2025 and Beyond:

Re-defining People-Vehicle Interaction and Infrastructure for Future Mobility in Singapore

TUM Asia has been awarded a 2-year project under the LTA-URA Urban Mobility Grand Challenge to research the current and future design of Bus Stops, Taxi Stands and Pick-Up/Drop-Off points. The main goal of the project is to prepare these passenger pick-up/drop-off facilities (PUDOs) for the upcoming deployment of Autonomous Vehicles (AVs) and improve mobility experiences for all users. The research project is led by TUM Asia in partnership with the National University of Singapore, the Nanyang Technological University and ST Engineering Autonomous Solutions. Motional Singapore Pte. Ltd., an autonomous vehicle (robotaxi) research and development company, and public bus operators SBS Transit and Tower Transit are also collaborating in the project to ensure relevant outcomes for all stakeholders.

In Singapore, we have standardised design specifications for bus stops, but they are not set up for receiving AVs yet. Other transport facilities such as pick-up/drop-off points and taxi stands do not have unified design specifications. To ensure the smooth deployment of AVs, revised and consistent design standards for all PUDO types will be necessary. Most PUDO facilities are complex environments, especially at peak hours. There can be many vehicles and passengers intermingling, waiting for, finding, alighting, and boarding buses, taxis, and private vehicles. Such inadequacies could impede the AVs’ ability to safely navigate in PUDOs and create conflicts in traffic and commuter flows and interactions between pedestrians, human-driven vehicles, and AVs.

As the first physical interface between passengers and the transport system, the pick-up/drop-off facility plays a major role in how people access future mobility services. The transition is critical for ensuring safe integration of AVs with human-driven vehicles, a smooth learning curve for other road users and pedestrians, and minimal or positive impacts on traffic flows. To address the identified problems, our project consists of three main objectives:

  1. Determine the impacts of AV deployment on traffic demand and throughput at PUDOs
  2. Propose new design and retrofitting concepts to future-proof and improve the user experience at PUDOs
  3. Evaluate and validate the proposed design and retrofitting concepts

We exercise a holistic, design-led, iterative strategy that synergises Design, Traffic Engineering, Sensing Technology and Prototyping. Our approach is closely supported by continuous user research, real-time contextual and operational data, and traffic simulations. Iterative prototyping and progressive testing lead to the final on-site pilot test and eventually, practical design recommendations and innovative ideas for future PUDOs. Infrastructure and human-machine interface elements are combined in one integrated concept to improve information dissemination and passenger/pedestrian and traffic flow in a mixed traffic environment with autonomous and human-driven traffic.

The project is divided into three main work packages (WP) with sub-work packages covering specific Focus Area objectives. WP1 lays the foundation for the project and discovers the present context of PUDOs with the collection of baseline data and research into human interactions and behaviour in transport environments. Armed with an understanding of the gaps, challenges, and pain points at the various sites, WP2 then builds on the outcomes and insights from WP1 to explore and develop solutions for future PUDOs designs in an iterative process. In WP3, the impacts of AV activity on people and traffic flows as well as their interactions are evaluated to validate the proposed design recommendations in pilot tests at selected locations with different types of AVs (Figure 1).

More Information

  1. For more information, please contact Dr Graham Leedham, Lead Principal Investigator, at graham.leedham@tum-asia.edu.sg
  2. Staff and Students behind PUDO project.

Click here to see the list of PUDO members.

The future of Autonomous Vehicles (AVS): Overcoming AV Challenges with Design

The ease of commuting remains one of the touchstones of a vibrant metropolis today. As more people move to live in cities, many developing cities face traffic congestion issues. Autonomous Vehicles (AVs) possess great potential as a mobility solution to enhance the efficiency of traffic flow on roads as they are designed to optimise speed and distance without having to brake unnecessarily.

In the quest of finding the optimal design of pick-up -and-drop-off (PUDO) points for the future of mobility, the TUM Asia’s team of designers and traffic engineers work hand in hand, conducting numerous surveys, feedback sessions, and focus group discussions to develop a set of recommendations ready for future PUDO points and the deployment of AVs in Singapore.

