Skip to main content

$7.5m FHWA grant to establish new mobility centre at UCLA

Center of Excellence on New Mobility and Automated Vehicles launches in November
By Adam Hill October 20, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) administrator Shailen Bhatt (centre) joined by the Mobility Center of Excellence director and UCLA engineering associate professor Jiaqi Ma (right) and FHWA Enabling Technologies Program manager Danielle Chou (left) at the announcement event in Anaheim, California (image: Zhaoliang Zheng | UCLA)

The US Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) has awarded a five-year, $7.5 million grant to establish the Center of Excellence on New Mobility and Automated Vehicles at UCLA. 

Set to launch next month, it will be known as the Mobility Center of Excellence and will assess the anticipated long-term impact of increased new mobility technologies and services on transportation systems including resilience, security and reliability, as well as what these new developments will mean for equitable access to mobility and job participation.

The money comes from the 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (Infrastructure Investment and Job Act) and the centre will publish research "to empower state and local governments, metropolitan planning organisations and commercial operators to make informed decisions that will benefit the public".

“The safety of the nation’s transportation system is our top priority,” said Shailen Bhatt, FHWA administrator. “The Mobility Center of Excellence will seek to understand how new multimodal surface transportation technologies can be used to improve efficiency, mobility and sustainability.”

The announcement came at ITS California’s annual meeting in Anaheim, California.

Alissa Park, the Ronald and Valerie Sugar Dean of the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering, where the centre will be based, says: “We look forward to collaborating with the agency and other partnering organisations to conduct research designed to understand how emerging mobility technologies will affect transportation networks, land use and workforce development.”

“Digital connectivity, automation and electrification have dramatically changed the way we transport, both in terms of how people travel and how goods are delivered,” said the centre's director Jiaqi Ma, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at UCLA Samueli and associate director of the UCLA Institute of Transportation Studies.

The work will include researchers from UCLA Samueli, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, University of Alabama and National Renewable Energy Laboratory, as well as nonprofits Shared-Use Mobility Center in Chicago and MetroLab Network in Washington, DC.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Gearing up for IntelliDrive cooperative traffic management
    February 1, 2012
    Beginning in the first quarter of 2010 it became evident that the IntelliDrivesm programme direction had been reestablished, by the USDOT's ITS Joint Program Office (JPO), after being adrift for a few years. The programme was now moving toward a deployment future and with a much broader stakeholder involvement than it had exhibited previously. By today not only is it evident that the programme was reestablished with a renewed emphasis on deployment, it is also apparent that it is moving along at a faster pa
  • Dynamic charging boosts electric vehicles’ potential
    December 16, 2014
    With an increasing need to use electric vehicles in city centres to reduce pollution, David Crawford looks at various solutions to power delivery. The UN’s September 2014 Climate Summit has added fresh momentum to the drive to increase urban electric vehicle (EV) takeup. It has launched the Urban Electric Mobility Initiative, which wants to see EVs accounting for 30% of all urban travel by 2030, and make cities worldwide more friendly to their use. Encouragingly, the plan is being well supported by commerci
  • ITS America applauds passing of FAST Act
    December 7, 2015
    The US House of Representatives has approved the Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (FAST) Act, five-year legislation to improve America’s roads, bridges, public transit, and rail transportation systems and reform federal surface transportation programs. Among the FAST Act provisions are: US$100 million per year for intelligent transportation systems (ITS) research; Creation of a new US$60 million per year Advanced Transportation and Congestion Management Technologies Deployment Program designed to
  • Masdar Institute and Abu Dhabi Department of Transport sign MoU
    December 24, 2012
    Abu Dhabi's Department of Transport (DoT) and Masdar Institute of Science and Technology, an independent, research-driven graduate-level university focused on advanced energy and sustainable technologies, has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to establish a collaborative partnership on exchange of information in transportation. The MoU will enable the sharing of information on Abu Dhabi's public transport systems and basic traffic data to be used by Masdar Institute for a research project. The proj