Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Chrysler building self-driving test area
ERIC D. LAWRENCE
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles is adding more muscle to its self-driving vehicle testing efforts.
The company will spend more than $30 million at a new testing and development facility at its Chelsea Proving Grounds west of Detroit. Testing begins this month at the facility, which will include a “dedicated autonomous highway-speed track, 35-acre safety-feature evaluation area and a high-tech command center,” according to a company news release.
It’s the second self-driving vehicle-related announcement the company has made in recent weeks. Last month, FCA said its Magneti Marelli components business would acquire a French startup — StartMeUp — focused on self-driving car software.
The twin announcements follow the release in June of the company’s five-year plan, where it dedicated a presentation to the company’s selfdriving and connected vehicle efforts. That presentation highlighted the company’s focus in developing the technology through partnerships, such as by supplying up to 62,000 Chrysler Pacifica Hybrids to Waymo’s self-driving project by 2021.
Former Chief Executive Officer Sergio Marchionne, who died in July, had pushed back against critics for suggesting that the company was a laggard in the development of self-driving technology.
New CEO Mike Manley said in the news release that the Chelsea facility would “help support and enable” the rollout of the five-year plan.