Skip to main content

Shortlist announced for UK’s Roads for the Future competition

The UK’s National Infrastructure Commission has shortlisted five companies including Aecom and Arup in a competition for ideas to make roads fit for driverless cars. The five companies were chosen from 81 entries submitted to the Roads for the Future initiative led by the roads authority Highways England and Innovate UK, a government agency that encourages research and innovation in many sectors. Aecom is examining how smart traffic signals could advise drivers as to a speed they should be driving if they
May 30, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

The UK’s National Infrastructure Commission has shortlisted five companies including 1397 Aecom and 1419 Arup in a competition for ideas to make roads fit for driverless cars.

The five companies were chosen from 81 entries submitted to the Roads for the Future initiative led by the roads authority Highways England and Innovate UK, a government agency that encourages research and innovation in many sectors.

Aecom is examining how smart traffic signals could advise drivers as to a speed they should be driving if they wish to arrive at the next set of traffic lights as they turn green.

Arup is testing its FlexKerbs system that changes roadside indicators such as for parking and limited stopping could change according to the time of day and traffic levels.

The shortlisted firms will present their ideas ranging from smart traffic lights to segregated driverless zones at a final event this autumn. All five candidates will receive €35,000 to test ideas, with around €57,000 going to the winner.

Four other commended entries are being put in contact with leading figures across government and industry to test their ideas, the commission said.

The other shortlisted companies were City Science, which is investigating how sections of roads could be dedicated to driverless cars while making it easier to manage risks as well as integrate connected and autonomous vehicles into the transport network.

Immense Solutions is examining how artificial intelligence could help sat-nav systems learn to choose routes to help driven and driverless cars avoid congestion.

Leeds City Council is investigating how data from connected cars could improve traffic light systems to reduce tailbacks.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Mersey Gateway shortlisted for the UK’s CIEEM ecology award
    June 1, 2017
    The team building the Mersey Gateway bridge has reached the final of a UK national competition that recognises excellence in ecology and environmental management. The project team entered this year’s Chartered Institute of Ecology and Environmental Management (CIEEM) Best Practice awards. The winners highlight outstanding examples of environmental management on large-scale projects.
  • Motorway surveys for Spot the robotic dog
    March 1, 2024
    Spot, from Boston Dynamics, is being trialled by National Highways, BAM Ritchies - the ground engineering division of BAM Nuttall - and AECOM.
  • HighwaysUK event being held in London
    November 9, 2015
    Highways planning in England is at a historic turning point. That is the message that former transport minister Steve Norris will be bringing to the HighwaysUK conference at ExCel London, 25-26 November. Norris speaks from a position of some experience having worked at the highest levels in both the public and private transport sectors. He is in no doubt that the recent shake up that has transformed the Highways Agency into Highways England is the start of a new era. He said, “It’s not just a badge chang
  • Telent pick up more UK ITS deals for traffic management
    June 10, 2019
    Telent Technology Services has been awarded a major eight-year traffic signals and ITS maintenance contract for England’s Essex county. The award was given to Telent, a UK-based company, by the contractor Ringway Jacobs on behalf of the Essex Highways Partnership. The deal will include maintenance of 231 traffic signal junctions, 262 traffic signal crossings, four emergency wig-wag lights, 30 car park count sites, 48 car park guidance Variable Message Signs (VMS), 17 vehicle actuated signs and 398 school