The
Highway Patrol Cop Of The Future Is A Robotic Unicycle
Or maybe an aerial drone. The LA Auto Show's annual Design
Challenge suggests the patrol car of the future is optionally manned,
self-driving, and armed with autonomous robots.

Honda's CHP Drone Squad
Concept
Honda
Every
year, the Design Challenge--formulated by and for the LA Auto Show--asks the
automotive industry's most advanced design labs to speculate on possible
futures as they pertain to the continuing evolution of the automobile. This
year's theme: highway
patrol 2025. Entries from the likes
of GM, Subaru, BMW, and Honda naturally show a lot of imagination, but more
than that they show a degree of agreement between the industry's brightest
creatives that the future is going to be crowded, full of traffic jams, and
above all very, very automated.
Everyday police work in
2025 will be autonomous and remotely controlled.
As
in the defense sector, robotics potentially offer law enforcement agencies a
force multiplier--something that allows fewer officers to be more productive at
a lower cost--and this year's Design Challenge entrants clearly understand
that. Some of the proposals are pretty straightforward; Mercedes Benz offers up
an advanced, fuel-efficient SUV for police forces trying to own the road with
sheer size, while General Motors introduces the "Volt Squad," a
three-vehicle manned system based on the electric propulsion technology pioneered
for the Chevy Volt.
But
the proposals put forth by Honda and BMW perhaps speak to the most likely
future of routine traffic patrolling. Honda Advanced Design's CHP Drone Squad
is an optionally manned system that makes highway patrol work more like the
routine intelligence-gathering conducted by the U.S. military. That is to say,
everyday police work in 2025 will be increasingly autonomous as well as
remotely controlled. Honda's Drone squad is composed of a larger optionally
manned Auto-Drone that functions like a mobile forward operating base capable
of deploying smaller unmanned two-wheeled motorcycles called Moto-Drones. Both
cruiser and its deployed robots can work together to chase down and corral
offenders or participate in various interception, intercession, or other
first-response missions, like a technology-heavy police cruiser with its own
small fleet of helper robots.
BMW's
concept is similar. Created by BMW Group DesignworksUSA, E-Patrol is the manned
police cruiser of the future. The team's research predicted that Los Angeles
2025 will host a traffic-filled yet fast-moving transit atmosphere, and for the
car chases of the future the officers driving E-Patrol will be able to deploy
both aerial drones or single-wheeled unmanned ground vehicles to pursue other
vehicles or gather information and report back to the hub. Essentially, a
couple of officers on patrol could do the work of multiple cruisers and an
aerial helicopter unit today--assuming someone pioneers a user interface that
would allow said officers to manage the entire system simultaneously.

BMW's E-Patrol
Concept
BMW
That
last part might be the biggest design challenge of all, and it will require
lots of robotic autonomy. But if the concepts put forth by the auto industry's
most forward-thinking creatives is any indication, highway policing by
autopilot could become the norm. And while this future won't necessarily come
to pass in the next 15 years, there's a strong chance that at some point we
will find ourselves receiving moving violations from autonomous systems, from
some kind of RoboCop (minus the cyborg element). So don't bother crying--your
pitiful human emotions won't get you off the hook this time.
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