Skip to main content

ITSA Detroit 2018: a must-attend transportation event!

The 2018 ITS America Annual Meeting Detroit, from 4-7 June, is the must-attend transportation technology event in North America this year. The theme of the meeting, “Transportation 2.0,” will be weaved throughout the three days of plenary sessions, demonstrations, and exhibits. Discussions will centre around the future of transportation, intelligent mobility, and managing risk. “Changes happening today will fundamentally affect how people interact with transportation in the months and years ahead,” said Sh
May 24, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
© F11photo | Dreamstime.com
The 2018 ITS America Annual Meeting Detroit, from 4-7 June, is the must-attend transportation technology event in North America this year. The theme of the meeting, “Transportation 2.0,” will be weaved throughout the three days of plenary sessions, demonstrations, and exhibits. Discussions will centre around the future of transportation, intelligent mobility, and managing risk.


“Changes happening today will fundamentally affect how people interact with transportation in the months and years ahead,” said Shailen Bhatt, president and CEO of ITS America. “We are thrilled to return to Detroit to talk about advances that will transform transportation.”

The line-up of keynote speakers and panellists underlines how important this annual meeting and its transformative effect is, both to government and industry. For instance, Heidi King, Deputy Administrator, NHTSA, will provide the opening keynote, The Future of Transportation, which will set the scene for the Mobility 2.0 Roundtable which follows. Wednesday’s keynote presentations will be provided by Rick Snyder, Governor of Michigan and Mark Reuss, EVP Global Product Development, Purchasing and Supply Chain, General Motors. On Thursday, delegates will hear a keynote on Managing Risk in the 21st Century by Tom Gebhardt, Executive Officer, Panasonic Corporation, Chairman & CEO, Panasonic Corporation of North America.

Panellists and presenters, all senior government and industry leaders, will support the keynote speakers and provide their insights and vision on the changes and challenges facing transportation as it comes to grips with an increasingly fast-changing present and what can sometimes seem a bewildering future. In all, delegates at the ITS America Annual Meeting Detroit have a unique opportunity to hear about, and understand, the overarching questions that are vital to prepare markets, governments, and researchers for the future.  (See separate story below, Key focus areas of Transportation 2.0).

A major new feature of this ITS America annual meeting will be the Smart Mobility Stage situated in a prime location on the exhibit floor. This builds off of the tremendous success of the Smart Cities Stage at the 2017 ITS World Congress in Montréal and it is where thought leaders, cutting edge visionaries, leading technology companies and manufacturers, will discuss, debate and advise on the trends and future of intelligent mobility.

In addition, the first in-person event in the Federal Highway Administration’s National Dialogue on Highway Automation series will be held on Thursday, 7 June, in conjunction with the ITS America annual meeting. The Dialogue aims to facilitate information sharing, identify key issues and prepare for integrating automated vehicles into the road network.

A key component of all ITS America annual meetings is the programme of Demonstrations and this year sees a wide-ranging and comprehensive range of 15 live demonstrations – a menu of these, and the organisations involved, is below: ITS America Annual Meeting Detroit Demonstrations. The Technical Tours programme will also provide attendees with an opportunity to visit a range of installations in the Detroit area.

Meanwhile, the main exhibition area will see over 100 companies participating to show their latest products, systems and innovations.

Shailen Bhatt, president and CEO of ITS America is bursting with enthusiasm about what visitors are going to see. “The change in transportation that’s coming is like the Industrial Revolution – but in the span of a few decades. It’s a global scale of change.”

And the place to get a real understanding of that, and more, is in Detroit from 4-7 June – at the must-attend transportation technology event in North America this year.

Related Content

  • ITS World Congress looks to new horizons in Montréal
    March 29, 2017
    ITS World Congress 2017 will highlight transformational technologies, integrated mobility and smart cities. “Today’s global transportation industry is at a transformational tipping point,” says Regina Hopper, president and CEO of the Intelligent Transportation Society of America (ITS America).
  • ITS will help ‘fifth generation’ roads offer pan-European solution
    December 21, 2018
    The next generation of roads - the ‘fifth generation’ - will provide the world’s highway authorities with a big leap forward, delegates to the recent European Road Conference heard. Adewole Adesiyun, deputy secretary general at the Brussels-based Forum of European National Highway Research Laboratories (FEHRL), said a paradigm shift is taking place, offering “solutions to existing and future problems with new ways to use smart, intelligent and dynamic technologies”. The first four generations of roa
  • RCA designs mobility for life
    June 11, 2019
    The Royal College of Art is a design powerhouse, and researcher Artur Mausbach is turning his attention to what future mobility will look – and feel – like. Adam Hill finds out more The name Royal College of Art (RCA) does not immediately bring to mind images of industrial design. But past alumni of this prestigious London institution include vacuum cleaner king James Dyson as well as that former enfant terrible of the artistic world, Tracey Emin: the RCA has always had a foot in both camps. And now it
  • WTS International: Attract, Connect, Sustain, Advance
    December 7, 2022
    WTS International exists to connect transportation professionals, and to help prepare the next generation of the mobility workforce. But it takes everyone to create change, says Lindsay Shelton-Gross