You are on page 1of 12

2014 SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA MODELING & SIMULATION CONFERENCE

AEROSPACE & DEFENSE, HEALTHCARE, MANUFACTURING, TRAINING

Wednesday March 12 & Thursday March 13, 2014


The Diversity Business Development Center is pleased to announce the MODELING & SIMULATION BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE to take place at ASUs SkySong Campus, Convergence Room # 150, 1475 North Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, AZ 85257. This Conference is the third in a series of two previous workshops held in the fall of 2011 and spring of 2012 in which it was determined that there was significant interest in advancing M&S technology across multi disciplines.

PURPOSE
The purpose of the conference will be to: 1. Identify common issues and synergies between the aerospace & defense, healthcare, manufacturing and other industries that could lead to the identification of common M&S thrust areas that would stimulate sustainable economic growth and new business development opportunities 2. Exchange information and network with other participants to advance your business and professional development, share ideas, benchmark processes and develop sustainable business relationships 3. Provide a forum for students to learn about M&S technology and applications and meet potential employers DISCUSSION TOPICS Identify, prioritize and define cross-cutting M&S focus areas in the aerospace and defense and healthcare sectors that will differentiate the conference from other M&S events Develop strategies to engage small to medium size manufacturing enterprises (SMEs) across the southwest to leverage M&S as a means to stimulate economic development Develop strategies to actively engage Community Colleges and Research Universities to address the full spectrum of M&S research needs and workforce development requirements

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?


Aerospace and Defense, Information Technology, Healthcare, Manufacturing, Communications, Electronics, Law Enforcement, Prime Contractors, Specialty Contractors, Subcontractors, Government, Economic Development organizations and Academia.

Page 2 of 12

PROGRAM AGENDA WEDNESDAY March 12, 2014


From 8:30 9:00 9:15 9:45 To Presentation Representative

9:00 Registration & Continental Breakfast Eduardo Castillo Dee Andrews, PhD Doohwan Kim, PhD, President & Founder, RTSync Larry Thacker, President, Thacker Consulting, LLC Mani Janakiram, PhD, Director, Supply Chain Strategy & Analytics Intel Corporation Dr. Gerald R. Moses, Medical Simulation Program Manager, General Dynamics Information Technology (GDIT) Rebecca G. Hathaway, RN, MSN, EDAC & Virginia Minolli, Empirical Solutions Corp.

9:15 Welcome and Opening Remarks 9:45 Attendees Introductions 10:15 Modeling & Simulation in Department of Defense Training "Modeling, Simulation, and Virtual Test for Systems-of10:15 10:45 Systems Engineering of Integrated Health Care Systems" 10:45 11:00 MORNING BREAK 11:00 11:30 Modeling and Simulation Research for Incident Commanders 11:30 12:00 "Modeling and Simulation of a semiconductor supply chain" 12:00 12:45 Luncheon Buffet Development in Medical Simulation Training and Future 12:45 13:30 Opportunities

13:30 14:30 Progressive Simulation a case study 14:30 15:30 Exhibits and Networking

Page 3 of 12

THURSDAY March 13, 2014


From 8:30 9:00 9:15 To Presentation Representative

9:00 Registration & Continental Breakfast 9:15 Welcome Remarks 9:45 "Safer Surgery with Games The First Cut" Stimulating M&S Technology Development and Applications through the EDGE Open Collaboration Network Ed Castillo Curtiss Murphy, Technical Director, Advanced Modeling & Simulation, Alion Science and Technology Pete Palmer, BG USA (Ret.), Director, EDGE Innovation Network, General Dynamics C4 Systems

9:45

10:30

10:30 10:45 Break 10:45 11:15 Dr. Richard M. Satava, MD FACS Modeling and Simulation Research for the Next Generation of Professor of Surgery, University of Medicine and Surgical Training Washington Medical Center Dr. William Swartout, Director of Technology, Institute for Creative "The Promise of Virtual Reality and Medicine: Making it Real" Technologies, Research Professor, USC School of Engineering Computer Science Department Luncheon Buffet Dr. Nancy J. Cooke Ph.D. Professor of Cogntiive Science and Engineering Arizona State University; Science "Simulations as Research Testbeds" Director Cognitive Engineering Research Institute Exhibits and Networking

