Congratulations to Our 2024 Grand Prize and First Place Winners!

NETrolyze, a novel immunotherapy for triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), was named the $25,000 grand prize winner at a live finalist round held November 15 in New York. The first-in-class therapeutic injectable gel prevents the spread of TNBC, one of the most aggressive cancer types, enabling patients to avoid toxic chemotherapy and expensive treatments – potentially transforming their lives. Click here for the full list of 2024 winners. Also see the Top 100 highest scoring entries.

Special thanks to our esteemed panel of judges.

Help build a better tomorrow

Since Tech Briefs magazine launched the Create the Future Design contest in 2002 to recognize and reward engineering innovation, over 15,000 design ideas have been submitted by engineers, students, and entrepreneurs in more than 100 countries. Join the innovators who dared to dream big by entering your ideas today.

Read About Past Winners’ Success Stories

Special Report spotlights the eight top entries in 2023 as well as past winners whose ideas are now in the market, making a difference in the world.

Click here to read more

A ‘Create the Future’ Winner Featured on ‘Here’s an Idea’

Spinal cord injury affects 17,000 Americans and 700,000 people worldwide each year. A research team at NeuroPair, Inc. won the Grand Prize in the 2023 Create the Future Design Contest for a revolutionary approach to spinal cord repair. In this Here’s an Idea podcast episode, Dr. Johannes Dapprich, NeuroPair’s CEO and founder, discusses their groundbreaking approach that addresses a critical need in the medical field, offering a fast and minimally invasive solution to a long-standing problem.

Listen now

Thank you from our Sponsors

“At COMSOL, we are very excited to recognize innovators and their important work this year. We are grateful for the opportunity to support the Create the Future Design Contest, which is an excellent platform for designers to showcase their ideas and products in front of a worldwide audience. Best of luck to all participants!”

— Bernt Nilsson, Senior Vice President of Marketing, COMSOL, Inc.

“From our beginnings, Mouser has supported engineers, innovators and students. We are proud of our longstanding support for the Create the Future Design Contest and the many innovations it has inspired.”

— Kevin Hess, Senior Vice President of Marketing, Mouser Electronics

Follow Create the Future

Swift Tram: High Speed Automated People Mover

Votes: 28
Views: 21530

Swift Tram is an emerging rapid transit system that will get people from their starting points to their destinations more enjoyably than any other transit alternative available today. Swift’s automated (driverless) system is elevated, completely avoiding pedestrians, bicyclists, automobiles, and stoplights, and offering views of the world below. System operators can offer scheduled and/or on-demand service, which passengers can easily arrange at kiosks or with their smartphones according to the time they wish to arrive at their destinations.

Swift Tram’s infrastructure installs fast and quite inexpensively in comparison to at-grade systems such as light rail or commuter rail, and operates at a much lower cost than even bus rapid transit (up to 80% of bus operating expense is driver expenses). The system is electrically powered, so its pollution profile is much lower than that of internal combustion technologies. That electricity is either grid-supplied, or it may be supplied by renewables: microgrid-managed solar PV over guideways and stations. Swift is smartgrid-enabled; its control system will make programmed adjustments in power consumption to economize under tiered power rate structures, and to supply revenue-producing electrons to the grid according to agreements with local utilities.

Swift Tram’s market exceeds $10B annually just in the U.S. Since many of our customers will want complete DBFOM solutions (design, build, finance, operations, maintenance), we’re in the process of creating strategic partnerships with coach manufacturers, steelworks, legal and financial firms, electric companies, design/engineering companies, and operating companies. Swift coaches are more akin to corporate jet fuselages than to buses or rail cars; they’ll be fabricated using highly efficient advanced manufacturing processes and lightweight aeronautical materials. Coaches can feature small airline-style lavatories, and can be flexibly upfitted for stowing bicycles, skis, snowboards, and other equipment and luggage as the system operator specifies.

We’re working with NASA on aerodynamic issues, with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory on energy efficiency, and with the University of Colorado on engineering validation. We’ll build the electric drive bogies – which contain most of our patent-pending intellectual property – in-house. The bogie units are small intelligent electric vehicles that run inside the elevated fixed guideway at up to 125 mph; they’re attached to the suspended coaches through an open slot on the guideway’s underside.

Although Swift systems are centrally controlled, there’s considerable processing intelligence onboard each bogie to optimize system performance and to enhance system security through ‘swarm computing.’ In the case of a grid outage, there’s sufficient intelligence and battery-stored energy onboard to bring passengers to the nearest disembarkation point safely. Swift Tram’s system design complies with all federal requirements for emergency evacuation and ADA accommodations.

Our first installations (five identified projects) will be loops of a few miles that are 21st century versions of the first hanging trains built more than a century ago. Our second wave will be longer regional arterial routes (two identified projects) that can be networked together using modern IT control systems for system management.

Video

  • Awards

  • 2013 Transportation & Automotive Category Winner
  • 2013 Top 100 Entries

Voting

Voting is closed!

  • ABOUT THE ENTRANT

  • Name:
    Carl Lawrence
  • Type of entry:
    team
    Team members:
    Carl Lawrence, CEO, CTO


    Becky English, Director Business Development, VP Sustainability


    Graham Hill, VP Marketing


    John Murino, CFO


    Elaine Thorndike, Director of Manufacturing and Strategic Partnerships


    Gaby Aweida, Manager of Fabrication


    Carl Talkington, Manager of Engineering


    Rob Kammerling, IT Director


    Kim Hedberg, Program Manager


    Nancy Balch, Program Manager


    Ilse Gayl, Advisor


    Ron Gremban, Advisor

  • Profession:
    Business Owner/Manager
  • Carl's favorite design and analysis tools:
    Sketchup, AutoCAD, SolidWorks
  • Carl's hobbies and activities:
    Flying, running, biking
  • Carl belongs to these online communities:
    LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, Colorado Cleantech Industry Association (coloradocleantech.com), Rockies Venture Club (rockiesventureclub.org)
  • Carl is inspired by:
    I'm an engineer who's been devising electrically powered cleantech solutions to challenges in the mobility environment for the last 20 years. Transit today is often inconvenient, clunky, dangerous, and grossly energy-inefficient. I take great professional pride and pleasure in identifying what's needed, then applying state-of-art technology to designing and realizing those needs. The world needs fast, convenient transit. While we're making transit improvements, we might as well offer travelers seamless mobility from starting point to destination; Swift Tram is an early part of realizing that vision.
  • Software used for this entry:
    SketchUp, AutoCAD, SolidWorks
  • Patent status:
    pending