Feb 24, 2026
Leading mobility researchers across Korea visit ACEWORKS headquarters to discuss university-industry partnership and talent cultivation

Some of the country's most accomplished mobility researchers recently visited ACEWORKS' headquarters in Gangnam-gu, Seoul, for a series of meetings centered on industry-academic collaboration and talent development.
The delegations came from two Hanyang University laboratories: the Intelligent System Control Lab (UNICON LAB), led by Professor Chang-mook Kang of the Department of Electrical and Biomedical Engineering, and the Advanced Mobility Powertrain Lab (AMP LAB), headed by Professor Sung-wook Park of the Department of Mechanical Engineering. The visits — held on February 12th and 16th — were designed to forge a more direct link between industry and academia, and to lay the groundwork for deeper collaboration between the two sides.
Each visit followed a structured agenda: an overview of ACEWORKS' core business areas and technical capabilities, a guided tour of the company's development, testing, and verification facilities, and an open Q&A session. Faculty and graduate students explored the latest technology trends and real-world applications in autonomous driving and future mobility, while engaging in candid conversation about the skills and research directions that matter most in an industry setting.
ACEWORKS took the opportunity to underscore its commitment to talent development through university partnerships. The company highlighted its ongoing efforts to expand industry exposure through site visits and knowledge-sharing events, while building collaboration frameworks that can evolve into joint research projects, internships, and recruiting pipelines.
One concrete example is already in place: a student who joined ACEWORKS through Hanyang University's field training program is currently working at the company — a tangible proof of concept for this kind of industry-academic partnership. ACEWORKS sees these arrangements as a win on both sides: students gain hands-on experience and a clearer sense of career direction, while the company gets early access to promising talent.
For the Hanyang University researchers, the visits offered a valuable opportunity to test the real-world applicability of their work against an actual industry environment — examining development workflows and verification infrastructure up close. For ACEWORKS, it was a chance to better understand where university research is heading and what problems it is trying to solve. Both parties came away with a shared sense of optimism about the potential for ongoing collaboration — spanning technology exchange, joint research, and talent mobility.