As automated, connected and electric vehicle technologies continue to develop, road agencies across Australia and New Zealand need to prepare infrastructure for new operating conditions. Technologies such as Automated Vehicles (AVs), Connected and Automated Vehicles (CAVs), Electric Vehicles (EVs), Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) and Cooperative Intelligent Transport Systems (C-ITS) place new demands on both physical and digital infrastructure. Many of these demands extend beyond the scope of current design standards.

This webinar presents the findings of Austroads Project CAV6428, which defines a set of high-level design principles to support infrastructure readiness for future mobility. The project reviewed international and local research, analysed existing Austroads and jurisdictional guidance, and engaged with Austroads member agencies to understand current challenges and priorities. The project outputs provide a structured foundation to support agencies through this transition, identifying key gaps and mapping how infrastructure capability can evolve over time.

The project identified 24 topic areas - 11 physical and 13 digital - where agencies require clearer direction to support emerging vehicle technologies. Across these topics, the report identifies 135 design principles covering areas such as managing transitions of control between automated and manual driving, ensuring readability of lane markings and signage, managing mixed traffic interactions, kerbside management for automated vehicles and EVs, ensuring reliable CAV communications, protecting data from cybersecurity threats, and supporting digital resilience.

The principles give agencies practical direction for planning and adapting infrastructure in an evolving technology environment. They support informed decision-making that reflects local context, operational needs and technology readiness. The principles are a flexible toolkit that agencies can apply selectively to suit different project types and stages of deployment, while supporting consistency across jurisdictions.

The project also developed an online mapping tool to help visualise and navigate the principles. This interactive matrices allow users to filter by topic area and explore how physical and digital considerations for vehicle technologies impact infrastructure.

In this session, presenters David Yee and Megan Sharkey will explain the purpose and structure of the design principles, summarise the key physical and digital topic areas, outline how agencies can apply the principles in practice. The session will also demonstrate how the mapping tool can support practical application.

This webinar is relevant to professionals across road and transport agencies, including planners, designers, asset managers, ITS specialists and policy leads involved in preparing infrastructure for emerging mobility technologies.

Join us to explore how a principles-led approach can support safer, more consistent and future-ready road and infrastructure planning across Australia and New Zealand.

Details About the Webinar

Wednesday, 29/04/2026 · 1:00 p.m. Sydney (GMT +10:00)
Cost: Free
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About the Speakers

M Megan Sharkey

Dr Megan Sharkey is the Senior Manager, Future Mobility Testing and Assurance at Transport for NSW. She leads the assurance of emerging transport technologies and oversees the state’s Future Mobility Testing and Research Centre (FMTRC) in Cudal. The FMTRC serves as a national test bed supporting connected and automated vehicle trials, advanced technology systems, and ANCAP testing. Megan works closely with internal teams, industry partners, and research organisations to evaluate the performance, safety, and readiness of new mobility technologies for deployment across NSW’s road network.

1752543232-ff0f7967141b0a38 David Yee

David Yee is the Managing Director of Transport Management Consulting and a leading specialist in Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS), traffic and transport operations, and digital transport infrastructure. He has supported government agencies across Australia and New Zealand in delivering national ITS architecture, real-world CAV trials, harmonised data provision frameworks, and the design, implementation, and operation of real-time Traffic/Transport Management Centres (TMCs) and ITS platforms. David’s work bridges policy, strategy, implementation, and operations—delivering scalable, future-focused solutions for transport management and mobility. He has authored influential reports that guide agencies through technical and operational transformation, with a strong emphasis on interoperability, maintainability, and real-world delivery outcomes.

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