
The facility at Ottawa Lake, which is being built by the Toyota Research Institute, will go into operation in October.
“This new site will give us the flexibility to customize driving scenarios that will push the limits of our technology and move us closer to conceiving a human-driven vehicle that is incapable of causing a crash,” Ryan Eustice, the Toyota Research Institute’s senior vice president of automated driving, said in a statement.
US opens probe into fatal Tesla crash in California
Automakers such as General Motors and companies such as Alphabet unit Waymo have been racing to develop self-driving cars and be the first to market with a viable product.
But questions about the safety of self-driving technology and oversight of developers were raised after a fatal collision between an Uber self-driving vehicle and a pedestrian in Arizona in March.
Tesla’s electric motor shift to spur demand for neodymium
Following that accident, Toyota suspended all its self-driving tests on US public roads in California and Michigan. Toyota has continued tests on closed courses.
A Toyota Research Institute spokesman said halting tests on public roads has allowed the automaker to refine and upgrade its fleet of test vehicles.
“We will resume testing on public roads in a few weeks, once these three systems have been more closely aligned,” the spokesman said.
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