The project involved a collaborative effort, bringing together teams from across the Asia-Pacific region. Russell Marsh, President of Cubic Defense, highlighted the achievement, stating: “The impressive engineering project was a collaborative effort consisting of teams from across the Asia-Pacific region, all coming together to design, manufacture, deliver, and install a range of advanced training systems for SAFTI City.”
Cubic’s contribution to SAFTI City includes an advanced computer vision system capable of tracking targets and enabling them to autonomously shoot back at training forces. Additionally, the company delivered 11,000 sensors, including 8,000 building-integrated anchors with ultra-wideband indoor tracking and 3,000 shoot-through-wall modules.
The newly delivered systems are designed to support realistic urban combat training. The shoot-back functionality and integrated tracking enhance the ability of military personnel to prepare for complex, high-density environments.
Alicia Combs, Cubic’s Ground Training Vice President and General Manager, expressed pride in the project, stating: “We are extremely proud to have delivered the next evolution of vehicle and soldier tracking instrumentation with new enhancements included. The vehicle instrumentation system now shows crews the direction from which they were hit. The soldier system enables seamless tracking from outdoors to indoors, by using GPS and radio communications outside and pairing with building infrastructure to use ultra-wideband communications indoors.”