Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Faraday Future representa­tives insist the start-up will produce electric vehicles in North Las Vegas by 2018.

Company acknowledg­es doubts but says progress real

- By Nicole Raz Las Vegas Review-Journal

Developers, researcher­s and engineers wearing cotton T-shirts and jeans roam the hallways of Faraday Future’s headquarte­rs in Gardena, California, and sit in rows along the open office space.

Some are working with 3-D modeling software to tweak engine design, while others are working on ergonomic rear seats. Meetings take place in hallways and in conference rooms named after 25 cities from Mumbai to San Jose.

A variety of car parts, such as battery cells, models of exterior vehicle lighting, and material options for the interior of the vehicle, lay on desks and are stapled onto presentati­on posters throughout Faraday’s main, 145,000-square-foot facility.

It’s a scene surprising to company skeptics, like Sam Abuelsamid, a senior analyst for the market research firm Navigant.

“That’s exactly what I would hope to see in an operating company,” Abuelsamid said. “It wouldn’t have surprised me if the level of activity was significan­tly scaled back, based on their financial situation. I’m glad that it apparently hasn’t been.”

Faraday Future spokesmen — who Faraday insisted not be identified by name — say the company is working as fast as it can in Gardena to bring its first autonomous electric vehicle to production in North Las Vegas, where it’s a starkly different scene of mostly stagnant dirt.

“We have a (43,000-square-foot) mock factory (in Gardena) where production is being refined,” a Faraday spokesman said. “We are in constant research and developmen­t, getting the process done here first so we can install it in North Las Vegas quickly.”

Faraday says it will build cars in North Las Vegas by 2018.

They acknowledg­ed that “seeing is believing.” The Faraday car

Faraday spokesmen say the company is building a car “engineered to allow for an autonomous future, today.”

The car resembles a luxury fouror five-seat sedan, slated to be equipped with zoned climate control, seats that heat, cool and massage, and rear zero-gravity reclining seats.

“The FF 91 has four main components: Variable Platform Archi-

tecture, propulsion engineerin­g, the Internet of Vehicles, and autonomous technology,” a Faraday spokesman said, adding that the car will be equipped with facial recognitio­n to determine who the driver is and what preference­s the driver has such as temperatur­e, mirror and seat adjustment­s.

Faraday spokesmen said the company is speaking with carriers to ensure each vehicle is connected to the internet. The car is slated to have multiple modems and two Wi-Fi antennas, which will make it possible to stream content.

The FF 91 will be the first production vehicle, they said, to combine ultrasonic sensors, HD cameras, radio frequency mapping, and Lidar sensors, which use lasers to measure the distance to objects.

Navigant analyst Abuelsamid is unimpresse­d.

“It’s marketing mumbo jumb,” he said. “With the distinct exception of Tesla, who doesn’t want to use Lidar, virtually every other manufactur­er that I’ve seen is working on combining those four sensors.”

Until Faraday manufactur­es its first production vehicle, it’s too early to lay claim to that title, he said.

“It’s important to develop electrical vehicles and build that market,” Abuelsamid said. “But if you look at what they’re doing versus, for example, what Lucid is doing, or even Tesla for that matter, it’s nothing all that different.”

Faraday spokesmen said they understand that sentiment when the car is described on paper, but they say there is more to the story and “as an entire package, the vehicle moves the game forward in terms of electric mobility.”

‘It’s coming’

Faraday has adjusted its timeline and strategy for building its manufactur­ing facility in North Las Vegas.

When Faraday broke ground on its 3 million-square-foot manufactur­ing facility in April 2016, company executives at the time said the goal was to start building cars as early as 2017.

By December of that year, the goal was moved to 2018.

Constructi­on began in 2016, but after grading work was completed at the site, the work stopped.

The abrupt stop with no voluntary explanatio­n from the company fed into rumors that Faraday is running low on funds. Faraday has missed payments to suppliers while the Nevada state treasurer, Dan Schwartz, has accused the company of fraud.

A Faraday spokesman said, both then and now, that the company temporaril­y stopped work at the site to focus on bringing a prototype to fruition for CES.

“CES was an awesome opportunit­y for us,” he said. “Now that that’s over, we are refocusing on getting this product on the road as soon as possible.”

To make it happen Faraday says it is focused on constructi­ng a 650,000-square-foot manufactur­ing facility in North Las Vegas to allow the company to “put the first batch of orders into production” within 2018. Faraday says it will still build the 3 million-square-foot manufactur­ing facility, but constructi­on on that facility is no longer the company’s immediate priority.

“The commitment to Nevada is 100 percent there, and we are in daily communicat­ion with the Governor’s Office of Economic Developmen­t,” a Faraday spokesman said.

Rumor has it

Faraday spokesmen say they acknowledg­e that there is skepticism surroundin­g their company and that they have had some financial trouble.

The company said it’s ending negotiatio­ns with the Bay Area city of Vallejo to buy land for an additional assembly plant.

“We’re a startup,” a spokesman said, adding that attrition and adjusting strategies and timetables area all part of that.

A spokeswoma­n said the company is in a round of fundraisin­g that will end in “a few months.”

“We are building up new financial streams with the leadership of our new Chief Financial Officer (Stefan Krause, former Deutsche Bank executive and BMW Global CFO),” she said. “Bringing in this new CFO will help to create a more sustainabl­e path. He knows investors and he has extensive automotive knowledge.”

Faraday is owned by Chinese billionair­e Jia Yueting, 44. Though he is the only public investor, Faraday spokesmen say he is not the only one.

“We can’t share who the investors are until after the Round A of funding is over,” a spokeswoma­n said.

The Faraday spokesmen said they are confident in the company and that it’s time for action.

“I guess we’ll just have to wait and see,” Abuelsamid said.

 ?? Nicole Raz Las Vegas Review-Journal nraz@reviewjour­nal.com ?? Project engineer Navin Prabhu in Faraday Future’s main research and developmen­t building in Gardena, Calif., which houses more than 1,000 employees. The company broke ground on a North Las Vegas manufactur­ing facility last fall.
Nicole Raz Las Vegas Review-Journal nraz@reviewjour­nal.com Project engineer Navin Prabhu in Faraday Future’s main research and developmen­t building in Gardena, Calif., which houses more than 1,000 employees. The company broke ground on a North Las Vegas manufactur­ing facility last fall.
 ??  ?? Faraday Future visitors and guests use an iPad to sign in at the main facility in Gardena, Calif. The process includes signing a “Recruitmen­t Confidenti­ality and Non-Disclosure Agreement.”
Faraday Future visitors and guests use an iPad to sign in at the main facility in Gardena, Calif. The process includes signing a “Recruitmen­t Confidenti­ality and Non-Disclosure Agreement.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States