Windsor Star

Michigan developing driverless car route

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Michigan announced an initiative to explore developmen­t of a more than 65-km stretch of road dedicated to connected and autonomous vehicles between Ann Arbor and Detroit.

The project will be led by Cavnue, a subsidiary of Sidewalk Infrastruc­ture Partners, and will be supported by an advisory committee that includes General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and Toyota Motor Corp., as well as autonomous driving startups Argo AI and Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo.

“We are taking the initial steps to build the infrastruc­ture to help us test and deploy the cars of the future,” Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said in a statement.

Michigan said the dedicated AV corridor is the first of its kind and eventually will improve safety and transit access for communitie­s along the road. The first two years of the project will focus on testing technology and exploring the viability of a highway dedicated to vehicles that drive themselves.

The goal would be to create a corridor “that allows for a mix of connected and autonomous vehicles, traditiona­l transit vehicles, shared mobility and freight and personal vehicles,” the state said in the statement.

Most of the U.S. testing by leading autonomous-vehicle companies to date has taken place in California. In most cases, a safety driver is required, and the AVS share the road with regular traffic. Waymo also does a lot of driverless testing in Arizona.

“Testers in Michigan do not face the heavy reporting burden faced by those in California, making the state an ideal place for testing without much public scrutiny,” Bloomber NEF analyst Alejandro Zamorano-cadavid said.

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