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Association of Equipment Manufacturers launches competition

Infrastructure Vision 2050 competition to award $150,000 to innovative infrastructure solutions that address the $3.6 trillion infrastructure problem in America.


The Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) has announced the Infrastructure Vision 2050 Challenge, a three-phased, crowd-sourced competition to award a total of $150,000 in prizes for innovative ideas to overhaul the crumbling infrastructure that Americans rely upon to move people, materials, products, services and information.

Open to everyone everywhere, the Infrastructure Vision 2050 Challenge leverages the HeroX crowdsourcing model designed to bring about radical business, technological and social innovation benefiting local and global communities, inspiring new industries and catalyzing markets.

“The United States is the strongest and largest economy in the world and yet the overall quality of our infrastructure is falling dramatically behind our global competitors,” said Dennis Slater, president of AEM. “AEM’s members thought it was time to break the cycle of patchwork fixes and deferred maintenance and lead the conversation in a different direction. We need to engage innovators who we haven’t heard from before and who have the ability to imagine how people, freight, energy and information will move in the country of tomorrow – even as far out as the year 2050. With the HeroX crowdsourcing model, we’re confident we can bring these solutions to life.”

“HeroX was founded on our conviction that the crowd – everyday people with great ideas – can and will solve the world’s most pressing problems,” said HeroX CEO, Christian Cotichini. “The Infrastructure Vision 2050 Challenge moves the U.S. infrastructure conversation beyond traditional political channels for the first time and gives everyone affected by these issues a chance to voice their opinions and find solutions.”

The American Society of Civil Engineers’ 2013 Report Card for America’s Infrastructure gave the U.S. a combined grade of D+ for the condition of its infrastructure. The report cites the nation’s 70,000 (one-in-nine) structurally-deficient bridges, the fact that 42% of America’s major urban highways remain congested, costing the economy an estimated $101 billion in wasted time and fuel annually, and an estimated 240,000 annual water main breaks as examples for why rebuilding the country’s infrastructure is such a critical issue. The report further estimates that it would take a $3.6 trillion investment by 2020 to bring U.S. infrastructure up to exceptional standards.

Competition phases, judging and prizes
Finalists and winners of the three-phased Infrastructure Vision 2050 Challenge will be determined by a judging panel and crowd voting. The first two phases launch on January 19. The third phase is scheduled to launch in mid-summer, 2016.

First phase: The “Complain Phase” will engage the public to describe the biggest infrastructure challenge facing their community.
Total prize: $5,000 (10 finalists receive $250; overall winner receives $2,500)
Deadline to enter: March 15, 2016

Second phase: The “Dream Phase” will seek to solicit new thinking and solutions, especially from non-experts.
Total prize: $45,000 (5 winners receive $9,000 each)
Deadline to enter: May 31, 2016

Third phase: The “Build Phase” takes the second phase a step further and solicits plans to implement those solutions on a larger scale.
Total prize: $100,000 (Winner receives $100,00)
Deadline to enter: TBD

Judging criteria and other information can be found at the Infrastructure Vision 2050 Challenge website.


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