Amazon is bringing its autonomous vehicles to roads in Phoenix.
Zoox, Amazon’s robotaxi service, will begin testing its fleet vehicles in downtown Phoenix in the coming weeks. The company said its expansion to Phoenix allows it to test in extreme heat and dusty conditions.
Zoox already operates in 10 different markets across the U.S., but only offers passenger service in Las Vegas and San Francisco.
In a statement, the company said it will first roll out a testing fleet of retrofitted Toyota Highlanders with human operators to map the roads before beginning passenger service.
Its purpose-built autonomous vehicles have carriage-style seating and are built without a driver in mind. The robotaxis do not have a steering wheel, pedals or a driver’s seat.
Zoox is opening an operations center in Scottsdale this spring to handle remote guidance and real-time rider support.
“Phoenix and Dallas are both rapidly growing metropolitan areas with high demand for ride-hailing and first- and last-mile connections,” Zoox said in a release. “Expanding into these cities allows us to test in sprawling environments, differentiating this data from our testing in other dense metro areas like San Francisco.”
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Waymo and Waze announced a pilot program to collect pothole location data and share it with cities. The data, which is already collected by Waymo, will be uploaded to the free Waze For Cities platform. Cities can then download the data into their own systems.
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Supporters say the garage is needed to address the parking needs in Old Town, including for spring training. Opponents say the garage will ruin the charm of Old Town, and that the city is relying on outdated data.
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The city will consider adding two more levels to an existing two-level parking garage at First Street and Brown Avenue, which would add 185 spaces.
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Sky Harbor spokesperson Monica Hernandez confirmed that ICE agents have now been gone for a week after vacating the airport on April 6.
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More than half of the 2,400 miles of Route 66 pass through Indian Country. And much of it follows ancient Native American hunting trails and trade routes.