JumpStarter, Inc The company was founded by JumpStarter, Inc., utilizing the company's
crowdfunding and collaboration platform
JumpStartFund. In 2013, HyperloopTT announced partnered with
Ansys, GloCal Network and UCLA's Architecture & Urban Design program to aide in the early-stage development of feasibility testing, supply chain management and station experience.
Early routes The company was not focused on the Los Angeles-to-San Francisco route that was the baseline of the Hyperloop Alpha design from 2013, and considered other routes. In 2015, HyperloopTT signed an agreement with GROW Holdings, the developer of
Quay Valley, California, to construct a demonstration track beginning in 2016. Also in August 2015, HyperloopTT announced partnerships with international
engineering design and construction giant
Aecom and
Oerlikon, the world's oldest vacuum technology specialist. Construction on this demonstration track in Quay Valley never started as GROW Holdings lacked the funds to continue the new community development and stopped all development in the valley.
Early agreements In 2016 then HyperloopTT CEO, Dirk Ahlborn, announced an agreement with the
Slovak government to perform feasibility studies regarding routes connecting
Vienna, Austria to
Bratislava, Slovakia, and Bratislava to
Budapest, Hungary. Total costs for this project are estimated to be . The resulting annual system capacity is projected to be 10 million passengers. The company announced in March 2016 that they would be using passive
Inductrack systems for their titular Hyperloop. However, in August 2018 the agreement expired after the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister and HyperloopTT didn't reach an agreement to continue the project. In September 2017, HyperloopTT signed an agreement with the
Andhra Pradesh State Government in
India to build a Hyperloop between the cities of
Amaravati and
Vijaywada. The two-phase project would begin with a 6-month feasibility study which would be followed by actual construction. In July 2018, HyperloopTT announced an agreement to create a joint venture with the government of China's southwestern province of
Guizhou to construct a 10 km long Hyperloop track in the city of
Tongren.
Funding In 2016, HyperloopTT had raised $31.8 million in cash and received $77 million in man-hours, services rendered, land rights usage and future in-kind investments. A 2020
Forbes article stated that HyperloopTT had received a total of $50 million in-cash investments since founding, compared to Virgin Hyperloop's $350 million. In a letter to shareholders obtained by
Fortune in 2024, CEO Andrés de León stated the company was in financial trouble, having not paid employee salaries for months.
Move to Venice HyperloopTT stated in a 2024 press release the company was moving from its Toulouse headquarters to offices outside of
Venice in the first half of 2024. == Current prototypes ==