New Research Center in Silicon Valley
News
April 12, 2017

Continental Strengthens Worldwide Technology Network with New Research Center in Silicon Valley

  • Up to 300 experts to work in San José on “the future of mobility”
  • Technology company invests millions of US dollars
  • Technology Officer Kurt Lehmann: “Combined energy of 32,000 engineers on board”
  • Projects in automated driving, electromobility, connectivity and mobility services 

Hanover/San José, U.S.A., April 12, 2017. Technology company Continental is expanding the worldwide network of its research and development centers. On Wednesday, the DAX company opened a new location in San José in Silicon Valley, California, U.S.A., where up to 300 experts from all parts of the company will work on pioneering solutions for the sustainable mobility of the future. Their projects are concerned with automated driving, electromobility, connectivity and mobility services.

“Our attention is focused on developing and shaping the environment of future mobility. At our new center in Silicon Valley, we connect our customer’s wishes, contributions and orders with our innovative ideas, knowledge, energy and experience of over 32,000 of our engineers worldwide and our business partners – for the benefit of all,” said Continental’s Corporate Technology Officer, Kurt Lehmann.

Continental is investing millions of US dollars in the new research and development center. The state-of-the-art laboratories, workshops and offices are housed in a complex of around 6,000 square meters. Continental has already been represented in Silicon Valley for several years, as the Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) business unit has been based there since 2014.

Lehmann noted that the new research and development center forms an important building block in implementing Continental’s strategy. The aim of this strategy is to develop pioneering technologies for transporting people and their goods. Software-based solutions, handling large amounts of data and using artificial intelligence play a vital role in this.

“The automotive industry is undergoing the biggest transformation in its 130-year history. In the past, it created value primarily using mechanical solutions. It then increased this value with help from sensors, electronics, software and digitalization. In the future, our business will be driven by mobility services and intelligent mobility technologies,” explained Lehmann, who has been responsible for corporation-wide technology development at Continental.

He went on to say: “Over the coming decades, most of the electrically powered, fully connected and automated vehicles in cities will be operated by mobility service providers and fleet managers. Continental connects vehicles’ ‘brains’, thus expanding the collective intelligence of the fleet. This is the kind of interdisciplinary collaboration taking place across Continental in San José, and it will result in new, additional business areas for our pioneering solutions.”

Continental employs more than 18,000 people in the U.S.A. In the past five years the company has invested more than $1.9 billion there and is planning comparably large investments for the next five years.

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