Skip to main content

UK begins work on 300km C/AV trial route

New venture is major addition to CAM Testbed UK
By Adam Hill May 19, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
C/AVs will eventually be trialled on 350km of UK West Midlands roads (© Zenzic)

More than 300km of roads in the West Midlands region of England are to be used to trial connected and autonomous vehicles (C/AVs).

Work has begun on phase one of the Midlands Future Mobility route, which will extend from Coventry to Birmingham, linking key mobility hubs such as Birmingham International Airport and the new HS2 high speed rail interchange in the city.

The route will be extended later this year to 350km and will be a mixture of urban, rural and suburban roads as well as highways, using smart CCTV, weather stations, communications units and GPS.

The project is backed by a consortium including WMG (an academic department at the University of Warwick), Mira, Transport for West Midlands (TfWM), Costain, Amey, Wireless Infrastructure Group, Vodafone, Coventry University and Highways England.

AVs are estimated to be worth up to £62 billion to the UK economy by 2030. Midlands Future Mobility is part of CAM Testbed UK, which comprises six core facilities to test C/AVs, funded by the Centre for C/AVs and coordinated by Zenzic.

Costain and contractor Siemens Mobility have begun work on the Midlands route, which will officially open for trials later this year. 

The partners insist there will be no disruption to drivers or homeowners, as the new route “uses existing road infrastructure 95% of the time”.

The first phase – which will initially be trialling connected vehicles - includes the University of Warwick, the Coventry ring road, and roads in Meriden, Solihull and central Birmingham around the Jewellery Quarter.

The route runs from Coventry to Birmingham (© TfWM)
The new route runs from Coventry to Birmingham (© TfWM)

John Fox, Midlands Future Mobility project director, says: “The West Midlands has a rich history of the automotive industry, and to see it is now progressing into AVs feels somewhat momentous.”

Wilke Reints, MD of intelligent traffic systems for Siemens Mobility in the UK, says the project “allows us collectively to demonstrate how smart technology enables vehicles to be connected via high-speed, high-capacity wireless infrastructure across a whole road network”.

Related Content

  • March 13, 2024
    Intertraffic Amsterdam 2024: From innovation to implementation
    Since 1972, Intertraffic has been focused on innovation and implementation in ITS: and in this year’s packed programme the emphasis is on smart, safe and sustainable mobility for all
  • August 21, 2013
    Hi-tech road surface scanner surveys West Midlands highways
    The condition of highways in the UK’s West Midlands is to be surveyed using the latest vehicle-based technology from Yotta DCL under a contract awarded by the consortium of West Midlands Local Authorities. The highway technology and surveying company will use its new Tempest survey vehicle to capture road surface condition and forward facing video across the region’s road network, plus pavement images at normal traffic speeds. Yotta DCL will survey a total of 1250 km of roads under the terms of the co
  • February 5, 2016
    UK government funds connected vehicle development with a Flourish
    The UK government has selected the Flourish consortium as a winner of its multi-million pound research grant to fuel development in user-centric autonomous vehicle technology and connected transport systems. The new programme, co-funded by the UK’s innovation agency, Innovate UK, will focus on the core themes of connectivity, autonomy and customer interaction. The three-year project, led by Atkins and worth US$8 million, seeks to develop products and services that maximise the benefits of connected and
  • June 12, 2023
    How to outsmart the rat runners - use data
    Proactively solving transport problems with powerful empirical evidence is appealing: Emily Bobis of Compass IoT explains how vehicle-generated data can be the missing link