A team of students from the University of Sao
Paulo in Brazil have claimed the top prize of €30,000 as winners
of Airbus Fly Your Ideas 2013.
Team Levar won with their proposal
for a luggage loading and unloading system for airplane cargo
compartments to reduce the workload of airport baggage handlers
with an air cushion solution inspired by air hockey tables.
Supported by UNESCO, Airbus Fly Your Ideas is a biennial
competition which challenges students worldwide to develop ideas
for a more sustainable aviation industry.
The winning team
is comprised of Marcos Philipson, Leonardo Akamatsu, Adriano
Furtado and Caio Reis, all studying design at the University of
Sao Paulo, and Henrique Corazza studying at Loughborough
University in the UK.
The runner-up prize of €15,000 went
to Team CLiMA from the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology,
Australia, for their proposal to develop aircraft fuelled by a
blend of sustainably produced liquefied biomethane and liquefied
natural gas (Bio-LNG).
This third edition of the
competition saw over 600 teams from around the world submit a
proposal responding to one of six challenges set out by Airbus for
aviation in the 21st century. Over 60 Airbus assessors evaluated
the submissions for quality, environmental benefits, and for the
level of innovation demonstrated by the team.
Charles Champion, Airbus Executive Vice
President Engineering, said, "Team Levar's response to the
competition has been fantastic, with a truly innovative proposal
for an air cushion solution inspired by hockey tables. They have
taken a really broad view of how to improve the aviation industry
as a whole, not limiting their ideas to aircraft alone but also considering ground operations and they are deserving winners.
According to the students, passengers could collect their luggage
30% faster, start their holidays sooner, and luggage handlers
would be put under less physical strain. This kind of idea is
fundamental in ensuring the aviation industry continues to drive
forward to a more sustainable future."
Irina Bokova,
Director-General of UNESCO, said "The diversity of these students'
ideas is a huge source of inspiration. Their talent also serves to
remind us of the urgent need to train more engineers, to develop
the skills and competences needed to translate ideas into reality
and put science into practice. This is UNESCO's ambition and one
of the objectives of this partnership with Airbus is to inspire
more innovative ideas for our future, in sustainable
transportation and even further."
In addition to the prize
money, the students now look forward to welcoming experts from
Airbus' innovation cell onto their campus for a week of workshops
and training later this year.
The winning team will today (17 June) be at
the Le Bourget Paris Airshow at 15:00 in the EADS Pavillon.
Sao Paulo,
Airbus,
Brazil
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