Arrival’s autonomous driving technology achieves major AI advancement

Arrival has announced its automated driving system (ADS) has successfully completed a live demonstration at a fully functioning parcel depot.

This is the first time where an Arrival Van has maneuvered around a facility without a human driver inside the vehicle. The vehicle was able to autonomously complete all operations that are performed on a daily basis by a commercial fleet driver.

Arrival has been developing its autonomous driving functionality for the Arrival Van, as part of Robopilot, a project designed to improve the market knowledge, functionality, and public perception of autonomous driving systems. The technology then can be adapted for the planned rollout of all Arrival Vehicles including the Arrival Bus and Arrival Car.

Max Kumskoy, Head of Advanced Driver Assistance and Automated Driving Systems at Arrival, said: “We are building supplementary technologies that will help drivers. Depot maneuvers are the most accident-prone parts of a worker’s shift and with our technology, we hope to introduce greater safety by removing human driving errors happening in confined environments.

“We are starting with a fixed controlled environment in the depot, where we are truly able to test and validate our technology. We can then understand how it will operate on public roads, in our vehicles, and how it can be implemented worldwide.”

Robopilot is part-funded by Innovate UK and the Centre for Connected Autonomous Vehicles (CCAV). Through the project, Arrival has been able to develop and test its own Automated Driving System (ADS), which uses in-house algorithms, combined with state-of-the-art hardware helping to fast-track the development of self-driving technology and showcase its capabilities.

The company is developing a scalable commercial Automated Driving System (ADS), that relies on computer vision and avoids expensive sensing technologies. Arrival is also making HD maps or high-precision GPS completely unnecessary for driving on public roads. Maps will be able to be used as an optional source of data when navigating in a fixed and controlled environment, such as a parcel depot.

Following the successful completion of testing and validation of Arrival’s autonomous driving system in a fixed controlled environment, Arrival will begin testing its autonomous driving functionalities on roads in the UK. Arrival’s aim is for the application to be used in Arrival Vans, across the globe.

Image: courtesy Arrival / Victoria Tomlinson (PR)

“Arrival is playing a critical role in the UK innovation and transport sector by bringing together organisations from across technologies, skills, and services. It’s brilliant to see the projects being developed here picked up and exported around the world.” said Minister of Investment, Lord Grimstone.

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