Skip to main content

Smarter transport solutions from TomTom

TomTom is introducing two novel products that help deliver smart traffic solutions, RoadDNA and its HAD map. The Road DNA will help make automated driving a reality, according to the firm. Designed with vehicle data storage and processing limitations in mind, RoadDNA delivers highly accurate location information that can easily be integrated into the onboard system of a vehicle. This allows a vehicle to continuously know exactly where it is located on the road. It offers highly accurate vehicle localisa
January 4, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
The TomTom technology provides a stepping stone for autonomous vehicle mdevelopment
3972 TomTom is introducing two novel products that help deliver smart traffic solutions, RoadDNA and its HAD map. The Road DNA will help make automated driving a reality, according to the firm. Designed with vehicle data storage and processing limitations in mind, RoadDNA delivers highly accurate location information that can easily be integrated into the onboard system of a vehicle.

This allows a vehicle to continuously know exactly where it is located on the road. It offers highly accurate vehicle localisation content in an efficient and cost-effective way. By matching RoadDNA data with vehicle sensor data in real-time, a vehicle knows its location on the road and even while travelling at high speeds or when changes occur to the roadside. But by converting a 3D point cloud of roadside patterns into a compressed, 2D view of the roadway, RoadDNA delivers a solution that needs little storage space and requires conventional processing requirements, without losing detail.

TomTom RoadDNA, combined with the TomTom HAD Map, delivers real-time information about a vehicle’s precise location on a map whilst coping with changes in the environment. The firm is also offering its HAD Map for Germany. This complete map of Germany covers the entire Autobahn network and provides a 3D lane map for 24,000km of roads.

The TomTom HAD Map for Germany provides accurate representation of 3D geometries of lane centrelines, lane dividers, road borders, and guard rails, as well as highlighting lane-dependent speed limits and lane divider marking types. In addition to enabling future self-driving cars to see beyond their sensors, the TomTom HAD map can also be used for advanced driving applications like improved versions of eco-adaptive cruise control (ACC), lane level guidance, and predictive powertrain control.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bentley Systems boosting business with acquisition
    February 11, 2015
    Construction software specialist Bentley Systems continues to develop its portfolio of solutions with yet another acquisition. The company is growing both organically and through acquisition, this time buying up the French firm Acute3D, provider of Smart3DCapture software for reality modelling. Through reality modelling, observations of existing conditions can be processed into representations for contextual alignment within design modelling and construction modelling environments. According to Bentley, rap
  • Ma(r)king the roads readable for self-driving cars
    December 20, 2021
    CAV, V2X, C-ITS, CCAM – the acronyms are differing, but they all have in common that they denominate the linking of road infrastructure and vehicles with the aim to improve traffic flow, reduce emissions and make traffic safer and our journeys more convenient.
  • Tough competition in concrete paving market
    February 13, 2012
    One thing is clear in the concrete slipforming sector. This comparatively niche market for equipment is rapidly becoming a good deal more competitive as key manufacturers jostle for position.
  • Key developments are changing the face of the machine control market
    April 4, 2013
    Various business moves are changing the face of the machine control sector - Mike Woof reports An array of developments, both business moves and new technologies, are changing the focus for the machine control segment of the construction equipment sector. For a long time three firms, Leica Geosystems, Trimble and Topcon, have dominated this segment. The three are retaining their strong positions in the market but are seeing additional competition from Hemisphere and MOBA. Arguably the biggest news is that T