Autocar RSS Feed: Insight: Why Volkswagen and Hyundai are teaming up with a self-driving start-up firm

Autocar RSS Feed
Welcome to nirvana for car enthusiasts. You have just entered the online home of the world's oldest car magazine, and the only place on the internet where you can find Autocar's unique mix of up-to-the-minute news, red hot car reviews, conclusive road test verdicts, and a lot more besides. 
Insight: Why Volkswagen and Hyundai are teaming up with a self-driving start-up firm
Jan 9th 2018, 15:37

VW Moia

The VW Moia ride-sharing vehicle
A new company set up by the former head of the Google car project has become a key player in autonomous technology

You probably haven't heard of Aurora Innovation. And there's no real reason you should have.

But you'll definitely have heard of two firms who, at this year's CES, have announced partnerships with the tiny company to use its autonomous technology: Volkswagen and Hyundai.

Click here to read more about CES 2018

That two major car groups have reached a deal with a relatively unproven company is unprecedented in an industry known for being conservative when you consider Aurora was established just over a year ago with just five staff.

Three of them initially worked out of co-founder Chris Urmson's home in Palo Alto, California, with two operating from an old restaurant in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

They key, of course, involves the experience of those three co-founders: Urmson is the former boss of Google's autonomous driving division, Sterling Anderson previously worked for Tesla, and Drew Bagnell was Uber's autonomous vehicle leader.

So while Aurora was only founded last year, it's run by some of the pioneers of self-driving vehicles. Canadian Urmson has been working on autonomous technology since his time as a researcher at Carnegie Mellon University. His work on a NASA robot led to the opportunity to develop an autonomous car for the DARPA Challenge event in 2003. In 2007, CMU's self-driving Chevrolet Tahoe won the DARPA Urban Challenge.

He them spent just over seven years working on the technology for Google, before deciding he needed a new challenge. Bt his time at CMU and Google helped turn Urmson, now 41, into a key figurehead in the self-driving world.

"When I left Google, it made the national news," he says, adding: "That was bizarre."

And, after a few months out, he helped establish Aurora.

During his time with Google, Urmson met Jurgen 'JJ' Jungwirth, VW's chief digital office at CES. Jungwirth said: "I took a ride in Google's self-driving Toyota Prius.

I've seen the progress Chris made with Google's team and systems. When it was clear his decision was to establish Aurora Innovation and make the best self-driving system in the world and work in a friendly way with OEMs we talked again."

VW and Aurora have been working together for around a year, and in the last six months have begun integrating Aurora's self-driving system – including sensors, hardware and software – into VW Group platforms.Urmson describes Aurora's opportunity to work with VW as "profound."

"Building an affordable ecosystem that enables VW to be as successful as they have been is a difficult business, and it takes a set of processes and a mindset. It's a very different thing to what you see in Silicon Valley, when the most complex product is a smartphone that takes six to nine months to develop."

It's that ability of tech firms to be more agile and responsive that has attracted Volkswagen and Hyundai to Aurora. Fellow Aurora founder Sterling Anderson added: "We felt when we started Aurora that if we pulled together an experienced team that understands every facet of autonomous vehicles, we could combine it was the strengths a company such as Volkswagen has in terms of development and production and move more quickly than we could separately."

Urmson says that the key to Aurora's rapid rise is ensuring everyone is passionate about the goal to make self-driving cars, rather than money – although he noted he's "not opposed" to the latter. With two major car firms on board, Aurora is expanding rapidly – there's a length list of vacancies on its website. But Urmson says expansion plans will never include the firm developing its own car. "Making one car is easy," he said. "Making a million is an incredibly complex thing."

But make no mistake: while you might not see Aurora's name on the front of a car any time soon, the firm could become a key player in the shape of motoring in the future.

Read more 

Volkswagen Group targets self-driving cars on public roads by 2021

New legislation to allow driverless cars on UK roads by 2021

Volvo to supply 24,000 self-driving XC90s to Uber

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com. By using Blogtrottr, you agree to our polices, terms and conditions.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions.
Share This :

Blog Archive

Recent Posts