Skip to main content

Hyperloop project aims to link Venice and Padua

Hyper Transfer is designed to reduce traffic between the two Italian cities - if it is built
By Adam Hill February 8, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
'An eco-friendly, high-speed transport revolution' (image: Hyperloop TT)

A joint venture in Italy plans to create a hyperloop link - a tube-based transportation system - between two cities in the north-east of the country

No timeline is given for its completion but the 'Hyper Transfer' would run from Mestre, which is on the mainland, across the water from the famous island city of Venice, and Padua, which is around 50km away.

Hyperloop Transportation Technologies, Webuild and Leonardo have formed a consortium called Hyper Builders, which won the tender from the Venetian Motorway Concession (CAV), Italy’s regional highway operator.

Phase one is a feasibility study, followed by "a detailed design and engineering phase and the subsequent final phase for construction, testing, and certification".

The companies say the project "will reduce heavy traffic, decrease traditional transport times and energy consumption, improve road safety, and enhance the interconnections between transport systems and smart cities in the local area".

Rina and Hyperloop Italia – HyperloopTT’s licensee in Italy - are also part of the joint venture.

“This is the moment HyperloopTT has been working towards since 2013," says Andrés de León, CEO of HyperloopTT.  

"We thank the Italian government, the Veneto region, and CAV for their vision and commitment to sustainable innovation. We’ve partnered with some of the best engineering and transportation companies in the world, all with deep roots in the region. We look forward to bringing this first of many hyperloop systems to the world.”

Zach Zhang, director HyperloopTT and Silicon Valley-based venture capitalist said: "We are not only investing in a technological marvel, but also in the people that are creating the future of sustainable and efficient travel.”

Bibop Gresta, founder and CEO of Hyperloop Italia, called it "an eco-friendly, high-speed transport revolution".

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Nextbike by Tier moves further into Italy
    August 10, 2023
    Company emphasises its connection with Mobility as a Service in latest launches
  • Promoting cycling is the solution to congestion and pollution
    August 20, 2015
    Cycling offers health, air quality and road space/parking benefits, promoting governments and the EU to look at tax and technology initiatives. David Crawford reports. One way to improve urban air quality is to make green alternatives to car use financially attractive. Incentivising employees to switch their travel-to-work mode to using their own bikes could increase cycling’s modal share of commuting travel by 50%, a recent French research project suggests. The country’s government already subsidises pu
  • Sigma breaks into the French tolling market with deal for Sanef
    March 20, 2018
    Italian vending solutions provider Sigma has entered the French tolling market by supplying self-service payment machines to Sanef, Société des Autoroutes du Nord et de l'Est de la France. Sigma’s cash and electronic payment units are being installed on the motorways A1, A13, A26 and A29. The French deals comes after a recent similar contract in Austria where highways operator Asfinag ordered the TP1000. SIGMA says that it remains the sole supplier of self-service payment machines in Austrian tolled m
  • Investors point to bright future for micromobility
    January 23, 2020
    Some big names are looking to invest in transportation companies – and this new confidence in the future of MaaS and micromobility indicates a step change, says Ito World’s Johan Herrlin