Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Photo Galleries
  4. Legacy Archives

Express Charging Corridors coming coast to coast, thanks to BMW, VW, and ChargePoint

Add as a preferred source on Google

Fully electric vehicles are becoming less of a premium item and more of an option for average car consumers, we’re sure to see more of them populate our streets. With a number of 280,000 EVs currently in the U.S. and growing, drivers will need more of a supporting infrastructure. Otherwise, EV owners are limited to a small number of local charging stations that will quickly become overwhelmed, what’s the point of having an electric car if you can’t go anywhere?

This is the reason why BMW and Volkswagen have teamed up with ChargePoint to create express charging corridors along the east and west coast’s most traveled routes. The initiative is designed to increase the number of direct current fast charging stations along these routes to make long trips in electric vehicles much easier.

“With strategically-placed stations where drivers need them, these express charging corridors will give EV drivers the freedom to go farther and have an EV as their only car without limitation,” said Pasquale Romano, ChargePoint CEO.

The east coast corridor will run along I-95, connecting Boston and Washington, D.C. at first, while the west coast corridor will connect areas of Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego. Installations will be spaced no less than 50 miles apart. Nearly 100 ports will be installed in the first phase, which is expected to be complete by the end of this year.

Each location will have up to two 50kW direct current fast chargers, so vehicles like the BMW i3 And the VW E-Golf can get 80 percent worth of charge in 20 minutes. Cars that don’t have the DC fast charging capabilities can still use the standard “level 2” chargers, which can get them around 25 miles worth of range from an hour’s worth of charge.

Installations on the west coast have already started, with the first one set up in San Diego County. They’ll be publicly available, but anyone looking to use them will have to setup a ChargPoint account. They can then pay with a ChargePoint or ChargeNow card or with the ChargePoint mobile app.

Alexander Kalogianni
Former Automotive Editor
Alex K is an automotive writer based in New York. When not at his keyboard or behind the wheel of a car, Alex spends a lot of…
Volvo’s parent just launched a $16,000 EV that looks shockingly luxurious
This $15,600 Geely EV has no business looking this premium
Geely Galaxy Starshine 7 Promo Image

Geely, the Chinese auto giant that also owns Volvo, has just unveiled a new RV that really does not look like it belongs anywhere near the budget end of the market.

The company has just kicked off the presales in China for the Galaxy Starshine 7, with its pricing starting at 112,900 yuan or about $16,550. For that money, buyers get a midsize electric sedan with a sleek fastback silhouette, full-width lighting, a richly trimmed cabin, and even an available dual-motor all-wheel-drive setup that can hit 0 to 100 km/h in 5.4 seconds.

Read more
Xiaomi makes dirt-cheap gadgets, but its CEO just ruled out cheap EVs
Xiaomi is staying out of the bargain EV fight
Xiaomi SU7 EV in blue

Xiaomi has been known for building some surprisingly cheap gadgets that still feel a little more premium than they should. But that philosophy apparently does not extend to electric cars.

According to ITHome, Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun said during a livestream for the company's SU7 endurance challenge on April 17 that Xiaomi will not make vehicles priced below 100,000 Yuan. That works out to be just under $15,000. Lei explained that if consumers expect an electric car to deliver strong intelligent features, software, and overall capability, the cost is harder to squeeze down that far.

Read more
The new electric Mercedes C-Class puts its giant screen front and center
Mercedes previews a richer electric C-Class interior with a dash-wide display, upgraded comfort features, and a stronger push to make the cabin feel like the main event
Car, Transportation, Vehicle

Mercedes-Benz is using the cabin to make its first electric C-Class feel like a bigger step than a normal model update. Ahead of the car’s April 20 world premiere, it has shown an interior centered on a sweeping digital display, extra space, and a more upscale finish that leans hard into comfort and theater.

The key visual is the new MBUX Hyperscreen, with Mercedes also offering a Superscreen setup. Both are designed to stretch the digital interface across the front of the car and blend the center console into the instrument panel, giving the dashboard a cleaner and more dramatic shape than the current C-Class.

Read more