As reported by Yahoo News: Elon Musk is taking another step forward with his innovative high-speed public transportation system, aptly named the Hyperloop. On Tuesday, his company SpaceX announced a partnership with the world's largest design and construction firm Aecom to build a one-mile test track in Hawthorne, California for this year's Hyperloop pod competition, Tech Insider reported.
The open competition, which was announced on June 15, kicks off this weekend with showcasing the over 100 pod designs. The selected pods will compete at the new track sometime in the summer of 2016, the SpaceX website said. The vacuum-sealed track is slated to be six feet wide and one mile in length, and since it's a test track, a 12-foot long foam pit will be at the end in case a pod has a brake failure, an Aecom statement from Tuesday said.
The Hyperloop was announced in 2013, as Tesla and SpaceX's Elon Musk's "train of the future," aka the fastest way to travel. In Musk's vision, the depressurized tube-based train will travel at 760 mph, and carry up to 840 passengers an hour, or 7.6 million a year. The cost of building it was estimated at $6 billion in 2013, Mic reported. Musk declared the Hyperloop a public challenge, releasing a 60-page document on the project, also emphasizing that SpaceX will not pursue the Hyperloop itself, Tech Insider reported.
"What we are delivering is more than just a track to test pod prototypes; it's a glimpse into the future," Aecom CEO Michael Burke said in the statement. Aecom worked with Brooklyn, New York's Barclay's Center and the Crossrail tunnel in London, the Verge reported.
Since the Hyperloop's announcement, two independent companies have sprung up in hopes of commercializing the high-speed transportation business: Hyperloop Technologies and Hyperloop Transportation Technologies. On Jan. 8, Hyperloop Technologies announced that it received its pipes to build a test tube in Nevada that could be running by 2020. But Hyperloop Transportation Technologies wasn't about to sit still; soon after, on Jan. 21, the company announced it will build its own 5-mile test track in its sustainably built Paradise called Quay Valley by Fresno, California.
Although technically unaffiliated, Hyperloop Technologies is sponsoring the pod competition, contributing $150,000 for the winning prizes, the Verge reported Jan. 15.