Hardt unveils Europe’s first hyperloop test facility in Delft

Hardt toont Europa’s eerste hyperloop-testfaciliteit in Delft. Fotograaf Roderik van Nispen (Van Nispen Fotografie).

Delft, 1 June 2017 - On Thursday morning, and amid considerable interest, Minister Schultz van Haegen unveiled Europe’s first hyperloop test facility on the TU Delft campus. Hardt was founded as a company by a number of the winners from Elon Musk’s hyperloop competition earlier this year. Together with the European construction company BAM, they have built a 30-metre long test facility to test the technology for this futuristic transport system.

Hardt is the first European company to develop the hyperloop and has also announced its plans to create an operational hyperloop system. Before the unveiling, the Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure and the Environment announced that, in cooperation with Hardt and the American company Hyperloop One, it was starting research into the possibilities for the hyperloop in the Netherlands. In this research, the Ministry will be looking into aspects such as the current state of the technology, spatial planning, and the organisation of a hyperloop system.

Minister Schultz: ‘In terms of transportation, a new age has begun with self-driving vehicles, platooning trucks, and drones. In the Netherlands, we want to be the European test bed for these innovative and sustainable forms of transport and so build up more knowledge about them. The hyperloop is fast, innovative, silent and sustainable and so very interesting for the transportation needs of the future.’

The test facility of Hardt and BAM in Delft consists of a tube with a length of 30 metres and an external diameter of 3.2 metres. This test facility will allow Hardt to test all the important systems in a vacuum at low speeds. This includes testing the safety, the propulsion, the gliding and the stabilisation of the hyperloop vehicle.

In conjunction with TU Delft and BAM, Hardt is also studying social issues concerning the new vehicle. In order to study the integration of the hyperloop into a living and working environment, the test facility is located at The Green Village on the campus of TU Delft. This 'living laboratory' serves as a test bed for radical innovations that are focussed on a sustainable future. This location provides scope for research into, for example, the social integration and social acceptance of the new transport method.

European hyperloop network

A hyperloop will enable people and goods to travel at speeds of more than a thousand kilometres per hour through tubes with very low air resistance. This makes the transport system more energy efficient than, for example, travelling by airplane or the train. A hyperloop network in the Netherlands would allow the Randstad to be reached in less than half an hour from all corners of the country. The hyperloop can also help relieve large cities because people can work in the city but live much further away because of the much faster connection for commuters. A hyperloop network in Europe would mean that people could travel over an entire continent with the same ease that underground train travel currently offers in big cities. Unlike train travel, the hyperloop would not make any intermediate stops during its journey, but would arrive at its destination uninterrupted. Tim Houter, CEO of Hardt: ‘We are creating a world where distance no longer matters. One where you will have the freedom to live and work wherever you want to.’

Step-by-step plan for creating the hyperloop

Hardt’s goal is to begin building a hyperloop route between two cities within the next four years. The test facility unveiled today is the first in a series planned to build the first hyperloop route step by step. After completing the low-speed tests, Hardt will aim to build a test facility that will enable the testing of all the systems at high speed. This test facility will be used to test aspects such as the technology involved in cornering and the changing of lanes within the vacuum tube at top speed. When all the techniques have been proven, the building of a route between two cities to transport both people and goods can begin.

Cooperation with BAM

For BAM, the cooperation with Hardt fits seamlessly into its ambition to invest in new technology and to work with innovative, entrepreneurial partners. Marinus Schimmel, Director of BAM Infra Nederland bv: ‘We are connecting for the future. We are constantly looking for new and smart ways of travelling in order to make an important contribution to improving our transportation systems and creating a more sustainable society. We are on the verge of a unique, completely new technology which will allow us to make much more efficient use of our means of transport and our transport infrastructure.’

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About Hardt Global Mobility:

Hardt’s goal to is begin building a hyperloop route between two cities within the next four years. The founders of Hardt were part of the Delft Hyperloop team that won Elon Musks’s Hyperloop Pod Competition in Los Angeles in January of this year. NS and the UNIIQ investment fund have invested in the innovative start-up that is located in Delft. Hardt is also supported by BAM and TU Delft.

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About BAM Infra:

BAM Infra Nederland is a customer-driven organisation that, with its broad expertise and innovative working methods, provides added value for its clients. Our integral, cooperative approach to infrastructural specifications always enables us to offer the best solutions to our clients. BAM is known for its high quality and the reliability of its products and services, as well as for the efforts, knowledge and experience of its employees.

BAM Infra Nederland is a subsidiary of Royal BAM Group, a successful European construction group that incorporates operating companies in the two business lines of Construction and Property and Infrastructure, as well as in the area of public-private collaboration. BAM is listed on the Amsterdam Euronext.