Inside Stellantis’ 504-Acre Braintrust, Big Changes are Happening
Key takeaways
- Stellantis is reworking its future inside its massive Michigan complex.
- The tech center and the tower, the latter often wrapped in giant images assembled like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, form the nucleus of the 504-acre Stellantis North America campus and headquarters.
- Under the current leadership of CEO Antonio Filosa and his FastLane 2030 plan, Stellantis is working on 11 all-new models and 12 refreshes in the next five years.
Why this matters: an automotive development that could shape industry direction or buying decisions.
Stellantis is reworking its future inside its massive Michigan complex.
It has been 40 years since construction started on the Chrysler Technology Center in Auburn Hills, Michigan, and 30 years since the corporate tower was finished, complete with its signature 35-foot Pentastar that can be seen for miles as cars zip along I-75. The tech center and the tower, the latter often wrapped in giant images assembled like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, form the nucleus of the 504-acre Stellantis North America campus and headquarters.
Under the current leadership of CEO Antonio Filosa and his FastLane 2030 plan, Stellantis is working on 11 all-new models and 12 refreshes in the next five years. That has the whole complex hopping and, in some cases, changing and upgrading how they do things, working to ensure quality while cutting regional costs by $3 billion.