Toronto Star

City is testing driverless shuttles

Autonomous­AA vehicles to ferry Scarboroug­h passengers to GO station

- CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF DAVID RIDER

Some Scarboroug­h residents will, ww in a pilot project starting as early as next spring, climb into a self- driving electric shuttle and ride to the local GO station.

The experiment is modest in terms of geography covered and people carried.

And while the vehicle will use computers and sensors to guide itself through city streets, for testing purposes it will have more staff aboard than a normal TTC bus.

City officials say, though, the “automated shuttle trial” could launch Toronto toward what many transporta­tion experts envision — a future of automated zero- emission shuttles taking people from transit- starved homes to transit hubs.

The aim is to reduce the number of people commuting ( even if only to transit stations) by car by offering them a futuristic option.

“This is an important step in the right direction to test microtrans­it technology,” said Coun. Jennifer McKelvie, whose Ward 25 includes the West Rouge neighbourh­ood where ww the U. S.- made “Olli 2.0” shuttles will run.

The city of Toronto and provincial vv Metrolinx will operate the tt federally funded pilot pro- ject. City staff say the service could launch as early as April 2, but pandemic- related concerns might delay that.

Some key facts about the project:

á The vehicle: Local Motors, in partnershi­p with Pacific Western Transporta­tion, won a competitio­n to provide the service vv via Olli 2.0, already being tested in other cities. The tall rectangula­r units are manufactur­ed mostly with 3D printers. They can carry eight people, but for the pilot project will always carry an operator able to take control and a TTC or Metrolinx staffer.

á The route: The program partners will set the route, number of stops and stop placement after consulting again with West Rouge residents, who ww were invited to consulta- tions last year. Shuttles will run to Rouge Hill GO station and back only during morning and afternoon weekday rush hours. Stops will be decided by community mm acceptance, user need, accessible waiting areas, safety and appropriat­e spacing for transit service.

á The experience: Shuttles will ww glide at 25 km/ h or slower in regular traffic. Maximum waits at stops will be 20 to 30 minutes. The vehicles will each have an accessibil­ity ramp and a system for securing wheelchair­s. There will be no extra fee ff beyond the regular transit f fare.

á The future: The city, TTC and aa Metrolinx will decide how long the pilot project lasts based on current ridership data, data from the pilot and weather conditions. “At this time, there is no intention to make this temporary trial permanent, nor to scale up automated shuttle services across the transit system without ww further analysis,” the city says.

McElvie said such a service makes sense in a neighbourh­ood without the density to justify traditiona­l mass transit, but with ww residents who can be con- vinced v to leave the car at home. She hopes it relieves ongoing parking pressures at the GO station.

The councillor is also hopeful that Olli 2.0 might eventually roll into service on weekends between the GO station and Rouge National Urban Park, which often has a parking shortage.

The TTC and other transit agencies in Ontario must, according to rules imposed by the provincial government, consider replacing some of their least- used bus routes with ww private “microtrans­it” ser- vices vv to be eligible for a second round of emergency COVID- 19 relief. No bus route is impacted by this trial.

Mayor John Tory told CP24 that the pilot project is the first step toward “a brand new way to get a lot more people, especially on those cold winter days, thinking transit for them is a viable option.”

 ?? LOCAL MOTORS/ CITY OF TORONTO ?? Olli 2.0 is a driverless vehicle that will be used by the city of Toronto and Metrolinx for a pilot project in the Scarboroug­h neighbourh­ood of West Rouge to shuttle residents to the GO station.
LOCAL MOTORS/ CITY OF TORONTO Olli 2.0 is a driverless vehicle that will be used by the city of Toronto and Metrolinx for a pilot project in the Scarboroug­h neighbourh­ood of West Rouge to shuttle residents to the GO station.

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