EZ-GO Is An Electric Self-Driving Mobility … Thing (From Renault)

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Mobility is a very popular word these days. It applies to ride hailing, carsharing, and carpooling. It also applies to bicycles, scooters, and a raft of “last-mile” transportation devices intended to get people to work in the morning without having to do any actual walking. Renault has looked at everything going on in the mobility sphere these days and decided what the world really needs more than anything is the EZ-GO, a four-wheel, all-electric autonomous transportation pod with a portcullis-like device grafted onto the front and a U-shaped couch inside. Who are we to argue?

Renault EZ-GO

The EZ-GO concept graced the Renault display in Geneva this week and it’s not like anything the world has ever seen before.  It’s a high-roof electric vehicle made expressly for urban mobility (there’s that word again). The large opening at the front is designed to let passengers enter and exit standing up while shielded from other vehicles, perambulating pedestrians, and cyclists.

The large expanse of glass on all sides is there for a reason. Surveys done by the company indicate people are not comfortable being in a closed vehicle with strangers. They want those outside to be able to see in and they want to be able to see out. “When you are in our car, on the bench seat and beside a big window, it’s like you are on a park bench that’s somehow moving,” Stéphane Janin, Renault’s manager of concept cars, tells Engadget.

And that U-shaped bench? That’s there for a similar reason. “For the shared pool mode, you might not always feel comfortable when you are in a normal car and passengers you don’t know are behind you,” Janin explains. “That’s why we decided to make this U-shape. People are more or less facing each other, so they can see everyone and say hello.”

Janin’s reference to a “shared pool mode” suggests the company is thinking of other operational modes for the EZ-GO. For instance, it could be used for sightseeing instead of commuting.  “Because it’s a super-transparent cabin, you can see everything outside and take pictures,” said Janin. “So you could say, I don’t want to go from A to B, and the service could take you on a 20- or 40-minute tour instead.”

Then there is the issue of helping women feel safe at night. “If you’re a woman and it’s late, you could ask for girls-only service,” he says. “Then it becomes a riding pool with no driver and only women in the vehicle so that they will feel safe.” A lot of women will probably find that a very attractive feature.

The EZ-GO has four-wheel steering for agile maneuvering, air suspension for soaking up potholes and speed bumps, and a full complement of autonomous driving sensors built in, including Lidar embedded in the airfoil device at the rear. It is intended for Level 4 self-driving within a geofenced area and can stop, start, change lanes, and turn corners without a human driver. Think of it as a horizontal elevator on wheels.

The EZ-GO is conceived as a more sociable service than Uber of Lyft that will also cost less than either, but still more than a bus. The front opening conceals a ramp to make ingress and egress convenient for people with disabilities. Is it a thing of beauty? Perhaps, perhaps not. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. But it does offer a fresh perspective on urban mobility, one that answers questions others haven’t even thought of. Most manufacturers want to simply build conventional cars, equip them with autonomous driving technology, and send them off to make money for them 24 hours a day. Renault has done its homework and made its vehicle serve the needs of customers rather than forcing customers to serve the needs of the manufacturer.

The EZ-GO was probably the slowest vehicle in the hall at Geneva this year, but it may be one of the most inspired. Renault says its futuristic people mover may be available by 2022 for use by private companies or public transportation services.


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Steve Hanley

Steve writes about the interface between technology and sustainability from his home in Florida or anywhere else The Force may lead him. He is proud to be "woke" and doesn't really give a damn why the glass broke. He believes passionately in what Socrates said 3000 years ago: "The secret to change is to focus all of your energy not on fighting the old but on building the new." You can follow him on Substack and LinkedIn but not on Fakebook or any social media platforms controlled by narcissistic yahoos.

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