Close Menu
Machinery Asia
  • Home
  • Industry News
  • Heavy Machinery
  • Backhoe Loader
  • Excavators
  • Skid Steer
  • Videos
  • Shopping
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Machinery Asia
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Industry News
  • Heavy Machinery
  • Backhoe Loader
  • Excavators
  • Skid Steer
  • Videos
  • Shopping
Machinery Asia
You are at:Home » Colorado is leading the way with self-driving highway maintenance vehicles
Industry News

Colorado is leading the way with self-driving highway maintenance vehicles

Machinery AsiaBy Machinery AsiaNovember 10, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Tumblr

Road maintenance is a dangerous job. In 2023 and 2024 combined, 47 people died on roads in Colorado work zones, including two road crew members.

The Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) has turned to autonomous crash trucks to help mitigate the problem. These vehicles drive behind painting and maintenance vehicles to provide a safety buffer to traffic on the road.

CDOT purchased its first autonomous truck, backed by technology from Florida-based Kratos Defense, in 2016. Since then, it has purchased two more with the intention of continuing to deploy these vehicles. Kratos’ Autonomous Attenuator (ATMA) allows crash trucks to operate without a driver.

Heather Pickering-Hilgers, CDOT’s deputy director of mobility technology, said the program was launched on low-traffic roads in southeastern and southern Colorado. “We try to follow roads very little traveled,” he says. “We’re still keeping it out of any major metropolitan areas.”

A $1.7 million US Department of Transportation Strengthening Mobility and Revolutionizing Transportation (SMART) grant awarded to CDOT in 2022 funded the acquisition of the third vehicle. The award also funded an online toolkit to help other states launch their own ATMA programs.

“We’re working with a lot of other states,” says Pickering-Hilgers. “We hope to apply for the Stage 2 SMART grant. We’re working with a bunch of other states to expand the program, not just in Colorado, but across the country. We really feel like every state that wants one should be able to have one.” The next grant could reach $15 million, according to the USDOT website.

Military technology finds a civilian use case

Maynard Factor, Kratos’ vice president of business development, said the ATMA technology grew out of the company’s core market of providing autonomous vehicles to the military. He attended a Florida Department of Transportation event around 2010 that alerted him to the concept of wrecked trucks. “I saw this as a great way to adapt our driverless technology into the commercial space and aligned with Kratos’ strategy of offering dual-use technologies,” says Factor.

Factor later connected with Pennsylvania-based Royal Truck and Equipment, a leading supplier of crash trucks. “Within a week, I had a truck and we automated it,” he says. “It was the first that had ever been done.”

ATMA uses GPS and inertial navigation for autonomous driving as Kratos evaluates optical navigation systems. The systems also have fully redundant backup communications technology with “military-grade encryption,” says Factor.

A soft launch in Pennsylvania followed in 2014, then a UK-based company was the first contract for an ATMA for a paying customer, also in 2014. “The next contract I got was with the Colorado Department of Transportation,” he says.

CDOT staff “were already aligned with a technology innovation program, and this ATMA project fits very well into that program,” says Factor. “They had a dedicated team to evaluate the technology, validate it in the use case, and make recommendations for continuous improvement of the technology and capabilities. They were basically subject matter experts in how they did highway maintenance, and they had a very strong team in vehicle automation technologies.”

Factor says Kratos has since deployed 15 systems in other states, including Missouri, North Dakota, Minnesota, Ohio, Oklahoma and California. Colorado has the most with three, and Missouri is second with two systems.

Some states have a safety engine on the truck. “The main reason for this is that the legislation has not yet caught up with the technology in these places to allow a driverless, 36,000-pound truck on the road,” explains Factor.

There’s plenty of room for growth in Colorado and beyond, he adds. Colorado has about 100 legacy crash trucks in 10 regions, and there are near-term plans to deploy an autonomous vehicle in each district. “A long-term goal is to have a solid percentage of these automated vehicles for workers to use and deploy in their normal daily activity,” says Factor.

Pickering-Hilgers says Kratos has been a fantastic partner for CDOT. “We’re just trying to make it better every time,” he notes. “Our vendor has been very pleasant to work with [Kratos]and tell them what works and what doesn’t. Each one has gotten a little better in terms of their sensors and cameras and things like that, so we’re continuing to refine it and they’re listening to us, which is great.”

Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleClark, Herzog breaks ground on $705 million DC rail yard
Next Article Best Government/Public Building, Award of Excellence, Sustainability: State of Michigan DNR Customer Service Center
Machinery Asia
  • Website

Related Posts

Best Project, Specialized Construction: Fully Automated Pitch Change Solution at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium

December 13, 2025

New England Project of the Year: The team provides an off-grid remote contact station

December 13, 2025

Project of the Year Finalist, Best K-12 Education: Josiah Quincy Upper School

December 13, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Don't Miss

Best Project, Specialized Construction: Fully Automated Pitch Change Solution at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium

New England Project of the Year: The team provides an off-grid remote contact station

Project of the Year Finalist, Best K-12 Education: Josiah Quincy Upper School

Des Moines Airport launches next phase of $600 million expansion

Popular Posts

Best Project, Specialized Construction: Fully Automated Pitch Change Solution at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium

December 13, 2025

New England Project of the Year: The team provides an off-grid remote contact station

December 13, 2025

Project of the Year Finalist, Best K-12 Education: Josiah Quincy Upper School

December 13, 2025

Des Moines Airport launches next phase of $600 million expansion

December 13, 2025
Heavy Machinery

Aluminum car trailer

December 2, 2025

Wheel Dozer vs. Crawler Dozer

November 20, 2025

Where can I find reliable mini excavator dealers near me?

October 27, 2025

The complete expert guide to faster and smarter cargo transportation

October 27, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.