“…A first group of papers presents static approaches, where, for each vehicle, nominal routes are computed on the underlying routing network, taking load-balance factors into account, to prevent collisions as far as possible [8,9], or, if the application context allows, by dividing the routing area into non-intersecting zones, each occupied by one vehicle at a time, as in regional control models [9][10][11][12]. In general, such approaches cannot guarantee collision-free nominal routes, and additional methods are required during their execution to detect and resolve collisions and, in case, deadlocks, based on, e.g., Petri Net approaches [13,14], graph-theoretic models [15], queries on geospatial reference grid systems [16] and searching the space of possible deviations from nominal routes [17]. A specialized static approach for grid networks is presented in [18], where initial routes that minimize collisions are chosen from equivalent Manhattan paths, and selected collision avoidance rules, based on preliminary collisions classification, are applied during execution.…”