Skip to main content

Cruise robocars make a cautious return to Houston

A Cruise autonomous car.
Cruise

Robotaxi specialist Cruise is restarting tests of its autonomous vehicles on the streets of Houston, TechCrunch reported on Tuesday.

Recommended Videos

Cruise’s main backer, General Motors, said on the same day that it’s investing a further $850 million in the robotaxi project.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The developments come as Cruise makes a cautious return to testing its autonomous cars on public roads following a string of troubling incidents last year. The worst of these involved a female pedestrian who was dragged along the street by a driverless Cruise car in San Francisco in October after she was thrown in its path following a collision with a human-driven vehicle.

The accident, which the woman survived, prompted California to suspend Cruise’s operating permit in the state, a decision that led Cruise to suspend testing across the country a short while later.

Since then, Cruise has returned very small fleets to Phoenix and Dallas. As a sign of Cruise’s highly cautious approach, the Houston fleet will comprise just three vehicles and although they’re fitted with autonomous systems, the equipment will not be operational for the time being, Axios reported. This suggests Cruise merely wants to gauge the response of human drivers on the same roads and help them get used to seeing Cruise cars back on Houston’s streets.

When ready, Cruise will begin “supervised autonomous driving” in which the autonomous systems will function, but with a human behind the wheel ready to step in if required.

The company started operating its self-driving cars in Houston last fall. But its decision to halt testing nationwide meant that testing stopped in the city after just a few weeks.

Cruise was founded in 2013 and since then has raised more than $15 billion in funding, with GM providing more than half of that figure since acquiring the company in 2016.

During its crisis toward the end of last year, there was talk about whether Cruise would continue with its work in the autonomous-vehicle sector. But with GM’s backing, it insisted it would carry on, though with a new approach described by a Cruise spokesperson as “slow and steady.”

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Cruise’s robotaxis have driven 1 million miles fully driverless
A driverless Cruise car in San Francisco.

General Motors-backed Cruise revealed this week that its fully driverless cars have now traveled more than a million miles, mostly on the streets of San Francisco.

The achievement comes just 15 months after the company’s first fully driverless ride, during which time it also launched San Francisco’s first paid driverless robotaxi service.

Read more
Robotaxis have a passenger problem that no one thought of
gm cruise to test fully driverless cars in san francisco

An issue with self-driving cars that apparently no one previously considered has come to light: dozing passengers.

Officials in San Francisco, where Alphabet’s Waymo company and GM-backed Cruise are currently operating robotaxi services as part of ongoing trials, highlighted the problem in a recent letter to the regulator, Wired reported.

Read more
GMC poured all of its truck-making expertise into the Sierra EV pickup
A 2024 GMC Sierra EV towing an Airstream trailer.

The Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickup trucks are twins, and that will continue to be the case when they go electric.
Chevy unveiled its Silverado EV at CES 2022, and now it’s GMC’s turn. The 2024 GMC Sierra EV borrows some key features from its Chevy sibling, as well GMC’s first electric truck — the Hummer EV. Some of those features were actually pioneered by General Motors two decades ago on non-electric trucks, and are now making a comeback.
You can reserve a Sierra EV now, but deliveries aren’t scheduled to start until early calendar-year 2024. Production starts with a high-end Denali Edition 1 model, with other versions arriving for the 2025 model year.

Design
The Sierra EV updates the design language of the internal-combustion GMC Sierra for the electric age. A big grille is no longer needed for cooling, but it’s still an important styling element that designers didn’t want to break away from, Sharon Gauci, GMC executive director of global design, explained to Digital Trends and other media in an online briefing ahead of the truck’s reveal. The grille shape is now outlined in lights, with an illuminated GMC logo.
Like the Hummer EV and Silverado EV, the Sierra EV uses GM’s Ultium modular battery architecture which, among other things, means the battery pack is an integral part of the structure. So unlike most other trucks — including the rival Ford F-150 Lightning — the Sierra EV doesn’t have a separate frame. The cab and bed are one piece as well, all of which helps increase structural rigidity.
The Sierra EV also borrows the Midgate setup from the Silverado EV. First seen on the Chevy Avalanche and Cadillac Escalade EXT in the early 2000s, it allows the bulkhead and glass behind the cab to be removed, effectively extending the bed. Combined with the fold-out MultiPro tailgate from the internal-combustion Sierra, it can expand the default 5.0-foot, 11-inch bed length to 10 feet, 10 inches. A frunk (GMC calls it the “eTrunk”) provides covered storage space as well.
Because it’s pitched as a premium vehicle, the Sierra EV gets upscale interior materials like open-pore wood trim and stainless steel speaker grilles for its Bose audio system. But the design itself, with a freestanding portrait touchscreen and rectangular instrument cluster, looks suspiciously similar to the Ford Mustang Mach-E cabin. The touchscreen even has the same big volume knob as the Ford. We hope GMC’s lawyers are ready.

Read more