Kids streaking back and forth on a soccer pitch in scorching tropical heat promises to produce something more than buckets of sweat.
Billed as Brazil’s first player-powered soccer pitch, a field inaugurated on Wednesday in a Rio de Janeiro slum harnesses the kinetic energy of players’ movements to provide nighttime illumination.
Soccer legend Pele was on hand for the event in the Morro da Mineira slum, which saw a local youth team put the system to the test.
Under the project, sponsored by Royal Dutch Shell, about 200 energy-capturing tiles developed by British startup Pavegen were installed the width and breadth of the pitch, and covered by a layer of AstroTurf. Working in conjunction with solar panels also installed around the field, the player-powered tiles feed electricity to a system of floodlights overhead.
While the head of Pavegen, engineer Laurence Kemball-Cook, took pains not to reveal the exact science behind the tiles, his father, chairman Richard Kemball-Cook said they use a system of cogs.
When stepped on, the cogs spin like tops and act like generators, he said. Each tile costs about US$500, but the price is falling as the firm refines its manufacturing process.
Pavegen has installed similar tiles in train stations in Europe, shopping centers in Australia and Terminal 3 of London’s Heathrow Airport, Laurence Kemball-Cook said, but the soccer pitch is a first.
“We’ve effectively turned this community into a real-life science experiment,” he said. “I believe this technology can be one of the future ways we illuminate our cities.”
Pele got emotional over the project, saying he hoped the pitch would help spark kids’ interest not only in soccer, but also in science.
“My father named me Edson after Thomas Edison,” said the legendary striker, whose birth name is Edson Arantes do Nascimento.
He said he hopes the next generation of Brazilians will help bring the country as much success in science as it has had in soccer.
“I’m sure that soon the No. 1 scientists in the world are going to be Brazilians,” Pele said as he brushed aside a tear.
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