Guys,
All I wanted to say is that I find it rather disappointing to see engineers with zero faith and arguing endlessly against something. Especially if it's an unfair argument. This is the quality of an engineer who can only do what's been done before.
As an engineer who certainly doesn't like to only do what has been done before, i find some important issues with your assertions!
In the "real world" engineering is a compromise. Today, in 2014, we have such understanding of our environment and physics, that practically, we
CAN do almost anything we set our minds to. The issue is not therefore of
CAN we do something, but
should we do something, and that includes many more non engineering decisions and often politics, semantics and even idealistic principals!.
An example:
You need to buy some milk. I suspect you either walk, ride your bike, or most probably, drive your car to the shop to buy some. Why don't you take a helicopter to get some, it would be much quicker? The answer (of course) is that the vast majority of people cannot afford to own a helicopter, even though "helicopter technology" is proven and now relatively mass produced. That doesn't make "Helicopters" pointless, or make people who don't use helicopters to get their milk luddites!!
So, the principal issue with Solar roadways is simple:
"Due to the compromises necessary in the design to make these solar panels work under roads, for any given investment, it will always be better (higher ROI) to spend that money on conventional solar systems"
This has nothing to do with the technology or physics, or engineering or whatever of the devices, but is a simple fact of the (capitalist)world we live in.