NJ TRANSIT presented local municipalities and community-based transportation groups with a glimpse at autonomous, self-driving shuttles at the NJ Council on Special Transportation Expo in Edison.
NJ TRANSIT
2 min to read
NJ TRANSIT presented local municipalities and community-based transportation groups with a glimpse at autonomous, self-driving shuttles at the NJ Council on Special Transportation Expo in Edison.
NJ TRANSIT
NJ TRANSIT presented local municipalities and community-based transportation groups with a glimpse at autonomous, self-driving shuttles at the NJ Council on Special Transportation Expo in Edison. NJ TRANSIT hopes to test the self-driving shuttles as part of an innovative pilot program that fills the first mile, last mile issue.
NJ TRANSIT submitted a proposal to the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) for a $950,000 grant to test three self-driving shuttles as part of the pilot program that would last several years. The first phase would be closed-course testing on a 40-acre site on a closed section of Fort Monmouth. Phase two would require obtaining permits to allow the vehicles to drive on public roads and carry passengers within the Fort Monmouth property.
Ad Loading...
“Our customers are clearly looking for ‘first mile, last mile’ options, and that’s what this pilot program is all about — exploring options for our customers, staying ahead of the curve, and studying the benefits and challenges of this rapidly-advancing technology in real-world scenarios,” said NJ TRANSIT President/ CEO Kevin Corbett.
The autonomous shuttles have a 15-passenger capacity, travel at speeds up to 15 miles per hour, and are 100% electric. NJ TRANSIT has partnered with Rutgers University Center for Advanced Infrastructure and Technology and Fort Monmouth Economic Revitalization Authority for the pilot program.
By conducting the pilot program of low-speed autonomous shuttles, NJ TRANSIT will learn what is needed to recommend these types of vehicles to community transportation providers who serve senior citizens, people with disabilities, and other transit dependent residents.
The program will enhance the understanding of the community-based transportation providers to potentially use these innovative solutions for their customers who have fewer mobility options and would benefit from additional travel capacity.
The self-driving shuttles can serve small area trips and feed NJ TRANSIT and other fixed-route services, thereby enhancing ridership and customer satisfaction among community and traditional transit.
This winter, the FTA is scheduled to announce recipients of funding on the grant proposals.
The service is a flexible, reservation-based transit service designed to close the first- and last-mile gaps and connect riders to employment for just $5 per day.
Transit agencies depend on safe, reliable vehicles to deliver consistent service. This eBook examines how next-generation fleet software helps agencies move from reactive processes to proactive operations through automated maintenance, real-time safety insights, and integrated data. Learn how fleets are improving uptime, safety outcomes, and operational efficiency.
In a recent episode of METROspectives, LYT CEO Timothy Menard discusses how artificial intelligence, cloud connectivity, and real-time data are transforming traffic management, boosting bus reliability, and enabling system-wide transit optimization across cities.
The analysis finds that a $4.6 trillion investment across all levels of government over 20 years ($230 billion per year) would be required to build, operate, and maintain a transit network that approaches the level of service within a cohort of 17 global cities with world-class transit systems.
As the transportation landscape continues to evolve in the wake of the pandemic, few manufacturers have faced, or embraced, change as decisively as Forest River Bus.