More than 400 gleaming cars and trucks shimmied off vehicle transporters Friday and headed into the Minneapolis Convention Center, where 40,000 spectators are expected to kick tires at the Twin Cities Auto Show that starts Saturday.
The show, which runs through March 16, is an annual rite that brings out auto enthusiasts from around the Midwest, and also helps rev up auto sales.
"This show is a big deal for everyone. We're expecting another good year" after vehicle sales jumped 13 percent last year, said Scott Lambert, executive vice president of the 400-member Minnesota Auto Dealers Association.
On Friday, scores of workers raced to build stages and kiosks, hang giant GM, Ford, Mazda and Nissan signs, and drive vehicles across the convention floor. The show features something for many car enthusiasts — but especially Minnesotans who love big trucks and those hankering for fuel efficiency.
"This year, it's all about gas mileage," Lambert said.
And on Friday convention staffers drove a slew of fuel-efficient beauties onto the convention floor, including the all-electric BMW-i3; the Chevy Volt, a solar car designed by University of Minnesota students and even the electric Mitsubishi MIEV Evolution II, which is the race car that took first place at the 2013 Pikes Peak International Hill Climb for electric vehicles.
But gas-powered vehicles won't be outdone, organizers said.
"What is big this year is Ford's new F-150. It has an all-aluminum body. That's big. They took 700 pounds of material out of the truck. It hasn't hit [Minnesota] showrooms yet, but it's here," Lambert said.