11:15 12:30

12:30 13:00

13:00 13:30

13:30 14:30

Page 4 of 12

FEATURE PRESENTATIONS
Title: Modeling and Simulation Research for the Next Generation of Medicine and Surgical Training Richard Satava, MD, FACS, is Professor of Surgery at the University of Washington Medical Center, and Senior Science Advisor at the US Army Medical Research and Materiel Command in Ft. Detrick, MD. Prior positions include Professor of Surgery at Yale University and a military appointment as Professor of Surgery (USUHS) in the Army Medical Corps assigned to General Surgery at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and Program Manager of Advanced Biomedical Technology at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), His undergraduate training was at Johns Hopkins University, medical school at Hahnemann University of Philadelphia, internship at the Cleveland Clinic, surgical residency at the Mayo Clinic, and a fellowship with a Master of Surgical Research at Mayo Clinic. He has served on the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) Committee on Health, Food and Safety. He is currently a member of the Emerging Technologies and Resident Education, and Informatics committees of the American College of Surgeons (ACS), is past president of the Society of American Gastrointestinal Endoscopic Surgeons (SAGES), past president of the Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons (SLS), and is on the Board of Governors of the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME) as well as on a number of surgical societies. He is on the editorial board of numerous surgical and scientific journals, and active in numerous surgical and engineering societies. He has been continuously active in surgical education and surgical research, with more than 200 publications and book chapters in diverse areas of advanced surgical technology, including Surgery in the Space Environment, Video and 3-D imaging, Telepresence Surgery, Virtual Reality Surgical Simulation, and Objective Assessment of Surgical Competence and Training. During his 23 years of military surgery he has been an active flight surgeon, an Army astronaut candidate, MASH surgeon for the Grenada Invasion, and a hospital commander during Desert Storm, all the while continuing clinical surgical practice. While striving to practice the complete discipline of surgery, he is aggressively pursuing the leading edge of advanced technologies to formulate the architecture for the next generation of Medicine.
.

Dr. Richard Satava M.D. Professor of Surgery at the University of Washington Medical Center Senior Science Advisor at the US Army Medical Research and Materiel Command in Ft. Detrick, MD.

Title: Safer Surgery with Games The First Cut Curtiss Murphy won Best Tutorial at I/ITSEC, the Largest Modeling, Simulation, & Training Conference Worldwide, but its his passion for story-telling and obsession with the psychology of why games work that make him a thought leader in the industry. With 20 years of experience in software development, Curtiss is routinely invited to speak at conferences across the country. His vision and expertise guided the development of the Navys Damage Control Trainer, an award winning training game used by 40,000 recruits each year. Curtiss holds a B.S. in Computer Science from Virginia Tech and is the Technical Director of Alions Advanced Modeling and Simulation Technology Operation.

