ICE London starts next week
The most important event for the gambling industry starts on Tuesday at the ExCel London.
UK.- With 612 exhibitor brands from 66 countries, the 2019 edition of ICE London will be the biggest one yet. Gaming professionals are ready to exhibit their products, offer their services and create and strengthen partnerships at the upcoming edition of the show, which will take place next week at ExCel London (February 5-7).
The net floor space has grown from the 2018 figure of 43,500sqm to 45,500sqm, an increase of just under 5%, revealed Clarion Gaming, organiser of the event. Since 2012, ICE London has grown year-on-year and is now more than twice its 2012 size. When visitors attend ICE London, they have direct access to the smartest innovators in world gaming, showing products and services that harness the latest advances in technology.
“No other exhibition can come close to delivering this quality and in such numbers covering all of the gaming verticals,” explained Kate Chambers, who is Managing Director of Clarion Gaming and the person who has overseen the development of ICE London into the pre-eminent gaming event on the international calendar.
The show will feature the biggest companies of the industry, such as Konami Gaming Inc, Merkur Gaming, BetConstruct, FBM, Dallmeier, INTRALOT, AMATIC Industries, TCSJOHNHUXLEY, SBTech and Sportradar, among others.
ICE London has also partnered with Ecobooth, the world’s first genuinely zero waste events production company, to deliver the ICE Graphics Amnesty 2019. The amnesty will see Ecobooth and Clarion working with the event’s 589 exhibitors to collect the most common event stand waste materials which will then be recycled into a sheet material and used to make an array of products and outdoor furniture for the local community and used in communal spaces surrounding ExCeL London.
Moreover, Clarion Gaming will be using ICE London to present two bespoke powered wheelchairs as part of its partnership programme with children’s charity CHIPS. Born out of the gaming industry, CHIPS has donated 520 wheelchairs to children with severe mobility issues. Chairs, which are designed for the specific needs of each child, cost an average of €8k each.