Tuesday, November 25, 2025 · 658 words · 4856 characters
Hi-Drive Final Event: Europe’s Flagship Automated Driving Project Reaches Its Destination.
Brussels, Belgium, 25 November 2025. After four and a half years of pioneering research and large-scale testing, the European flagship project Hi-Drive concludes with a Final Event at AutoWorld in Brussels on 25 November 2025. This one-day exhibition and conference celebrates the successful completion of a €60 million initiative co-funded by the European Union under Horizon 2020, bringing together 53 partners from leading automotive manufacturers, suppliers, research institutions, and user organizations.
The event will feature 29 exhibits, including 16 research and prototype vehicles, 5 simulators, multiple demonstrators and themed exhibition booths, complemented by presentations, panel discussions and the opportunity to interact with some of Europe’s top experts in automated driving.
The Hi-Drive exhibition will remain on display as the backdrop for the EUCAR Annual Reception and Conference, which follows immediately after. This partnership ensures that Hi-Drive’s achievements are showcased to a broad audience of industry leaders, policymakers, and researchers during one of Europe’s most influential automotive R&D gatherings.
Showcasing the Future of Mobility
The Hi-Drive Final Event exhibition is organized around three thematic topics that reflect the project’s core achievements.
1. Vehicles, Enablers & Operations
Hi-Drive has paved the way for advanced vehicle automation by addressing the fragmentation and extension of Operational Design Domains (ODDs). Building on the foundations of L3Pilot, the project introduced modular technology enablers in V2X communication, high-precision positioning, V2X cybersecurity, and machine learning, validated through extensive real-world and simulation testing. Cooperative manoeuvres via V2V and V2I, GNSS-denied positioning solutions, robust V2X cybersecurity protocols and advanced Machine Learning applications demonstrated resilience and scalability for future deployment.
These innovations were integrated into 37 prototype vehicles and evaluated during the Operations phase, where 20 teams conducted 45 operations on public roads and test tracks, complemented by simulation campaigns. In total, over 6,000 test runs across 38 use cases engaged 1,800 participants, covering all major road types—motorways, urban motorways, urban and rural roads, parking environments—and diverse weather and ODD conditions. This comprehensive testing demonstrated robustness and extended the capabilities of Automated Driving Functions (ADFs).
2. Effects and Impact Assessment
Hi-Drive evaluated automated driving performance using data from 45 operations pooled in 17 use-case clusters. Results show that technology enablers significantly defragment ODDs and improve driving behavior toward greater comfort, efficiency, and safety. On top of that, Hi-Drive conducted the most comprehensive impact assessment study to date for automated driving in Europe. Based on system-level modeling using the operation data for calibration, the final socioeconomic analysis revealed benefits dominated by safety and user comfort, resulting in a positive benefit-cost ratio.
3. Users
Safe and intuitive interaction with Connected and Automated Vehicles (CAVs) is essential for public acceptance. Hi-Drive gathered insights from 20,000 participants worldwide through surveys, simulators, and on-road studies to understand user needs and expectations. Safety, comfort, and the ability to engage in non-driving-related tasks emerged as key factors for adoption. Research explored driver monitoring systems, adaptive HMIs, and external communication cues (eHMIs and dHMIs) to ensure trust and smooth interaction with other road users. Innovative VR-based methods for mitigating motion sickness and frameworks for assessing comfort were developed, paving the way for inclusive and user-centric automated mobility.
- Hi-Drive Final Event Agenda:
www.hi-drive.eu/app/uploads/2025/11/Hi-DriveFE-Agenda.pdf - Link to the Hi-Drive Fact Sheet
www.hi-drive.eu/app/uploads/2022/10/230125_HI-D_Factsheet_1.0.pdf
The Hi-Drive project is an Innovation Action, co-funded by the European Union under the Horizon 2020 programme with the grant agreement number 101006664. Fifty-three organisations have committed to scientifically test and assess the impact of automated driving systems on driver comfort, safety, and traffic efficiency as part of the project.
About Institute for Automotive Engineering (ika) der RWTH Aachen University
As part of RWTH Aachen University, the Institute for Automotive Engineering (ika) researches the entire vehicle, including its systems and their interactions. From the initial idea through innovative component and system concepts to vehicle prototypes, the Institute's employees are shaping the vehicle of the future. The ika makes a recognized contribution to solving current and future challenges both in public projects and in cooperation with automobile manufacturers and suppliers.
The basis of our intensive research work for large parts of the automotive industry as well as public funding bodies at EU, federal and state level is our extensive infrastructure, which ranges from drive, battery, chassis and tire test benches to acoustic, thermodynamic and servo-hydraulic test facilities to a complete vehicle crash facility and test tracks including state-of-the-art measurement technology. In addition, there is up-to-date software and hardware equipment for all necessary simulation disciplines. ika employs about 120 permanent staff and more than 80 student assistants. In addition, around 100 student research and development projects are carried out on a permanent basis.
Released for publication. In case of reprinting, please send us a copy. If you have any questions or would like to receive further material, please contact your contact person.
Press contact
Institute for Automotive Engineering (ika), RWTH Aachen University
Steinbachstr. 7
52074 Aachen
Germany
Nikola Druce M.A.
Head of PR/Media
+49 241 80-25668
Download
Download PDF of press release.
Link
Project coordinator
Volkswagen Group Research
Aria Etemad
Aria.Etemad@volkswagen.de
Press contact
European Center for Information and Communication Technologies – EICT
Philippe Stehlik
+49 175 1816448
Philippe.stehlik@eict.de
Partners
Automotive manufacturers
Volkswagen AG, AUDI AG, BMW Group, Stellantis-CRF, Ford-Werke GmbH, Honda R&D Europe (Deutschland) GmbH, Hyundai Motor Europe Technical Center GmbH, Stellantis Auto (affiliated entity LAB (Laboratoire d'Accidentologie, de Biomécanique et d’étude du Comportement Humain)), Seat, Toyota Motor Europe, Volvo Personvagnar, Volvo Technology Corporation.
Suppliers
Aptiv, Automotive Artificial Intelligence (AAI), Robert Bosch GmbH, FEV.io, NNG, Commsignia, Planung Transport Verkehr AG (PTV), Valeo (affiliated entity Valeo Schalter und Sensoren GmbH).
Research
German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Communication and Computer Systems (ICCS), ika RWTH Aachen University (affiliated entity fka GmbH), Delft University of Technology, University of Leeds, Würzburg Institute for Traffic Sciences (WIVW), Institut VEDECOM, International Road Federation (IRF), Chalmers University of Technology, SNF Centre for Applied Research at NHH, Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO), University of Genova, Automotive Technology Centre of Galicia (CTAG), VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, University of Warwick, European Center for Information and Communication Technologies (EICT)
Authorities
TÜV SÜD, The Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt)
User Groups
Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), in association with third parties: Mobilité Club France, Allgemeiner Deutscher Automobil-Club (ADAC), Automobile Club d’Italia (ACI), Avto-Moto Zveza Slovenije (AMZS), Koninklijke Nederlandse Toeristenbond (ANWB), Automobile and Touring Club of Finland (AL), Hrvatski Autoklub (HAK), IAM Roadsmart (IAM), Magyar Autoklub (MAK), Royal Automobile Club de Belgique (RACB) and Reial Automobil Club de Catalunya (RACC)
Service
Cooperations
Address
Institute for Automotive Engineering
RWTH Aachen University
Steinbachstraße 7
52074 Aachen · Germany