Skip to main content

Waymo unveils design for a robotaxi without a steering wheel

Waymo has unveiled a design for a self-driving robotaxi without a steering wheel and pedals.

The autonomous-vehicle specialist announced this week that it’s partnered with Chinese automaker Geely to build a Zeekr minivan filled entirely with passenger seats.

The upcoming Zeekr vehicle from Waymo.
Built by Geely, Waymo’s autonomous Zeekr minivan will have no steering wheel or pedals. Waymo

The all-electric, self-driving minivan will be designed and developed in Gothenburg, Sweden, before being added to Waymo’s fleet “in the years to come,” according to the U.S. company.

Recommended Videos

Announcing the Zeekr in a blog post, Waymo said the new vehicle features “a flat floor for more accessible entry, easy ingress and egress thanks to a B-pillarless design, low step-in height, generous head and legroom, and fully adjustable seats.”

The upcoming Zeekr vehicle from Geely.
Waymo

It added that riders traveling inside the Zeekr will experience “an interior without steering wheel and pedals, and with plenty of headroom, legroom and reclining seats, screens and chargers within arm’s reach, and an easy to configure and comfortable vehicle cabin.”

While Waymo appears keen to add the Zeekr minivan to its current fleet of autonomous vehicles that are undergoing testing on public roads, safety regulators will have the final say on whether to give the plan the green light, hence no firm timeline from Waymo.

The upcoming Zeekr vehicle from Waymo.
Waymo

Born out of Google’s autonomous-vehicle program that began in 2009, Alphabet-owned Waymo has been testing a range of vehicles fitted with advanced software and a slew of sensors and cameras that ensure safe travel.

In 2018, Waymo’s increasingly capable technology enabled the launch of an exploratory ridesharing service for a select group of local residents in Phoenix, Arizona, as part of its Waymo One initiative aimed at introducing its product to more members of the public.

Autonomous vehicles in Waymo’s current fleet all contain a steering wheel, and sometimes a safety driver, too, who’s ready to intervene should any anomalies be detected during a journey.

But in a move eagerly anticipated by many, Waymo has finally signaled a clear desire to introduce autonomous vehicles with a design worthy of the name.

Keen followers of Waymo’s story will know that the Zeekr won’t be its first autonomous vehicle to come without a steering wheel. Seven years ago it unveiled the Firefly, a tiny pod-like car designed to test early iterations of its autonomous software. The Firefly was retired in 2017 when Waymo decided to use larger, more conventional vehicles that traveled faster than the pod’s top speed of 25 mph.

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)…
Waymo’s robotaxis are safer than human-driven vehicles, study says
A Waymo robotaxi picking up a passenger.

Love them or hate them, but robotaxis have certainly been making headlines in 2024. And beyond the glamorous, sci-fi-inspired marketing around Tesla’s recently unveiled Cybercab robotaxi, safety has remained, in one way or another, a recurring theme.

Earlier this year, a survey revealed a majority of the U.S. public, or 68%, brought up safety concerns when asked what they thought about having self-driving vehicles (SDVs) on public roads. Yet within that majority, more than half either believe that SDV safety issues can be addressed or that SDVs will actually be safer than humans.

Read more
Waymo is taking its robotaxis overseas for the first time
Waymo Jaguar I-Pace

Waymo is taking its robotaxis out of the U.S. for the first time as the company begins expanding testing internationally.

A fleet of its autonomous vehicles will be heading first to the busy streets of Tokyo early next year, Waymo announced on Monday.

Read more
It looks like the end of the road for Cruise robotaxis
A Cruise autonomous car.

Autonomous-driving operations at Cruise look certain to end after its main backer, General Motors (GM), said it will stop funding the initiative.

GM, which has owned about 90% of Cruise since 2016, announced the decision in a statement shared on Tuesday. It follows a challenging period for Cruise after one of its autonomous cars ran over a woman after she was knocked into its path by a human-driven car in San Francisco in October 2023. The incident led to California regulators suspending Cruise's license to test its driverless cars on the state's streets, a decision that prompted Cruise to pause operations in other locations where it operated. It restarted low-level testing in Arizona in May 2024.

Read more