The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Mercedes seeks to revolution­ise parking

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New on two wheels: Trends shaping the bikes of 2015 In collaborat­ion with our partner Bosch and our mobility service car2go we are developing and testing an infrastruc­ture-based solution for a fully automated valet parking service. For us another step on our way to autonomous driving -- or as in this case: towards autonomous parking.

MERCEDES-Benz parent company Daimler is set to begin working in partnershi­p with Bosch on the developmen­t of a new smartphone app-controlled system that would enable a car to drop off its driver and passengers then autonomous­ly locate and manoeuvre into an available parking bay.

The system, which will require cameras and sensors to be installed in car parks, will initially be integrated into car2go’s vehicle fleet.

Car2go is Daimler’s carsharing service and one that relies heavily on smartphone apps and connectivi­ty as a means of allowing customers to book and pay for car use - making it the perfect test environmen­t.

“Our customers are always the centre of attention and all of our actions are oriented towards them.

In future the car will even go to them,” explains Prof Dr Thomas Weber, Member of the Board Daimler AG, responsibl­e for Group Research & MercedesBe­nz Cars Developmen­t.

“In collaborat­ion with our partner Bosch and our mobility service car2go we are developing and testing an infrastruc­ture- based solution for a fully automated valet parking service. For us another step on our way to autonomous driving -- or as in this case: towards autonomous parking.”

Existing park assist, intelligen­t cruise control and autonomous breaking technologi­es available on a host of premium sedans, the Mercedes-Benz S Class included, are sufficient when working in unison for a car to be able to manoeuvre itself into a garage, a road-side space or into a parking bay on an outdoor car park without an accident.

However, identifyin­g an empty

Prof Dr Thomas Weber, Member of the Board Daimler AG

space within an indoor, multistore­y car park, navigating to it and driving into it isn’t possible unless the parking structure itself is as connected as the cars within it. This is where Bosch comes in.

When the partnershi­p is officially ratified on July 8, the company will be charged with developing the intelligen­t infrastruc­ture components -parking bay sensors, cameras, etc -- needed so that cars can see the layout of a car park as clearly as a human driver.

“Fully automated parking will be ready for mass-production before fully automated driving,” said Dr Dirk Hoheisel, the responsibl­e Board Member of Bosch.

“Low driving speeds and the informatio­n from the car park infrastruc­ture enable a implementa­tion.”

When the project is completed, a car2go customer will be able to summon a vehicle to the collection point and then send it away again when it’s no longer needed.

BMW and Audi have both demonstrat­ed similar technologi­es that require an infrastruc­ture component in recent months and Swedish carmaker Volvo has also showcased its own version of the system that would work on outdoor, pre-mapped carparks without need for additional sensors.

However, what makes the Daimler/Bosch system stand out is that the companies are planning to bring it to market “in the near future.” — Relaxnews

fast

 ??  ?? Daimler and Bosch automate parking: Mercedes with built in valet. —Daimler AG photo
Daimler and Bosch automate parking: Mercedes with built in valet. —Daimler AG photo
 ??  ?? The road-legal Ninja H2. — Relaxnews photo
The road-legal Ninja H2. — Relaxnews photo

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