Jaguar Land Rover unveiled a new design concept this week that it says will guide the venerable German carmaker into the age of autonomous, electric vehicles.  

"We've created a new concept car which can deliver mobility for individuals but also for public services," CEO Ralf Speth told Cheddar.

What Jaguar calls Project Vector is not a new car model but rather a multi-use design that could serve as the bones for future electric vehicles with a variety of personal and commercial uses.

At the heart of the project is bold speculation on the part of Jaguar  — which has spent much of its history manufacturing personal sports cars and SUVs — that a mix of private and shared vehicles and on-demand services will dominate urban travel in the future. 

Project Vector is the opening gambit for Jaguar as it prepares for that reality, Speth said.

The vehicle is about 13 feet long, with its battery and drivetrain components built into a flat floor. The open format allows for both private and shared uses, including commercial applications, such as the crucial last mile of delivery in congested urban areas.  

Jaguar's first electric vehicle, I-PACE, was released in 2018 and has informed the designs for Project Vector. The company used a number of its existing patents. 

Another hedge against the future is making the vehicle "autonomy-ready," which means Project Vector is designed to incorporate new driverless technology as it emerges. 

To prepare the public for the possibility of shared driverless cars, Jaguar is working with local officials to test a public mobility service on the streets of Coventry, England in 2021. 

This "living laboratory" will serve as a test case on how digital infrastructure in the world can work with autonomous vehicles. 

"The megatrends of urbanisation and digitalisation make connected urban mobility systems necessary and inevitable," said Project Director Dr. Tim Leverton in a statement. "Shared and private vehicles will share spaces with and be connected to public transit networks, so you can travel on demand and autonomously. That is a complex task, best achieved by working together with partners across the spectrum of vehicles, infrastructure and the digital world."

Project Vector serves a broader corporate mission for Jaguar as well. The company's Destination Zero initiative aims to achieve zero emissions, zero accidents, and zero congestion through Jaguar products, services, and facilities. Remaining open to new technology is key to that, Speth said. 

"If you calculate the energy efficiency, then the electric drive is the mobility of the future, but it's also quite clear that mobility demand can't be funneled down to one technical solution," he added. 

Share:
More In Business
Facebook Users: Aug. 25th Is Your Last Day to Apply for Part of This $725M Settlement
Anyone in the U.S. who had an account at any time between May 24, 2007, and December 22, 2022, is eligible to receive a payment. The 2022 settlement resolves a lawsuit alleging that Facebook allowed millions of its users’ personal information to be fed to Cambridge Analytica, a firm that supported Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign.
Climate Change May Force More Farmers and Ranchers to Consider Irrigation -- at a Steep Cost
Irrigation might have saved Jackson's hay, but she and her husband rejected the idea about 10 years ago over the cost: as much as $75,000 for a new well and all the equipment. But now — with an extended drought and another U.S. heat wave this week that will broil her land about an hour northwest of Dallas for days in 100-degree-plus temperatures — Jackson said she is “kind of rethinking.”
Load More