Growing up, Prince Ghosh was fascinated by planes, trains and automobiles. But now, the sophomore mechanical and aerospace engineering student is interested in a brand-new form of transportation: Elon Musk’s Hyperloop project.
Musk, CEO and chief technology officer of SpaceX and co-founder and CEO of Tesla Motors, introduced the Hyperloop project in 2013. He envisioned a new high-speed mode of transportation using trains accelerated by magnetic levitation that travel in semi-pressurized tubes.
“We’re stuck in this conundrum where traveling by car often becomes a lengthy and inefficient process,” Ghosh said. “Traveling by plane cuts (the time) down by a lot, but is just terrible for the environment. And traveling by train has just become very outdated.”
That’s where the Hyperloop comes in; it would offer a more efficient and environmentally friendly option.
So Ghosh teamed up with friends and fellow engineering students Luke Fakult and Marc Bouchet to enter the SpaceX Hyperloop Pod Competition, which seeks to accelerate the timeline to a functional hyperloop prototype.
Now Ghosh, who leads the team, dubbed North Coast Hyperloop, and his partners will work to advance in the multi-staged competition, which ends with finalists traveling to Hawthorne, California, to test their pods on SpaceX’s 1-mile text track.
Ghosh is seeking help from the Cleveland community, and involving faculty and students at the Weatherhead School of Management and designers at the Cleveland Institute of Art. The team’s faculty adviser is Richard Bachmann, an adjunct instructor of mechanical and aerospace engineering.
“In the past few years, Cleveland has really been rallying in terms of putting money toward innovation and people becoming a lot more engaged,” Ghosh said. “We really want to push this outside of just ϳԹ engineering.”
Ghosh considers North Coast Hyperloop a culmination of everything he’s ever been interested in—which is precisely what he’d hoped for in college.
Confused about what major to choose, Ghosh was inspired by The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch, which suggests the importance of pursuing one’s childhood passions. Based on the advice from what he now considers his favorite book, Ghosh remembered what had always intrigued him as a child: science.
And the Hyperloop project brings Ghosh right back to that early interest, only now he’s pushing the boundaries of what transportation means.
“I really do think this is an opportunity to change the way we interact with the world,” he said. “Every so often, new innovations come by—the car, the train, the plane. I think it’s long overdue for a new mode of transportation.”
Find out more about what inspires Ghosh in this week’s five questions.

5 questions with… ϳԹ’s Hyperloop project team leader Prince Ghosh
5QUESTIONS |
November 4, 2016
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF