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January 26, 2018

Nissan made some self-parking slippers to show off its clever car tech

by John_A

Japan’s famed hospitality has just stepped up a gear with the arrival of self-parking slippers, floor cushions, and even tables.

A traditional Japanese “ryokan” inn near Tokyo is testing out the new kit, built by one of the nation’s car giants, Nissan.

Designed to showcase the company’s ProPILOT Park autonomous technology that helps a car to park itself, the slippers and other items are fitted with a modified version comprising sensors and motors (and tiny wheels!) that steer them to their original location with a simple press of a remote button.

If you’ve ever stayed at a ryokan, you’ll know all about leaving your shoes at the entrance before stepping into a pair of slippers. Being the orderly nation that it is, ryokans like to have everything looking just right for guests, and while a pair of slightly-out-of-place slippers might not seem like a big deal to you, to the owner of an upmarket ryokan it’ll look like a scene of carnage and sweat-inducing chaos, prompting a rapid intervention by staff to put the footwear in its rightful place. Even if it is three millimeters to the left.

Nissan’s technology changes all that, with the sensors expertly guiding the slippers into position, leaving them perfectly lined up at the entrance at all times, creating an atmosphere of order and harmony for arriving guests as well as staff. Brilliant.

The guests in the video (above) are certainly impressed. “It’s incredible,” a man marvels as a self-driving cushion trundles toward him. “Selected guests” will be able to try out Nissan’s technology at the ryokan in Hakone from March.

Nissan spokesperson Nick Maxfield told Reuters the self-parking slippers are supposed to “raise awareness of automated driving technologies, and their potential, non-driving applications,” and so will probably not be appearing at ryokans across Japan anytime soon.

The company’s ProPILOT Park technology was introduced with the all-new electric Nissan LEAF in Japan in October 2017. Using sensors and cameras, it detects surrounding objects and, with a push of a button, lets drivers automatically park their vehicle in a selected parking space. Nissan’s ProPILOT technology also includes an “assist” feature that can help the driver with acceleration, steering, and braking under particular conditions on a highway. It debuted in the U.S. with the Rogue in 2017.

In another effort to boost the technology’s profile, Nissan created the Intelligent Parking Chair in 2016. If you’d like to see a bunch of office chairs parking themselves, then do take a moment to check out the video.

Editors’ Recommendations

  • Nissan follows GM with plan to test robo-taxis in early 2018
  • Sit back, relax, and enjoy a ride through the history of self-driving cars
  • TomTom and Zenuity team up to create the self-driving cars of the future
  • Lyft and Aptiv will shuttle CES attendees around Vegas in self-driving cars
  • Volkswagen Group to collaborate with self-driving firm Aurora Innovation


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