| São Paulo International Motor Show | |
|---|---|
| Status | Active |
| Venue | Ibirapuera Park (until 1968) Anhembi Convention Center (until 2014) São Paulo Expo (since 2016) |
| Locations | São Paulo, Brazil |
| Country | Brazil |
| Inaugurated | 1960–present |
| Website | salaodoautomovel |
TheSão Paulo International Motor Show (Salão International do Automóvel de São Paulo) is the biggest and most important automotive event in Latin America.[1] The São Paulo International Motor Show has been held inSão Paulo since 1960. Originally being held irregularly, it has been a bi-annual show since 1984 (although there was no 2020 edition due to thecoronavirus pandemic). In 1990 the event became internationalized and the domestic industry showed its capacity for global competition.[2]
The original six exhibitions took place at the centrally locatedIbirapuera Park. From 1970 until 2014, the Show was held indoors, at theAnhembi Convention Center. The two most recent events have been held at theSão Paulo Expo [pt].
The inaugural edition opened on 25 November 1960. 12 manufacturers were represented and 400,000 visitors - including domestic automobile industry champion, PresidentJuscelino Kubitschek - attended.[3]
At the second show, premieres included theWillys Interlagos, theSimca Chambord, and a revampedVolkswagen 1200.[3]
The third edition included the premieres of the locally producedVolkswagen Karmann Ghia (Typ 14) and theVemag Fissore, as well as theToyota Bandeirante, the Scania L-75, and theChevrolet Amazona trucks.[3]
With the fourth edition, the show adopted its current biannual schedule. The impact of Brazil's economy and political situations have, however, sometimes led to three-year gaps and occasionally to successive shows. This was the first year that the show was held under themilitary dictatorship. Volkswagen and Ford both boycotted the event.
The biggest premiere was the 1965Aero Willys; lesser stars included the limited productionBrasinca Uirapuru, theChevrolet Veraneio utility vehicle, and theVemaguet Rio.[3]
The 26th motor show was held between 25 October to 7 November.
The 27th edition was held from 24 October to 4 November 2012.
The 28th edition was held between 30 October and 9 November 2014.
The 29th edition was held between 10 and 20 November 2016.
The 30th edition was held between 9 and 18 November 2018.
23°30′59″S46°38′11″W / 23.5165°S 46.6363°W /-23.5165; -46.6363