Skip to main content

New partners for USDOT Smart City Challenge

US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx has announced two new partners in the US Department of Transportation (USDOT)’s Smart City Challenge, DC Solar Solutions and Continental Automotive. In addition to offering US$1.5 million in mobile solar products to the winning city, mobile solar technology manufacturer DC Solar Solutions will assist all seven finalist cities in building strategies for electric vehicle charging infrastructure to encourage and facilitate the adoption of electric vehicles by individ
June 23, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx has announced two new partners in the 324 US Department of Transportation (USDOT)’s Smart City Challenge, DC Solar Solutions and 260 Continental Automotive.

In addition to offering US$1.5 million in mobile solar products to the winning city, mobile solar technology manufacturer DC Solar Solutions will assist all seven finalist cities in building strategies for electric vehicle charging infrastructure to encourage and facilitate the adoption of electric vehicles by individuals, businesses and municipalities. It will also help these cities identify applications for its low-cost mobile solar technology, including the upgrading of off-grid power generators from diesel to solar.

As part of its commitment, Continental Automotive will provide advanced sensing, vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure communication technology to increase traffic safety at intersections and provide a platform for intelligent transportation systems of the future. The Smart City Challenge winner will be the country’s first city to fully integrate innovative technologies such as self-driving cars, connected vehicles and smart sensors into their transportation network.

USDOT has also announced that it will collaborate with government and private sector partners to help all seven finalist cities in the Smart City Challenge, not just the challenge winner, move forward with ideas that each city developed over the past six months.

This collaboration will include continued support from Paul G. Allen’s Vulcan and will focus resources from across the federal government and the private sector to support innovation in the cities of Austin, Columbus, Denver, Kansas City, Pittsburgh, Portland, and San Francisco.

Under the leadership of the Department of Transportation, the collaboration will include the Department of Energy, the Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology. The Challenge’s original private sector partners will also be supporting all seven cities.

Seventy-eight cities submitted entries to the competition, and in March, seven finalists were selected. Each finalist then prepared a full proposal, and the mayors of the seven cities presented their final pitches at a live event in Washington, DC in early June. The winning city will be announced by the end of this month.

Related Content

  • April 24, 2020
    Spin launches safer road design competition
    Ford Mobility’s scooter firm Spin has launched a competition to design safer streets.
  • May 16, 2012
    Milestone for ChargePoint America
    Coulomb Technologies has celebrated a significant milestone for the ChargePoint America programme. At a ceremony in Exposition Park hosted by the Honorable Antonio Villaraigosa, Mayor of Los Angeles. US Energy Secretary Steven Chu and Coulomb Technologies founder and CTO Richard Lowenthal unveiled the 500th ChargePoint America station available now on the ChargePoint Network. Others attending the ceremony included ChargePoint America programme vehicle partners Chevrolet, Ford and smart USA as well as electr
  • March 31, 2015
    Secretary Foxx sends six-year transportation bill to Congress
    Over the past year, US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx has visited more than 100 communities and heard one common story about crumbling infrastructure and dwindling resources to fix it with. Foxx has now sent to Congress his solution to this problem: a long-term transportation bill that provides funding growth and certainty so that state and local governments can get back in the business of building things again. The Grow America Act reflects President Obama’s vision for a six-year, US$478 billion
  • April 30, 2015
    US budget proposals seek recognise ITS benefits
    President Obama’s latest budget brings some good news for the transportation and ITS sectors. President Obama’s proposed 2016 budget could see more progress on many of America’s ingrained transportation problems than has been achieved in some time and includes a six-year $478 billion surface transportation reauthorisation. That is, of course, provided it clears all of the administrative hurdles to become law.