Autonomous Systems to showcase “depot-first autonomy” for European smartbuses at IT-TRANS 2026

Karlsruhe, Germany – 19 February 2026

Autonomous Systems will exhibit at IT-TRANS 2026 (3–5 March, Karlsruhe), bringing a practical message to public transport operators across Europe: autonomy becomes useful when it starts in the depot — with measurable safety and operational impact before tackling the complexity of open-road operations.

At IT-TRANS, Jan Gramatyka (Co-CEO, Autonomous Systems) will speak at the Market Update Forum on 4 March at 15:00 with a presentation titled “Depot-first autonomy for European smartbuses”, sharing how operators can deploy smartbuses in a controlled environment, build confidence step-by-step, and create a credible path to scale across depots and fleets.

Autonomous Systems has also been selected as one of the finalists of the Future Mobility Award 2026, underlining the relevance of its operator-first approach to automation in public transport.

What makes smartbuses practical for public transport operators

For many operators, autonomy has been positioned as a long-term destination. Autonomous Systems focuses on a nearer-term reality: depots are where buses spend a significant portion of their operating life, and where repetitive, low-speed movements create daily costs, safety risk, and staffing pressure.

Three operator-grade proof points that smartbuses are real and relevant:

A repeatable path from first deployment to fleet rollout
Smartbuses become credible when the deployment method is repeatable. Autonomous Systems supports this through the Smartbus Onboard Program: a structured way to move from initial interest to an operator-ready implementation plan grounded in depot workflow, infrastructure constraints, safety operations, and business case.

A clear, controlled operating environment
Depot-first autonomy is built for low-speed, structured spaces with repeatable routes and procedures — an environment where automation can be introduced responsibly and evaluated with real operational discipline.

Economics you can test with your own numbers
Autonomous Systems provides tools that translate “innovation” into operator KPIs —helping teams estimate impact on depot throughput, time spent on shunting/repositioning, and incident reduction using local assumptions.

Meet us at IT-TRANS: ROI & depot readiness sessions for operators

Autonomous Systems is inviting public transport operators attending IT-TRANS to schedule short, practical meetings with the team at the booth, including:

  • 15-minute depot ROI check (use your fleet/depot inputs to estimate impact)
  • Depot readiness discussion (how to phase deployment with minimal disruption)
  • Operational scaling plan (what changes on day 1, and what it takes to expand)

Book a meeting with Jan at IT-TRANS 3-5 March

“Public transport operators don’t need another autonomy promise — they need a pathway they can operate, justify, and scale,” said Jan Gramatyka, Co-CEO of Autonomous Systems. “Depot-first autonomy turns autonomy into an operational tool: controlled, measurable, and designed to fit real-world depot workflows.”

Where to hear Autonomous Systems at IT-TRANS week

IT-TRANS 2026 (Exhibitor): 3–5 March, Karlsruhe

Market Update Forum talk: “Depot-first autonomy for European smartbuses”4 March, 15:00 in Hall 1

UITP Academy (parallel to IT-TRANS): Jan Gramatyka will also participate as an expert trainer and speaker during the UITP Academy session “IT and ITS in Public Transport”, delivering a dedicated slot on smart depots and how depot digitalisation supports safe, scalable automation: https://www.uitp.org/events/it-and-its-in-public-transport/