Imagine an alternative future where the roads are cluttered with a motley of vehicles – buses, cars, taxis, private-hire cars, motorbikes, and AVs. Throw morning rush hour into the mix; anyone could tell that this is a recipe for chaos.

How might we design our PUDO points that are not only ready for AVs but also suitable for commuters who come from different walks of life with vastly different needs?

The PUDO team embarked on a two-year journey, to put before Singapore a vision of autonomous vehicles on its roads.

In Singapore, there are more than 5,000 bus stops, 305 gazetted taxi stands, and an estimated several thousand general PUDO points across the island catered for commuters who come from different walks of life with vastly different needs.

Meaningful placemaking – keeping things inclusive

In many ways, the many constructs of modern society have been cleverly manifested in the design of PUDO points. The team’s role is to rethink the function of every feature – bollards, berths, kerbs and lane markings, wayfinding, etc. – and retrofit the current PUDO points to be AV-ready. The team profiled seven user personas: parent and child, elderly, tourist, student, office worker, visually impaired individual and person in wheelchair. In addition, an array of other interest groups that make up the project consortium ranging from representatives from National University of Singapore, Nanyang Technological University Singapore, ST Engineering, Land Transport Authority, Urban Redevelopment Authority, SG Enable, etc. participated in the feedback sessions.

Using a human-centred design approach, the team identified the needs, pain points, and preferences of each user persona throughout their journey.

Breaking functional fixedness 

Different perspectives and needs produce divergent fixedness. One such feature is the bollard. Why do we require a bollard in front of the PUDO? It impedes my movement in getting on the vehicle, a wheelchair user says. Conversely, according to BCA guidelines, the bollards act as a vehicle security barrier, a type of counterterrorism measure and protective measure for commuters.

“The bollard is also used as a point of reference for bus drivers to stop the bus,” the PUDO team added.

While bollards are essential for various reasons, the current finishing materials used on bollards impede the Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR) sensors of AVs, affecting AVs’ ability to make judgments based on road conditions. 

Upon identifying the diverse and often   contrasting needs of various users and stakeholders, the PUDO team recommended adding relief markings on bollards not only to provide a safe way for AVs to navigate into PUDO points by eliminating possible dynamic AV challenges but also to guide users to specific waiting points.

Even simple acts of nature can impede the smooth operations of AVs as they are computed to slow down when their sensors pick up obstructions such as vegetation overgrowth past the kerb.

To overcome such challenges, the team has recommended demarcating a buffer zone from the kerb that would not hinder the clarity of traffic flow of the AV into the main carriageway.

Utilising AV: creative ideas as solutions

Defining challenges in conventional ways would naturally lead to conventional solutions and often becomes a stumbling block in finding a breakthrough in the middle of the most hidden problems. Putting the users at the centre of the development solutions often leads to surprising insights and creative solutions. One classic example would be the booking of AVs.

While most service providers would typically include a booking app on mobile phones, the team did not stop there. The team had also recommended installing a booking kiosk to provide an additional way for users to make a booking, which would also provide real-time arrival timings to passengers.

“We ought to consider the constraints faced by such users as parents who find it a challenge to free their hands from carrying multiple stuff on the go or tourists who find it a hassle to download a new booking app. The booking kiosk would enable commuters like tourists or elderly who are less tech-savvy to book AVs easily,” the team added.

Envisioning the future of our PUDO 

The envisioned PUDO design is not only a culmination of the needs of every user who require the use of PUDO points but also the fruition of the monumental effort the team has put in to marry the needs, potential challenges and pain points of different users, putting forth a set of design recommendations that is useful and tailored to their needs. Importantly, the final design iteration is a reflection of the needs and behaviour of our population from different backgrounds and the spirit of our community that encourages coexistence and consideration for all who inhabit them.

The final design iteration of our PUDO is a reflection of the needs and behaviour of our population from different backgrounds and the spirit of our community that encourages coexistence and consideration for all who inhabit them.

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