Advice | Community | State Reports | Videos | Photos | Blogs
Join | Login
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Earth Matters Lifestyle Technology Business Transportation Home Food Family
  • Green News Roundup
  • Our Bloggers
  • MNN TV
  • Community
  • State Reports
  • Videos
  • Photos
  • Climate Change
  • Wilderness & Resources
  • Energy
  • Politics
  • Translating Uncle Sam
  • Cars
  • Planes, trains, bikes
  • Shipping
  • Green Office
  • Finance
  • Green Jobs
  • Building, Products, Supplies
  • Research & Innovations
  • Computers
  • Gadgets & Electronics
  • Cooking & Recipes
  • Farms & Gardens
  • Markets & Groceries
  • Dining Out
  • Beer
  • Wine & Spirits
  • Building & Remodeling
  • Interior & Design
  • Gardening & Landscaping
  • Household Products
  • Recycling
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Books
  • Ecollywood
  • Health & Well-being
  • My Green Day
  • Travel
  • Pets & Animals
  • Baby
  • Education & Activities
  • Holiday
MNN.COM > MNN BLOGGERS > Jim Motavalli's Blog

Jim Motavalli

Clean power from speed bumps

MotionPower's test ramps slow cars down as they drive over a generator and produce electricity.
Mon, Oct 12 2009 at 1:40 PM EST
Read more: ALTERNATIVE ENERGY, ALTERNATIVE TRANSPORTATION, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, GREEN ELECTRONICS

DOUBLE DUTY: MotionPower's speed bump in place at a New Jersey Burger King. (Photo: MotionPower)
 
Have you ever heard the phrase “traffic calming”? It’s basically just a smart growth engineer’s fancy phrase for getting drivers to slow down and smell the coffee (and save some pedestrian lives in the process). In their simplest form, the speed bumps we all know and hate, and the roundabouts we imported from Europe, are examples of traffic calming.
 
But suppose a speed bump could do double duty not only for calming traffic but for generating clean electricity? Just such an experiment is underway today in Washington, D.C., at the Four Seasons Hotel. It was also tested over the Labor Day weekend at a more blue-collar location: A Burger King in Hillside, N.J. A company called New Energy Technologies developed MotionPower for use at drive-in locations such as restaurants, banks and toll plazas.
 
When a car hits what is essentially a slightly elevated ramp, it pushes down on an actuator connected to a generator that produces electricity. Here's how it looks on video:
 
 
In the demo version, the device merely lights a green light so drivers can see it working, but it promises to do much more. According to New Energy CEO Meetesh Patel, the high-tech speed bump could pay back its $1,500 to $2,000 investment in just two to three years.
 
Both the Four Seasons and that New Jersey Burger King are excited about MotionPower and say they’d consider buying in when marketing starts in a year or two. The Four Seasons, within walking distance of the White House, says it was one of the pioneers of the don’t-clean-my-linens-everyday movement, now ubiquitous in the industry. The hotel, which won the Good Earth Keeping award by the Hotel Association, will pick you up at the airport in a hybrid car if you ask nicely.
 
According to spokeswoman Liliana Baldassari, “We’re constantly looking for ways to be greener, and MotionPower fits right in. We just switched to salt water in our swimming pool, all our wet waste is composted, plastic tableware is made from corn and guests have the choice of ‘green meetings’ with recyclable note pads and pencils, and more plants in the room.”
 
Baldassari hopes that eventually some portion of the hotel’s electricity bill will be offset with speed bumps, but let’s not get carried away with what this technology can do. A car traveling over a MotionPower device develops something like 2,000 watts, says company director Jay Bhogal, but only some part of that is captured as storable electricity. Definitely enough to light a bulb, but maybe not enough to light thousands of them. I say “maybe” because the company, claiming the need to protect its trade secrets, isn’t being very specific about how much juice its unit will produce.
  • Comments
  • Link
  • EMAIL
  • Bookmark and Share
  • RSS
  • Stumble Stumble
  • Tweet Tweet
CLOSE link:
The opinions expressed by MNN Bloggers and those providing comments are theirs alone, and do not reflect the opinions of MNN.com. While we have reviewed their content to make sure it complies with our Terms and Conditions, MNN is not responsible for the accuracy of any of their information.
« Previous
Europe heats up: Smart battery cars and a whole lot of French charging stations
   Next »
Electric cars are quiet. Maybe too quiet.

Comments(1)

  • ALL COMMENTS
  • READERS' SELECTIONS
  • POST A COMMENT
Sort by:
Posted By dentist.brighton - Wed, Oct 14 2009 at 12:18 PM EST

NIce post

It was basically an informative article making one to know about the traffics n all..
Thanks for the article..

Dentists in brighton
Dentists in Brighton

  • reply

Add your comment

You can’t fool Mother Nature
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA

ADVERTISEMENT

About Jim Motavalli

New York Times contributor blogs about green transportation.

Jim's RSS Jim's profile

From our sponsors

  • Recycling is No Longer Optional
  • Nutrition: Making a Good Dog Great
  • Quiz: Test Your Recycling Knowledge
  • 50 Money Saving Tips for Your Home
  • Taking Action on Climate Change
  • More Beer, Less Water
  • How We Made Our Car Run on Grease
  • Organic Grapes Make Better Wine
  • The Business Case for Sustainability

Mother Nature. Delivered.

MNN's weekly newsletter sent straight to your inbox.
Follow us on Twitter Fan us on Facebook

JIM'S RECENT POSTS

EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT GREEN TRANSPORTATION
  • Five myths about electric cars
  • Toyota's showdown: The company is calling the runaway Prius owner's bluff
  • Porsche 918 Spyder offers 718 horsepower, zero to 62 in 3.2 seconds, and 78 mpg
  • Read Jim's Blog
+ add this to my site


Quick Links

  • Earth Matters
  • Transportation
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Food
  • Home
  • Lifestyle
  • Family

 

  • Advice
  • Community
  • State Reports
  • Videos
  • Photos
  • Blogs

MNN Tools

  • About us
  • Advisory Board
  • Press
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy
  • Terms of service
  • Contact us

All About MNN

  • Join MNN
  • Newsletters
  • RSS
  • Eco-glossary
  • Widgets
  • MNN Contests
  • MNN Lists
  • MNN Mobile

 

Copyright © 2010 MNN Holdings, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Website by GLICK INTERACTIVE | Powered by COLOCUBE
 
SPONSORS