Skip to main content

Hungary’s $159m AV test track gears up

Construction of the Zalazone project started in 2017 and is on schedule
By David Arminas June 1, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Hungary's AV track will contain a city zone (© Thodonal | Dreamstime.com)

The second phase of Hungary’s 265-hectare autonomous vehicle (AV) Zalazone test track is nearing completion, according to the country’s minister of innovation.

Laszlo Palkovics said the $159 million project, which started in 2017, is on schedule and progressing in three phases. 

The track is near Zalaegerszeg, around 180km south-west of Budapest.

Phase one involved setting up basic elements such a braking platform, a vehicle handling course and a typical country road layout. 

The braking platform is designed to carry out ABS, ATC and ESP tests along eight types of surfaces and watering systems and also allows for high-speed platooning tests.

Phase one also saw the start of the smart city area to provide realistic traffic circumstances in a closed area.

The second phase, now nearing completion, includes a high-speed oval, bad roads and slopes and additional aspects of the smart city.

Phase three will be development from 2022 onwards, according to the organisation’s website. 

It will add more more types of lanes, surfaces and road geometry, with different types of building and facades placed next to the street grid.

Budapest University of Technology, University of Pannonia and Széchenyi Istvány University do much of their vehicular and transportation research at Zalazone.
 

Related Content

  • Data crunching ‘can prevent cars crashing’
    March 25, 2013
    Having already cut traffic collisions resulting in injuries and deaths by nearly forty per cent in five years by analysing patterns from data it has collected, the city of Edmonton, Canada, is using predictive technologies to increase road safety even more. The city’s Office of Traffic Safety (OTS) has installed as many as 200 digital signs as just one element of an innovative traffic safety program that has dramatically reduced vehicle collisions in the Edmonton region since OTS launched in late 2006. Unde
  • Fabulos robo-buses hit European streets
    June 5, 2020
    EU-backed AV scheme aims to solve urban first-/last-mile problems
  • New Port Mann Bridge opens to eight lanes of traffic
    December 6, 2012
    Canada’s British Columbia (BC) government is delivering on its commitment to reduce congestion along the province’s busiest transportation corridor, with the opening of the new Port Mann Bridge to eight lanes of traffic, which cuts commute times and allows for the first regular transit service across the bridge in twenty-five years. This is the largest transportation project in BC history and completes the first and largest phase of the Port Mann/Highway 1 Improvement Project, which includes highway widenin
  • Looking both ways for speeding vehicles
    June 9, 2015
    Single-camera bi-directional speed enforcement can reduce the cost of enforcing speeding on two-way roads without repositioning the camera. Truvelo has received UK type-approval for a simultaneous bi-directional (SBD) enforcement camera, the D-Cam P digital, which can capture speeding motorist both those travelling towards and away from the camera. It is also in the process of carrying out the first installations of the D-Cam P in the UK.