Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu! usenet.ins.cwru.edu!cleveland.Freenet.Edu!bm426 From: bm...@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Tom Turner) Newsgroups: ieee.announce Subject: THE ELECTRIC VEHICLE AND THE AMERICAN COMMUNITY: (LONG, 12Kb) Date: 10 Jan 1993 01:33:12 GMT Organization: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio (USA) Lines: 286 Message-ID: <1inucoINNobk@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> Reply-To: bm...@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (T. Turner) NNTP-Posting-Host: hela.ins.cwru.edu The Electric Vehicle and the American Community: A National Infrastructure Planning and Design Competition 376 Boylston Street Boston, MA 02116 617 267-9035 Telephone 617 267-9098 Telefax SPONSORS: Edison Electric Institute General Motors Electric Vehicles Hughes Power Control Systems Electronic Data Systems U.S. Department of Energy CO-SPONSORS: The Detroit Edison Company Pacific Gas and Electric Company Southern California Edison Company with Arizona Public Service Company Boston Edison Company Los Angels Department of Water and Power Sacramento Municipal Utility District Salt River Project COMPETITION MANAGER: Cecil & Rizvi Inc. Previously posted to this news group was an general press release announcing the competition. The following summary of the competition program should address many of the questions you may have concerning the program, intent, and requirements of the competition. A complete package of instructions, information, and the specific challenge to the competitors will be provided in the competition program which will be mailed to all registrants beginning January 15, l993. The registration process is described in this summary. Registrants will have an opportunity to submit detailed questions a the competition process. Responses to submitted questions will be mailed to all registrants in early March, l993. In addition, information workshops are being planned in several in several cities during February and March; registrants will be notified of the workshop locations and dates. Should you have further questions, please contact us and we will try to assist you. We look forward to your participation in seeking answers to the challenging questions which face the emerging infrastructure for electric vehicles. +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o +o-o The Electric Vehicle and the American Community: A National Planning and Design Competition * Overview Electric vehicles and related "hybrid" vehicles will soon be introduced to American communities in large numbers. This event will substantially shift the nature of the infrastructure which supports the automobile. Ingredients in this change include the need to recharge these vehicles, their positive effects on air pollution, shifts in energy use, and shifts in travel patterns. As a result, America's communities will change. The opportunity to anticipate this change and promote creative solutions is unprecedented. The challenges presented by the planning and design of the new infrastructure cut across traditional boundaries between public agencies, private companies, and professional disciplines. To realize the full potential of the electric vehicle, cooperation and inventiveness are required. A chance exists to creatively expand an American technology, create jobs in emerging businesses, and help make our communities better places to live. But many of the issues raised by this new technology for our communities are unprecedented, and unexplored. This competition is an important step in the introduction of electric vehicles. Recognizing that numerous problems of a new infrastructure must be solved rapidly, and that many communities must bridge important gaps of information and cooperation, the competition seeks to engage the creative participation of interdisciplinary teams of professionals and students. This is an "ideas" competition about significant practical issues and opportunities which must be resolved soon. * "Infrastructure" Defined The notion of infrastructure as applied by the competition encompasses the entire spectrum of supporting facilities and policies which will become the operating framework for future users of electric vehicles. This may range from recharging stations to public policies that set air quality, land use, and transportation goals. By way of illustration, the infrastructure which supports the internal combustion engine is now pervasive in the landscape of our communities and the structure of our public policies. Elements of this infrastructure range from strategically located glass and steel filling stations which compete for our attention along our roads, to huge highway interchanges. Taxation programs allocate resources to support this infrastructure, and transportation policies seek to regulate the flow and mode of travel to help keep congested communities moving. We often take for granted the system which has evolved to support the existing technology. Much of this infrastructure will prove essential to electric vehicles, as well. But key elements will change. The short range of electric vehicles, their special recharging needs, and the shifts in air quality which could be achieved are new factors which will alter the form and quality of our transportation infrastructure, and American communities with it. * Context Two recent developments have created the context for this new technology. The first was the adoption of strict new air quality standards by several states which require the introduction of zero emission and low emission vehicles as a percentage of new vehicle sales. First adopted by the California Air Resource Board, similar regulations now exist in New York and Massachusetts, and may be adopted by many other states. Suddenly, a new market opportunity for hundreds of thousands of vehicles has been created which must be fulfilled in the next few years, based on regulatory requirements alone. The second major development has been the evolution of practical technologies which will allow electric vehicles to meet this market need. All three major U.S. automobile manufacturers have active product development programs