigates the potential benefits in infrastructure costs


Building narrower freeway lanes to accommodate the enhanced route-tracking capabilities of connected and autonomous vehicles

(C/AVs), running in platoon conditions, could result in cost savings of £0.5 million (€0.56 million or US$6.5 million) for every km of road length built. Such benefits could be secured without any serious loss in the level of service available to road users as a whole.

These are among the key findings of a new study by the UK University of Southampton’s Transportation Research Group (TRG), reported at the July 2019 annual conference in Leeds of the Universities’ Transport Study Group (UTSG). It finds the current national highway cross-section standard ‘too conservative’ - particularly in terms of lane widths, which have to include an allowance for the lateral inaccuracies inherent in human-controlled driving.

There would also be important gains in safety, fuel economy and reduced CO2 emissions, according to lead researcher Hameed Jehanfo, a qualified civil engineer. Earlier studies in the field of C/AV highway provision have been based on existing design standards, or on roads built without taking into account vehicles’ close route- tracking capabilities.

The challenge was to fill this gap, by developing a specification for a new type of lane that would deliver worthwhile economies. To pave the way for this, Jehanfo took the example of a standard, 16.48m long, 2.55m wide European articulated truck as presenting “the most onerous vehicle space demands”. He then used data from wheel odometry-based 3D Lidar, inertial measurements and a GPS-based locating unit to identify the additional space allowance that would be needed to cope with the minor tracking deviations that such a vehicle would inevitably make.


Increased margin

The results showed the need for a margin of 10cm on either side of it, a figure then rounded up to generate an overall 2.80m width requirement for outer (nearside) dedicated C/AV lanes running alongside inner ones still conforming to the 3.65m standard (which already includes an allowance for the lateral inaccuracies of human-controlled driving).  

The search for a real-life illustrative case study of the cost implications identified a 22km section of the planned Lower Thames Crossing, east of London, a freeway-standard link due to open in 2027 to relieve increasing pressure on an existing upstream river crossing. Earlier feasibility studies had identified the impracticability of widening this to accommodate a growing traffic load, much of it international.

The designated route of the new crossing includes provision for a number of horizontal and vertical lane centreline alignments, weaving sections, cuttings, embankments and bridges – all of these features adequately representative of the physical characteristics of typical existing freeways. This made it ideal, Jehanfo told ITS International, to support the central aim of the study in demonstrating the beneficial cost impacts of an alternative, “less onerous” geometric design. National road operator 8101 Highways England (HE) had already expressed a strong interest in future- proofing the crossing for C/AVs from the outset.

To derive the hoped-for economies, the study then applied standard construction-industry bills of quantities techniques to calculate the materials, plant, labour and time-cost elements of contracts for building out both the standard and the C/AV-friendly versions. It used detailed engineering design drawings that HE had produced for use in a 2018 public consultation. The results appear in Table 1 (see opposite page).

 

Achieving savings

Further investigation has also made it possible to derive the prospects of achieving a 122 tonne savings in CO2 emissions over 10 years, with beneficial implications for the greenhouse gas issue. The European Union (EU) has formally identified C/AV use as a key element in governmental efforts to slow the rate of climate change, stressing its beneficial effects in delivering higher transport system efficiency.

As the Southampton research reports, US studies of platoons in which HGVs are running at short headways have shown important reductions in aerodynamic drag, a major contributor to fuel consumption, leading eventually to decreased emissions. Another beneficial effect is that platoon convoy speeds vary much less than those of normal traffic, by enabling vehicles moving at 1.4 second time gaps to move at optimal engine and fuel consumption speeds. On safety, the study goes on to identify the scope for accident savings worth £10.8 million over 10 years on the same 22km stretch of road (see Table 2, below).

At the same time, it warns of the need for more work to establish the extent to which the widespread introduction of C/AVs could introduce new safety risks. Junction design, for example, with the need to manage merging/diverging and C/AV and manual traffic flows, needs to be studied in detail. There are also plans for additional engineering work involving visibility assessments and road restraint requirements to determine the extent to which these are influenced by reduced human input.

