Any electric car equipped with a European standard CCS charging connection can be charged at the Audi charging hub, regardless of brand. Audi customers benefit exclusively from the option of booking an individual charging slot of 45 minutes in advance and free of charge via the myAudi app. The reservation is held for a maximum of 15 minutes – after this time, the slot will be lost. If the reserved slot is still occupied by a previous user on arrival, the reservation is automatically transferred to a free charging point.
The technical heart of the Audi charging hub are the so-called charging cubes – which are modular container cubes that, in addition to the fast-charging infrastructure, also contain used, reconditioned lithium-ion batteries that come from dismantled Audi test vehicles. These so-called second-life batteries serve as buffer storage. As a result, the Audi charging hub system places minimal demand on the local power grid in terms of the power it requires and is simply connected to the existing low-voltage grid. In addition, the Audi charging hub sources 100 per cent of its power from sustainable sources, with its own photovoltaic system on the roof of the charging cubes providing additional green energy.
In total, the Audi charging hub can supply up to 60 electric vehicles with power per day. But there is no need for city dwellers to be envious, because the good news is that more Audi charging hubs of this kind are to follow in 2023: in Berlin in the first quarter, and in Salzburg and Munich in the second quarter of the year. Then electric car drivers in these cities who do not have their own charging facilities at home will be able to charge their cars in an easy and much faster way than at any other charging infrastructure.