The New Zealand Herald

Driverless cars head for the highway at old WWII bomber site

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Self-driving cars will begin taking test laps this December on the site of a famous World War II aircraft factory in Michigan, which produced B-24 Liberator bombers at the rate of one an hour more than seven decades ago.

Driverless cars — some without steering wheels, accelerato­rs or brake pedals — will race at speeds of up to 110km/h around a 4km loop that includes a triple-decker overpass, a 210m tunnel and a decommissi­oned federal highway.

The test track, known as the American Centre for Mobility, is under constructi­on on the grounds of the former Willow Run factory that was a critical cog in the US arms industry during World War II .

The f acility in Ypsilanti, Michigan, is one of 10 test beds around the country the US has designated as official sites for validating driverless technology.

Carmakers, suppliers and technology companies will share the US$110 million ($151m) facility to accelerate the arrival of autonomous cars.

Eventually, the 200ha centre will feature fake suburban neighbourh­oods, rural country roads and urban streets with robot pedestrian­s darting into traffic. The test track will include a full-size motorway interchang­e with looping on and off ramps.

“Here’s the reality: these vehicles are going to happen and it is going to transform mobility in the world,” Debbie Dingell, a Democratic congresswo­man from Michigan, said during a tour of the facility. “And it’s either going to happen in America or it’s going to happen in China or India or western Europe. And we are not going to let that happen.”

Earthmover­s and f ront- end loaders are now building bridges and overpasses on the vast site where the factory was levelled a few years ago. The test track spills out onto the adjoining US 12 highway, where autonomous test cars will take over two eastbound lanes as regular traffic is rerouted to the westbound lanes on a 2km section of the lightly travelled road.

Dingell was accompanie­d by Bob Latta, the Ohio Republican who chairs the House energy and commerce committee’s digital commerce and consumer protection panel. In a rare show of bipartisan­ship, Latta’s panel last month unanimousl­y approved legislatio­n that allows manufactur­ers to test thousands of self-driving vehicles on public roads while safety regulators come up with rules for driverless rides. The bill would also prohibit states from regulating the mechanical, software and safety systems of autonomous cars.

“We’re looking five and 10 years out,” Latta said. “We don’t want to have legislatio­n out there or regulation­s that are going to stymie developmen­t” of autonomous vehicles.

Latta said developing self-driving cars was imperative because US roadway deaths jumped 14 per cent over the past two years, with more than 40,000 people dying in crashes last year. Federal statistics show that 94 per cent of highway fatalities are the result of human error.

“I’d like to think right now that the United States is in the forefront” of developing self-driving cars, Latta said. “We want to stay at the front, so we don’t want to put roadblocks up.”

Detroit and Silicon Valley, vying for supremacy over autonomous cars, each have official test sites in their backyards. GoMentum Station, a decommissi­oned Naval base in Concord, California, also was named an official test site. There, 32km of roads weave around empty barracks, a mess hall, gymnasium and bowling alley.

“I’m tired of this California versus the Midwest” competitio­n, Dingell said. “We need to give a whole hell of a lot more credit to what is happening here and what is being built in Michigan, Ohio and the Midwest. We are at the forefront of that innovation.”

 ?? Picture / Bloomberg ?? Workers transform the old Willow Run site into a technology testbed.
Picture / Bloomberg Workers transform the old Willow Run site into a technology testbed.

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