Another issue concerns the impact, on the forecast gains, of the costs of installing and operating the necessary supporting roadside infrastructure – an issue that the TRG is dealing with via a programme of expert interviews. Already in the planning stage is the development of a simulation model, using commercially available software, to enable the assessment of the impact of the proposed C/AV road design on varying traffic levels. The hoped-for result is a decision-supporting kit.

Primary mode in US?

A study of the passenger car C/AV sector, carried out in the US within Ohio University’s Future Of Driving programme, sees driverless vehicles becoming ‘the primary mode’ of personal transport in the country by 2050, and making huge inroads into the US$160bn annual cost of traffic congestion. But, chiming with the Southampton initiative, it warns that their ability safely to share roads with human-driven traffic will need greater flexibility than current highway designs are allowing for.

Benefits that it predicts include reductions in urban traffic pressures thanks to the vehicles’ ability ‘objectively’ to pick the best routes, using modern computing techniques and accurate and up-to-date traffic flow and incident data to gain commuters in metropolitan areas nearly an hour a day in productive time. In New York’s Manhattan central business district, it suggests that a pool of 9,000 driverless cars could replace the current 13,000-strong taxi fleet (at the expense, of course, of the ousted cab drivers’ livelihoods).

In the process, the waiting time for a cab - once summoned - would fall from the typical current average of five minutes to just over half a minute; while the cost of the subsequent journey would drop to €3.125 per km (US$5 per mile).  In terms of urban land take, an automated car would be able safely to manoeuvre in and out of parking bays that were 15% narrower than those of today. But the costs of acquiring such a vehicle, the university warns. will remain a deterrent while the current price of a Google-equipped car, if it were commercially available, would be around US$150,000.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • In-vehicle automation of safety compliance and other traffic violations
    January 24, 2012
    David Crawford explores new initiatives in enforcement. Achieving the EU’s new road safety target of reducing road traffic deaths by 50 per cent by 2020 depends on removing legal and institutional barriers to the deployment of new enforcement technologies, stresses Jan Malenstein. The senior ITS Adviser to Dutch National Police Agency the KLPD, and a European-level spokesperson on road and traffic safety, points to the importance of, among other requirements, an effective EUwide type approval process for fr
  • Keeping people on track is RATP’s raison d’etre
    June 14, 2018
    In Paris, RATP Group’s autonomous Metro Line 1 is carrying 750,000 people a day across the city. Ben Spencer is invited into the control room to take a look at how the system works Paris is visited by millions of tourists each year, keen to see for themselves stunning attractions such as the Eiffel Tower, Arc de Triomphe, Notre-Dame, the Louvre, the Seine and all the rest. But while the best-known sites of the City of Light tend to be on the surface, there is a lot going on below those iconic grand boule
  • The UK’s busiest crossing adopts free flow charging
    April 30, 2015
    Colin Sowman looks at the transition to free-flow charging on the Dartford Crossing, a notorious congestion blackspot on the UK motorway network. The Dartford Crossing, where London’s orbital M25 motorway crosses the lower reaches of the River Thames 32km (20 miles) to the east of Central London, has long been a major source of congestion. Now, to alleviate the congestion caused by some 50 million crossings per year, the Highways Agency has adopted a free-flow charging system - but the Crossing’s location a
  • ITSA’s Shailen Bhatt looks to the future
    March 6, 2018
    The new boss of ITS America is fizzing with ideas. Shailen Bhatt talks to Adam Hill about the need to rebrand the ITS industry, how technology can leverage tax dollars – and where the Star Wars universe fits in to his philosophy. Shailen Bhatt has a big job on his hands. The CEO and president of the Intelligent Transportation Society of America is the second to hold the post in two years following the resignation last July of his predecessor Regina Hopper. It has not been the easiest time for the