Bosch and Daimler obtain the world's first approval for driverless parking
26 Jul 2019|2,367 views
Bosch and Daimler have reached a milestone on the way to automated driving. The two companies have now obtained approval from the relevant authorities in Baden-Wurttemberg for their automated parking system in the Mercedes-Benz Museum parking garage in Stuttgart.


Bosch and Daimler's top priority for the driverless parking service was always safety. Since there is as yet no official approval process for automated driving functions that do not require a driver, the local authorities - the Stuttgart regional administrative authority and the state of Baden-Wurttemberg's transportation ministry - oversaw the project along with experts from the German technical inspection service TUV Rheinland. Their aim was to assess the operating safety of the automotive and parking garage technology.
The result is a comprehensively safe concept with appropriate testing and approval criteria that can be applied beyond this pilot project. Within this concept, the developers defined how the driverless vehicle detects pedestrians and other cars in its path and reliably comes to a halt when it encounters an obstacle. They also set up secure communications between all system components and took steps to ensure the reliable activation of parking manoeuvres.


Once the driver has left the parking garage, the car drives itself to an assigned space and automatically parks. Later, the car will return to the drop-off point in the same way.
This process relies on the interplay between the intelligent parking garage infrastructure supplied by Bosch and Mercedes-Benz automotive technology. Bosch sensors in the parking garage monitor the driving corridor and its surroundings and provide the information needed to guide the vehicle. The technology in the car converts the commands from the infrastructure into driving manoeuvres. With this, cars can even drive themselves up and down ramps to move between floors in the parking garage. If the infrastructure sensors detect an obstacle, the vehicle stops immediately.
Interested parties will soon be able to experience the innovative valet parking service for themselves in the Mercedes-Benz Museum parking garage.
Bosch and Daimler have reached a milestone on the way to automated driving. The two companies have now obtained approval from the relevant authorities in Baden-Wurttemberg for their automated parking system in the Mercedes-Benz Museum parking garage in Stuttgart.


Bosch and Daimler's top priority for the driverless parking service was always safety. Since there is as yet no official approval process for automated driving functions that do not require a driver, the local authorities - the Stuttgart regional administrative authority and the state of Baden-Wurttemberg's transportation ministry - oversaw the project along with experts from the German technical inspection service TUV Rheinland. Their aim was to assess the operating safety of the automotive and parking garage technology.
The result is a comprehensively safe concept with appropriate testing and approval criteria that can be applied beyond this pilot project. Within this concept, the developers defined how the driverless vehicle detects pedestrians and other cars in its path and reliably comes to a halt when it encounters an obstacle. They also set up secure communications between all system components and took steps to ensure the reliable activation of parking manoeuvres.


Once the driver has left the parking garage, the car drives itself to an assigned space and automatically parks. Later, the car will return to the drop-off point in the same way.
This process relies on the interplay between the intelligent parking garage infrastructure supplied by Bosch and Mercedes-Benz automotive technology. Bosch sensors in the parking garage monitor the driving corridor and its surroundings and provide the information needed to guide the vehicle. The technology in the car converts the commands from the infrastructure into driving manoeuvres. With this, cars can even drive themselves up and down ramps to move between floors in the parking garage. If the infrastructure sensors detect an obstacle, the vehicle stops immediately.
Interested parties will soon be able to experience the innovative valet parking service for themselves in the Mercedes-Benz Museum parking garage.
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