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Autodesk Software Helps Mexico Students Design Award-Winning Green Concept Car

Autodesk
November 28, 2012

Environmentally-Friendly Vehicle for Today’s Megacity Environments Rethinks Urban Personal Transportation

 

Autodesk is recognizing a group of industrial design students enrolled in the Automotive Design course at Instituto Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico City for using Autodesk software to develop the award-winning Aurora green concept car as part of their curricula. For their efforts, the students have been named the Autodesk November Inventor of the Month. Autodesk names an Inventor of the Month each month for designers who use Autodesk software in an innovative fashion.

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The Aurora project focused on the challenge of designing a car that would be suitable for megacity environments where large, growing populations can quickly contribute to pollution and environmental strain.

Rather than relying on a fuel-hungry central combustion engine, theAurora uses hybrid  propellingtechnologies to power the car. Magnetic propulsion provides power for city driving, while the car’s suspension converts the car’s upward and downward motion into energy that can be stored in rechargeable batteries connected to localized motors on the rear wheels.

The concept car also features virtual interactive controllers connected to smart traffic clearinghouses, to automated driving systems, and to the houses and offices of the users — representing an embrace of developing automotive trends such as smart traffic systems and autonomous transport.

Autodesk Software Powers Students’ Innovation

“Having access to Autodesk software gave our students the tools to reimagine what an urban car should look like in the 21st century,” said Juan José Ramos, director of the Mexico-based industrial design firm DX Consulting and instructor in Automotive Design at Instituto Tecnológico de Monterrey. “Autodesk software aided their progress at every stage of the design concept.”

The student team — including Julio Valenzuela, Monserrat González, Pablo Ramírez and Carlos Vásquez — used Autodesk SketchBook Pro software to create digital sketches and Autodesk Alias Design software to create virtual models of the Aurora concept car. Virtual animations were created using Autodesk Maya software.

The students also used Autodesk Inventor software — part of Autodesk Product Design Suite — to create 3D digital models and motion animations of the mechanical systems and infrastructure of the concept car, as well as to create models of large avenues in Mexico City that represented a typical megacity driving environment.

In July 2012, the Aurora concept car was chosen as the final project toparticipate in the "Innovative Mobility Solutions (IMS)" global contest organized by the General Motors Partners for the Advancement of Collaborative Engineering Education (PACE) program in Shanghai, China.

The team from Instituto Tecnológico de Monterrey won the important “Best Creative Research” and “Best Concept Development” prizes, reflecting the high design quality and development tool expertise achieved by the students.

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