Parking of Connected Automated Vehicles: Vehicle Control, Parking Assignment, and Multi-agent Simulation

Abstract: 

This paper introduces a novel approach to optimize the parking efficiency for fleets of Connected and Automated Vehicles (CAVs). We present a novel multi-vehicle parking simulator, equipped with hierarchical path planning and collision avoidance capabilities for individual CAVs. The simulator is designed to capture the key decision-making processes in parking, from low-level vehicle control to high-level parking assignment, and it enables the effective assessment of parking strategies for large fleets of ground vehicles. We formulate and compare different strategic parking spot assignments to minimize a collective cost. While the proposed framework is designed to optimize various objective functions, we choose the total parking time for the experiment, as it is closely related to the reduction of vehicles' energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. We validate the effectiveness of the proposed strategies through empirical evaluation against a dataset of real-world parking lot dynamics, realizing a substantial reduction in parking time by up to 43.8%. This improvement is attributed to the synergistic benefits of driving automation, the utilization of shared infrastructure state data, the exclusion of pedestrian traffic, and the real-time computation of optimal parking spot allocation.

Author: 
Shen, Xu
Choi, Yongkeun
Wong, Alex
Borrelli, Francesco
Moura, Scott
Woo, Soomin
Publication date: 
February 22, 2024
Publication type: 
Preprint
Citation: 
Shen, X., Choi, Y., Wong, A., Borrelli, F., Moura, S., & Woo, S. (2024). Parking of Connected Automated Vehicles: Vehicle Control, Parking Assignment, and Multi-agent Simulation (arXiv:2402.14183). arXiv. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2402.14183