Skip to main content

Audi brings ‘green wave’ tech to Düsseldorf

Audi is bringing its Traffic Light Information service to the German city of Düsseldorf to provide drivers with information on around 150 traffic lights. 
By Ben Spencer February 4, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Audi networks with traffic lights in Düsseldorf (credit: Audi)

Audi says 450 of the city’s 600 intersections will be networked with the Vehicle to Infrastructure service by early summer. 

The solution's green light optimised speed advisory is expected to calculate the ideal speed for catching a ‘green wave’ of traffic lights. It also offers suggestions to gradually reduce speed around 350m ahead of the traffic lights so that drivers and the cars behind can reach the intersection when the lights turn green, the company adds. 

If stopping at a red light is unavoidable, a countdown displays the seconds remaining until the next green phase begins. 

Andre Hainzlmaier, head of development for apps, connected services and smart city at Audi, emphasises the importance of being able to predict how traffic lights will behave in the next two minutes in order to increase traffic safety. 

“At the same time, exact forecasts are the biggest challenge,” he says. “Most signals react variably to traffic volume and continuously adapt the intervals at which they switch between red and green.”

The manufacturer says an analytical algorithm developed in collaboration with Traffic Technology Services calculates exact predictions while also learning how traffic volume changes in, for example, morning commuter traffic or at midday when children leave nurseries and schools. 

Audi's fleet sends anonymised data to a backend system when traffic lights are crossed – the idea is to check whether the actual crossings correspond to the forecast data. 
“Only after this are the traffic lights cleared for the display in the car,” Hainzlmaier adds. 

In future, cities will receive data on whether cars stop unusually often at a particular intersection – or if the average waiting is comparatively long. 

“We aggregate the recorded data into reports that we will make available to the city authorities. Traffic lights can then be given more efficient phasing and traffic will flow better,” Hainzlmaier concludes. 

Audi Traffic Light Information operates in all Audi e-tron, A4, A6, A7, A8, Q3, Q7 and Q8 models that have been produced since mid-July 2019 (the 2020 model year). Pre-requisites include the Audi connect Navigation & Infotainment package and the optional camera-based traffic-sign recognition.
 

 


 

UTC

Related Content

  • October 5, 2016
    Audi launches new traffic light information V2I service
    Audi of America, in conjunction with Traffic Technology Services (TTS), is to launch its first vehicle to infrastructure (V2I) technology, traffic light information, as part of its suite of Audi Connect Prime services. The feature will be introduced later this year in the US through 2017 and beyond and is available on 2017 Audi Q7, A4 and A4 Allroad models built after 1 June 2016.
  • November 6, 2020
    Audi C-V2X to improve Georgia school safety
    OEM works with Applied Information in city of Alpharetta to urge drivers to slow down
  • December 6, 2013
    Transmax trials emergency vehicle ‘green wave’
    Existing equipment used in Australian emergency vehicle ‘green wave’ trial. Despite the lights and sirens, accidents between the motoring public and emergency vehicles on their way to/from the scene of an incident are relatively frequent. Figures from various sources indicate that road accidents are the second most frequent cause of death for on-duty fire fighter fatalities and that more than 90% of ambulance and fire engine accidents occur when the lights are on and the sirens wailing. Other studies indica
  • November 1, 2016
    Connected offers free I2V connectivity
    A new system could reduce the cost of implementing I2V communications across a city to less than that for a single intersection, as Colin Sowman hears. It may seem too good to be true but US company Connected Signals is offering city authorities the equipment to provide infrastructure to vehicle (I2V) communications for free. The system enables drivers to receive information about the timing of signals they are approaching via the EnLighten smartphone app (or connected in-vehicle display).