Skip to main content

Peachtree installs solar roadway system

US city's solution will produce more than 1,300 kilowatt-hours of electricity a year
By Ben Spencer December 15, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
The charger is equipped with an energy storage system for night-time charging (© Peachtree Corners)

The city of Peachtree Corners in Georgia has unveiled a roadway system which produces energy for a solar-powered electric vehicle (EV) charging station at city hall.

Part of Metro Atlanta, the city is a hub of connected infrastructure and hosts such innovations as smartphone-activated e-scooters, an autonomous shuttle and a solar roadway to an EV charging hub.

The solar roadway is located in a section of Technology Parkway's autonomous vehicle test lane and was provided to the city through a partnership with The Ray.

The Ray is a non-profit living laboratory and proving ground, located along an 18-mile stretch of Interstate 85 between LaGrange and the Georgia/Alabama state line.

Peachtree Corners says the new system will produce more than 1,300 kilowatt-hours of electricity annually for a Level 2 EV charger at no cost to motorists. 

The charger is also equipped with an energy storage system for night time charging.

As part of the deal, French transportation innovator Colas Group and French National Solar Energy Institute manufactured the Wattway solar roadway panels. 

Brandon Branham, chief technology officer and assistant city manager of Peachtree Corners, says: "While this new form of 100% green, renewable energy will begin with supplying power to an EV charging station, our vision is to begin to power more existing infrastructure across the city, off-grid.”

Harriet Anderson Langford, founder of The Ray, says: “Proving this technology in an environment like Peachtree Corners helps us further demonstrate its effectiveness while moving us toward implementation on a larger scale."
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • SP Group to implement 1,000 EV chargers in Singapore by 2020
    October 30, 2018
    Electricity and gas company SP Group says it will build a network of 1,000 electric vehicle (EV) chargers in Singapore by 2020 to meet public demand. Wong Kim Yin, SP group chief executive officer, says the initiative will enable greater adoption of EVs, help its customers go green and save energy and cost. The deployment will include 250 high-powered direct current (DC) chargers which are expected to offer power ratings up to 350kW to support EV models with bigger battery capacities and longer driv
  • Google joins Ford in Detroit mobility hub
    February 10, 2022
    Latest development in industrial city's Corktown district will be a 'transport innovation zone'
  • Downtown Chattanooga gets smarter
    January 10, 2023
    Seoul Robotics will deliver 86 new smart city intersections in Tennessee city
  • Fortum to offer wireless charging for electric taxis in Oslo
    March 26, 2019
    Clean energy company Fortum is working with Momentum Dynamics and the City of Oslo to introduce wireless fast-charging infrastructure for electric taxis in the Norwegian capital. Fortum says the project is seeking to reduce the time it takes for drivers to find chargers, thereby reducing climate emissions from the taxi sector. The partners are aiming to install induction technology, with charging plates in the ground able to provide up to 75 kilowatts of power, the company adds. Annika Hoffner, head o