Connected and Automated Driving (CAD) will bring disruption to individuals, economies, and society. Most forms of CAD require some level of support from the infrastructure for their safe operation, in particular communications. However, additional infrastructure services to suppo
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Connected and Automated Driving (CAD) will bring disruption to individuals, economies, and society. Most forms of CAD require some level of support from the infrastructure for their safe operation, in particular communications. However, additional infrastructure services to support CAD could improve safety and robustness and bring further benefits such as increased capacity. However, the infrastructure requirements of vehicle Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) are not always clear, and it is therefore difficult for National Road Authorities (NRA) to prepare future levels of support for CAD, given rapidly evolving technology and uncertain projections of future CAD demand. There is a need to articulate those requirements, bringing stakeholders together to formulate a structured approach, and a roadmap that will advance safe and smart roads that support CAD.
This paper presents the DiREC project (consortium partners: TRL, ARUP, TU Delft, VTT, VTI and FEHRL) funded by the CEDR Transnational Road Research Programme Call 2020 with funding provided by CEDR members of Belgium (Flanders), Denmark, Ireland, Israel, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. DiREC is seeking to address the above challenge. The project has established a CAV-Readiness Framework (CRF) based on a level of service approach to understand the needs of CAD, and to define the infrastructure and services that NRAs could provide to support these needs.