The Detroit Auto Show, which was derailed by the COVID-19 pandemic, moved to September for two years and was skipped last year, has rebranded.
Volkswagen declined to comment when reached ... resignations of all of the Green Township board members in 2023. The Detroit News obtained the records on the MEDC's billion-dollar offers after ...
Electric vehicles took center stage as Honda, Ford and Volkswagen won the 2025 North American, Car, Truck and Utility of the year awards Friday at an Automotive Press Association Event in Detroit. The winners: Car: Honda Civic hybrid Start the day smarter.
DETROIT – The Detroit Auto Show is back in January. “The next two weeks are going to be incredible for this great city. We got the number 1 seeded Detroit Lions and an auto show that is coming back full throttle to the month of January,” 2025 Detroit Auto Show Chairman Karl Zimmermann said.
The Volkswagen ID. Buzz has been awarded the 2025 North American Utility Vehicle of the Year at the Detroit Auto Show, showcasing its innovative design and all-electric powertrain.
After skipping 2024, the Detroit Auto Show kicked off earlier today. However, you probably didn’t notice as the only news out of the event was the winners of the North American Car, Utility and Truck of the Year Awards.
The Honda Civic hybrid won the 2025 North American Car of the Year award, while the Ford Ranger took the crown for the truck honors, and Volkswagen ID.
The Detroit Auto Show kicked off with the Media Day Friday morning followed by the Charity Preview in the evening. The public show opens Saturday morning and runs through Jan. 20.
With the Detroit show’s return to January, the announcements of the North American car, truck, and utility vehicles of the year again kick off the event. On Friday, the Honda Civic Hybrid was named car of the year, the Ford Ranger as truck of the year, and the Volkswagen ID. Buzz as utility of the year.
and Volkswagen ID. Buzz won the utility award. The honors, announced Friday morning during an Automotive Press Association event kicking off the North American International Auto Show in Detroit ...
Toyota subsidiary Hino Motors has agreed to pay $1.6bn (£1.3bn) and plead guilty to deceiving US regulators about the amount of emissions produced by its diesel engines. The truck company will also be banned from exporting its diesel engines to the country for five years.
When I stepped up to test drive the all-electric Volkswagen ID. Buzz, the first thing I thought was that it looked as if it were grinning, almost too much. But once inside, the smug mug made sense.  The Buzz is the first all-electric minivan in the United