ParkAV - the business and data chain for Automated Valet Parking
Lead Participant:
YELLOW LINE PARKING LTD
Abstract
"Automated valet parking (AVP) is a key feature needed in a level 4/5 automated vehicle. Users of premium vehicles don't want to care about parking and ""taking the vehicle away"" is vital for Mobility as a Service vehicles. The question is ""_where does the vehicle go?_"". Circulating streets is inappropriate, so parking is needed somewhere.
Parking could be at bays on street, subject to legislation, payment terms and vehicle restrictions, but a vehicle may need to stay close to the pickup to reduce waiting. It could be parked off street some distance away, in bulk storage. And a traditional car park could transform into a drop off hub, releasing value in parking property for retail and residential.
Delivering this requires filling gaps:
1. Knowledge of available spaces of the right size, routes to access and a payment mechanism; and
2. Ways to ensure AVP avoids the disastrous customer experience of receiving a parking ticket even though the customer thinks they have paid. This could mean pre-booking spaces not usually used for parking.
Addressing this requires scalability and evidence to prove payment. It also needs a business model that links automotive to parking with suitable investment return, changes to infrastructure to support drop off and a data model understanding customer and road authority expectations. And it needs to be secure and compliant with new privacy laws.
Our vision is a customer experience better than ""manual"" valet parking, and to support ""Mobility As A Service"" .
The business question is: _How do we make large scale automated valet parking work for demanding customers in the real city, and develop a sustainable business that can be rolled out globally?_
Our feasibility study therefore focuses on innovation in:
* Exploring AVP deployment in very different cities (Coventry &Westminster) with real world problems, based on car park operator (NCP) market knowledge
* Capturing data for parking, blurring the line between on and off street, looking at how to get data into the vehicle to make parking decisions (Appy)
* Building a business model of revenues, data ownership and liability
* Demonstrating AVP in a complete data chain model and customer storyboard
* Validating this against an OEM's global customer and business requirements (Jaguar Land Rover)
From a 12-month study , the outcome would be an innovative business model for how AVP might run and changes needed, proposed standards for AVP data exchange and a global view of UK industry opportunities."
Parking could be at bays on street, subject to legislation, payment terms and vehicle restrictions, but a vehicle may need to stay close to the pickup to reduce waiting. It could be parked off street some distance away, in bulk storage. And a traditional car park could transform into a drop off hub, releasing value in parking property for retail and residential.
Delivering this requires filling gaps:
1. Knowledge of available spaces of the right size, routes to access and a payment mechanism; and
2. Ways to ensure AVP avoids the disastrous customer experience of receiving a parking ticket even though the customer thinks they have paid. This could mean pre-booking spaces not usually used for parking.
Addressing this requires scalability and evidence to prove payment. It also needs a business model that links automotive to parking with suitable investment return, changes to infrastructure to support drop off and a data model understanding customer and road authority expectations. And it needs to be secure and compliant with new privacy laws.
Our vision is a customer experience better than ""manual"" valet parking, and to support ""Mobility As A Service"" .
The business question is: _How do we make large scale automated valet parking work for demanding customers in the real city, and develop a sustainable business that can be rolled out globally?_
Our feasibility study therefore focuses on innovation in:
* Exploring AVP deployment in very different cities (Coventry &Westminster) with real world problems, based on car park operator (NCP) market knowledge
* Capturing data for parking, blurring the line between on and off street, looking at how to get data into the vehicle to make parking decisions (Appy)
* Building a business model of revenues, data ownership and liability
* Demonstrating AVP in a complete data chain model and customer storyboard
* Validating this against an OEM's global customer and business requirements (Jaguar Land Rover)
From a 12-month study , the outcome would be an innovative business model for how AVP might run and changes needed, proposed standards for AVP data exchange and a global view of UK industry opportunities."
Lead Participant | Project Cost | Grant Offer |
---|---|---|
YELLOW LINE PARKING LTD | £110,603 | £ 77,422 |
  | ||
Participant |
||
NORMAN BOLTON | ||
INNOVATE UK | ||
COVENTRY CITY COUNCIL | £9,794 | £ 9,794 |
WESTMINSTER CITY COUNCIL | ||
MILTON KEYNES BOROUGH COUNCIL | ||
JAGUAR LAND ROVER | ||
JAGUAR LAND ROVER LIMITED | £49,427 | £ 24,714 |
COVENTRY CITY COUNCIL | ||
WESTMINSTER CITY COUNCIL | ||
MILTON KEYNES COUNCIL | £9,794 | £ 9,794 |
People |
ORCID iD |
Hunter Henry (Project Manager) |