underway and a commitment to meet the new air quality standards with American products. Other technical advances are being pursued under the auspices of the U.S. Advanced Battery Consortium, a collaborative effort involving the "Big Three" auto makers and the U.S. Department of Energy to create key improvements in performance of electric vehicles to help make them increasingly competitive. * Technologies Electric vehicles encompass two related technologies. Vehicles are now being designed and produced which have no emissions, and are entirely electric; they must be connected periodically to a recharging system in order to operate. Hybrid electric vehicles include a small internal combustion or other motor which can operate to recharge the electric motor which provides the vehicle propulsion. This technology can serve to extend vehicle range, or improve overall emissions to achieve "low emission" standards. Both technologies will depend on the same infrastructure to accomplish most recharging needs, however. These technologies hold the promise of major reductions in air pollution in American communities. By using predominantly off-peak charging, and given the greater efficiency and lower air pollution of electrical generating plants, the projected benefits are significant. * Competition Goals The fundamental goal of the competition is to create a unique forum for the investigation of the electric vehicle and its potential for the Americas communities. Additional goals include: National and Local Solutions: The electric vehicle has national implications but the infrastructure which supports it must be devised and implemented to meet specific local conditions. Interdisciplinary Problem Solving: The challenges of the electric vehicle and its infrastructure needs must be solved simultaneously by American communities, manufacturers, energy suppliers, designers, technicians, and public agencies. By requiring team responses, the competition seeks to encourage a broad spectrum of talents and ideas. Problem Definition: The implementation of the infrastructure for electric vehicles entails significant changes, the implications of which have not yet been fully explored. The competition will help define specific and unanticipated problems in cities throughout the U.S. and pair them with possible solutions. Practical Ideas: The competition sponsors wish to uncover practical ideas to match the emerging electric vehicle technology with real needs and as yet unimagined potentials. * The Challenge The challenge to the competitors is detailed in the program package which will be distributed to registrants. In order to provide a fair and equal opportunity to all entrants, the specific challenge cannot be released until January 15, l993. In general terms, the challenge asks the question, "how canyour community best accommodate electrical vehicles, and what will be the changes which will occur as a result?" Communities which are the subject of entries must be within the United States. * Award Categories The jury will be instructed to direct awards to entries which deserve merit in several categories. These categories are organized to assure that communities of similar scale and complexity are compared equitably. * Jury Review Criteria The jury will be instructed to distinguish among the entries and determine award and merit based on criteria which will include the following: Creativity Applicability to the Subject Community Practicality Presentation Clarity * Eligibility Any individual or team may enter the competition. In order to qualify as an entry eligible available for awards, entering teams must be interdisciplinary, with a professional or professional degree student in each of the following disciplines: design, planning, and engineering. Reasonable definitions within these categories will be accepted; the following categories are offered as a guide: Design - including architecture, landscape architecture, industrial and product design, urban design or the fine arts. Planning - including urban planning, economic planning or real estate development, public policy and governmental affairs, demography and urban geography, environmental planning, transportation planning and urban design. Engineering - including transportation planning and engineering, electrical physical sciences.ing and other representatives of the * Submittal Requirements Entries will include display panels and a small amount of written material. The graphic quality of the materials submitted will be a factor considered by the jury.) * Awards The jury will allocate $100,000 in prizes to winning entries. Award winning entries and other selected submittals will be published in a competition catalogue. Winners will be invited to participate in a workshops with the competition sponsors and national experts to review the results and suggest practical directions for further investigation. * Registration and Competition Schedule Registration is now open for the competition. Program packages will be mailed to registrants beginning January 15, 1993. Written questions will be accepted through February 28, 1993. Entries are due on April 13, 1993. The award ceremony will be held in Washington, DC on May 11, 1993. In order to register, send a non-refundable check or money order payable to the: BSA/Electric Vehicle Competition, 432 North Saginaw Street, Suite 801, Flint, Michigan 48502. The entry fee is $100. $50 for students. Please include a name, address and a daytime telephone number. Students should include documentation of current enrollment. A kit with competition rules and program information will be sent to all registrants. Poster's Note: For further information on upcoming local electric utility sponsored workshops---where you can meet and possibly join already registered teams--- call Cecil & Rizvi in Boston at (617) 267-9035. Alternatively, send you email request for more info to bm...@hela.ins.cwru.edu for relay to Cecil & Rizvi. Be sure to include your local mailing address and number. Additionally, when set, the date, time and locations of the utility-sponsored workshops will be posted to this group. Thanks again for your interest, Turner Information Providing Services (TIPS)