Skip to main content

Advanced vehicle facility for Japan

A new design and development facility has now been established in Japan that will focus on advanced environmentally-friendly vehicles and traffic technology.
February 23, 2012 Read time: 1 min
A new design and development facility has now been established in Japan that will focus on advanced environmentally-friendly vehicles and traffic technology. The laboratory forms part of the 1011 Nagoya University and will develop new technologies for machinery, materials, information technology, electronics, engineering and traffic. The facility has revealed that it will partner with 1013 Toyota Motor to research new vehicle projects and also plans to team up with other vehicle manufacturers as well as universities in the US, China and Germany. Electric, hybrid, hydrogen and fuel-cell driven vehicles will be worked on at the facility, which is now the largest of its kind in Japan.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Construction materials testing
    May 14, 2012
    Malta National Laboratory (MNL) has asked the UK’s TRL to help it establish a construction materials testing facility. This will allow MNL to become an independent test house on the island, and it will then be able to undertake testing of road materials to the required international standards. A team of TRL experts with extensive knowledge of civil engineering materials testing and pavement materials technology and design, as well as large-scale project management skills, will deliver the project in two p
  • Safety trials for FORUM8
    October 28, 2020
    Research by a US university is using linked up driving and cycling simulators to help with safer urban road designs for both drivers and cyclists
  • 3i buys SRL Traffic Systems
    March 29, 2022
    SRL Traffic Systems, a UK and Republic of Ireland manufacturer of portable and temporary intelligent transport system (ITS) solutions, has been bought by 3i Infrastructure.
  • Aluminium reinforced bridges?
    October 11, 2023
    For a bridge in Sunndal, Norway, steel reinforcement has been swapped for aluminium from Hydro, a Norwegian global producer of aluminium.