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Boring Company tunnel presentation before Hawthorne City Council. August 8, 2017 – via YouTube. King, Gayle (December 19, 2019). Elon Musk and Gayle King test drive his new Boring Company tunnel. CBS This Morning – via Youtube. LeBeau, Phil (December 19, 2018). Elon Musk unveils Boring Company loop tunnel for electric cars. CBNC News
According to Musk, the company's goal is to enhance tunneling speed enough such that establishing a tunnel network is financially feasible. [11] [12] Elon Musk speaking at the inauguration of the test tunnel in Hawthorne, California, December 2018. In early 2018, the Boring Company was spun out from SpaceX and into a separate corporate entity. [13]
Elon Musk has posted a video of Boring Company's first nearly completed tunnel under Los Angeles, which heads towards LAX and has an extra entrance at the SpaceX Hawthorne HQ. The multi-company ...
The 4,475 feet (1,364 m) first leg tunnel was completed on February 14, 2020. [5] [6] The second tunnel was finished that May. [7] The Boring Company started testing the system with volunteers in May 2021. The test demonstrated the new transport system could move up to about 4,400 passengers per hour with an end-to-end time of about two minutes.
Tonight The Boring Company hosted a launch event for the test tunnel it successfully built in LA running from SpaceX's property to "O'Leary Station" at a reported cost of about $10 million. In ...
We're about a month away from the planned opening of The Boring Company's Test Tunnel in LA, and it appears progress is moving along. Elon Musk tweeted this brief video of a digging machine ...
Engineers and workers have been boring the 1.14-mile-long tunnel underneath one of the main streets in Hawthorne, California. One end of the tunnel starts in a parking lot owned by Elon Musk's ...
Musk during the 2018 inauguration of the Boring test tunnel in Hawthorne, California. In 2017, Musk founded the Boring Company to construct tunnels, and revealed plans for specialized, underground, high-occupancy vehicles that could travel up to 150 miles per hour (240 km/h) and thus circumvent above-ground traffic in major cities.