The 3-km section at Collombey-Muraz, canton Valais, will test ultra-high-speed vacuum ground transportation and magnetic levitation technologies Eurotube

An industrial zone in canton Valais has been chosen as the first European site to test a high-speed "hyperloop" transport system. A test track is due to be built at Collombey-Muraz next year.

This content was published on December 13, 2018 - 19:13

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"EuroTube is entering into a partnership with the SBB to build a three-kilometre research facility and a test section for high-speed vacuum transport in Valais," EuroTube and the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) said in a statement on Thursday.

Hyperloop experimental high-speed transportation systems involve sending magnetic passenger pods through a vacuum tube at the speed of sound. SBB said the hyperloop is designed to travel at speeds of up to 1100 km/per hour, but "the Collombey-Muraz test and research section will be designed for speeds of up to 900 km/h".

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Collombey-Muraz was chosen because it offers "very flat [terrain] and with very few obstacles".

The SBB hopes the test track will provide "important insights into the construction and operation of this potentially high-capacity transport mode".



In Europe, there are currently no hyperloop test sections, while a few exist in other parts of the world. In the US, Elon Musk, the founder of SpaceX and co-founder of the car firm Tesla, launched in 2015 an annual Hyperloop Pod Competition in California aimed at revolutionizing transport systems. This summer, a team from the Swiss federal institute of technology Lausanne (EPFL) won third place in the competition with their “EPFLoop” pod.

A similar project to the hyperloop technology — a magnetic levitation train known as the Swissmetro that would have traveled through tunnels beneath Switzerland - was discussed decades ago but was ultimately abandoned.



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