European Automotive Design - For automotive design engineers
 
   
Search :   Search Help    login

New R&D Centre will advance transport 03/04/2008
 
Plans have been announced to construct a new transport technology R&D centre on the MIRA site in Warwickshire.

Each of the test circuits of the innovITS-ADVANCE centre will be instrumented with telecommunications networks including: 2G, 3G, GPRS, WiFi, roadside beacons and monitoring systems such as inductive loops, and accurate position monitoring technologies including differential GPS, and in the future, Galileo systems.

The first phase will involve the construction of a ‘city’ circuit including roads, traffic islands, roundabouts and controlled intersections, within the existing envelope of the MIRA site. The circuit is due to open in the late summer of 2009.

The centre is the result of a collaboration between innovITS, set up by the the UK government’s Department for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform in 2005 to advance Intelligent Transport Systems, MIRA and TRL. The project is to involve the investment of some 30 million euros over five phases, of which the city circuit is only phase one. Possible projects that might be carried out could include: collision avoidance and mitigation, driver behaviour studies, intersection safety, vulnerable road user detection, telematics robustness in poor reception areas, road sign detection, traffic management, advance driver assistance systems, time and distance based road charging and autonomous vehicles.
 
Author
Tom Shelley
 
 
Supporting Information
 
 http://www.innovits.com/
 
Email this article
 
Bookmark this article using:
 
Del.icio.us digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon
 
News Item
Linked Companies
 
 MIRA Ltd
 
 BERR
 
 
News Item
Similar News Articles
 
  LED headlamps win red dot
 
  Essential differential for chain-driven cars
 
  Rocketing into the aerospace race
 
  Kinetic energy storage helps F1 teams
 
  TRL to monitor active safety developments
 
 
News Item
Similar Technology Articles
 
  Lamborghinis benefit from digital tyre sensors