Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Chevy teams get new tech center

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Constructi­on is underway at a new site in Concord, N. C., to benefit NASCAR’s Chevrolet teams. General Motors, which manufactur­es Chevy vehicles fielded by top Cup Series organizati­ons, broke ground Thursday on a 130,000square-foot facility near Charlotte Motor Speedway.

The new facility, called the Charlotte Technical Center, will serve as a space for engineerin­g collaborat­ion between GM’s motorsport­s and production vehicle capabiliti­es, and replaces a previously announced 75,000-squarefoot space that was converted into a facility for manufactur­ing military vehicles after subsidiary GM Defense won a $214.3 million Army contract in June 2020

Charlotte Technical Center is a $45 million investment for GM that will be located separately from the army vehicle manufactur­ing facility at Internatio­nal Business Park off of Interstate 85. The new facility is scheduled to open in early 2022.

“This new location and larger facility is a cleansheet design, tailored for technology developmen­t and collaborat­ion with our racing teams and technical partners,” General Motors U.S. vice president of performanc­e and motorsport­s Jim Campbell said in a statement.

Hendrick Motorsport­s, Chevrolet’s largest fourcar team, is also based one mile from the track. The organizati­on achieved Chevrolet’s 800th win in NASCAR’s top series when No. 9 driver Chase Elliott won at Circuit of the Americas two weeks ago, and more recently became the winningest Cup team when No. 5 driver Kyle Larson won the CocaCola 600 at Charlotte last Sunday.

The new technical center is intended to help boost Chevy team performanc­e in NASCAR competitio­n by drawing top engineerin­g talent to the area, while bringing together virtual simulation and testing capabiliti­es for use on both Chevrolet’s racing and production branches.

Campbell, along with representa­tives from Hendrick Motorsport­s, such as team owner Rick Hendrick and vice president of competitio­n Chad Knaus, were present for the official groundbrea­king at the site on Thursday. Other Chevy team representa­tives, including Richard Childress Racing team owner Richard Childress, and individual­s from Chip Ganassi Racing and GM were part of the groundbrea­king ceremony.

“The new Charlotte Technical Center will expand GM’s engineerin­g footprint in the epicenter of racing in the United States, and will improve our engineerin­g speed and capability in both the racing and production environmen­ts,” General Motors vice president of safety Jim Danahy said in a statement.

“It will be a strong hub for the racing and production engineerin­g teams to collaborat­e, share resources and learn together, delivering better results more quickly both on the racetrack and in our production vehicles.”

The site will feature three Driver-in-the-Loop simulators, which closely mirror a racing environmen­t, as well as other vehicle modeling technology, according to GM. Its opening will come as NASCAR’s Next Gen car debuts in competitio­n at the start of next season in February.

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