Curtiss Murphy Technical Director Alion Science & Technology

Page 5 of 12

Title: "The Promise of Virtual Reality and Medicine: Making it Real" Dr. William Swartout has been involved in the research and development of artificial intelligence systems for over 30 years. He is the director of technology at the USC Institute for Creative Technologies and a research professor in the computer science department at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering. His particular research interests include virtual humans, explanation and text generation, knowledge acquisition, knowledge representation, intelligent computer based education and the development of new AI architectures. At ICT, Swartout provides overall direction for the institutes research programs. He leads the National Science Foundation-funded museum guides project, which is bringing ICT-created virtual humans to the Museum of Science, Boston. He oversaw the Mission Rehearsal Exercise project, which garnered awards for outstanding innovation in modeling and simulation from the National Training and Simulation Association and first place for innovative application of agent technology at the 2001 International Conference on Autonomous Agents. In 2009, Swartout received the Robert Engelmore Award from the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence for seminal contributions to knowledge-based systems and explanation, groundbreaking research on virtual human technologies and their applications, and outstanding service to the artificial intelligence community. He is a Fellow of the AAAI, has served on their Board of Councilors and is past chair of the Special Interest Group on Artificial Intelligence (SIGART) of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). He has served as a member of the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board, the Board on Army Science and Technology of the National Academies and the JFCOM Transformation Advisory Group. Prior to joining ICT in 1999, Swartout was director of the Intelligent Systems Division at the USC Information Sciences Institute. He received his Ph.D. and M.S. in computer science from MIT and his bachelors degree from Stanford University. Silver Sponsor During his 14 year tenure with Alion, Mr. Dane Mullenix has served in a number of capacities including MSIAC Director, Division Manager, Small Business advocate, and Director of Innovation, for the companys National Security Group. In his current capacity, Dane oversees the operation of the Arizona Laboratories for the City of Mesa, as part of a broader economic development initiative to attract Aerospace and Defense companies to central Arizona. Dane joined Alion in 2000 after a 26 year Air Force career as an Air Battle Manager and Aircraft Maintenance specialist. He began his career as an enlisted Crew Chief on the F-111 aircraft, followed by 22 years of commissioned service in a variety of Operations, Staff and Leadership positions. Danes expertise encompasses Command and Control, Intelligence Surveillance Reconnaissance, Modeling and Simulation, and Military Readiness. Danes aviation experience includes over 2500 hours in the E-3 AWACS and EC-130 ABCCC aircraft, and various ground-based radar systems. Dane also served on the headquarters staffs of the US Air Force Headquarters Pentagon and at the United States Pacific Command in Hawaii. Mr. Mullenix holds a Bachelor of Science degree in General Studies from the University of New York at Plattsburgh, and a Master of Arts degree in Human Resources Management from Pepperdine University. Panel Presentation Rebecca Hathaway Virginia Minolli Title: Progressive Simulation a Healthcare Case Study

Dr. William (Bill) Swartout Director of Technology Institute for Creative Technologies Research Professor USC School of Engineering Computer Science

Dane D. Mullenix Vice President Alion Science and Technology

Page 6 of 12

With more than 30 years of experience in healthcare operations, Rebecca Hathaway is recognized as a visionary thought leader, creating transformation and innovation through the creation of high performance team(s) and utilizing process tools (such as simulation modeling) to leverage business opportunities and solve complex issues to achieve exceptional outcomes. She has successfully developed and implemented innovative systems and process redesign for numerous healthcare organizations. Most recently, Rebecca has applied simulation modeling to the design, construction, and operationalization of a 140 bed net new acute care hospital in Southern California. The modeling effort spanned 2 years and had three phases during the project. Modeling was utilized to first test the architectural design (Phase I) and in the final two phases to operationalize a new and innovative care delivery model. She is in process of completing her doctorate at the Emerson Institute. Her professional memberships include the American College of Healthcare Executives (ACHE), the American Organization of Nurse Executives (AONE), AIA, and San Diego Healthcare Leaders. She has also served on numerous boards, advisory committees, contributes to the industry by presenting regularly and has been widely published. Virginia Minolli is currently president of Empirical Solutions Corporation (ESC), an engineering company that provides simulation modeling and systems analysis services to support the design and improvement of manufacturing, healthcare and business process systems. Since its inception in 1997, ESC has performed over 1,000 projects and has helped companies to quantify the impact of proposed system modifications prior to committing capital resources. She has lead the modeling and analysis efforts for several healthcare projects including process improvement and nursing value engineering studies for the Detroit Medical Center Children's Hospital Emergency Department, layout analysis and operational modeling for the UHS Temecula Emergency Department and departmental capacity modeling and analysis for the UHS Wellington Regional Medical Center. Prior to starting Empirical Solutions Corporation, Ms. Minolli worked for Comau, S.p.A. in various positions, including program management and engineering business unit director. She was instrumental in bringing computer aided engineering tools into use in the design and development of manufacturing systems including technologies such as finite element analysis, discrete event simulation, kinematic simulation and variation simulation. Her tenure at Comau also included a two-year assignment at the corporate headquarters in Torino, Italy where she worked as a systems analysis consultant for non-automotive clients including Eli Lilly, Port of Genova, Rome's DaVinci Airport and ENEL. She received the FIAT Innovation & Quality Award from Chairman Giovanni Agnelli in 1995 in recognition of her success in deploying computer aided engineering tools in the equipment design and development sector of FIAT. She has published several papers and spoken at technical conferences including the International Body Engineering Conference, the Simulation for Manufacturing Improvement Conference, Italian Technology Week, and the European Simulation Symposium. She has served as president of the Michigan Simulation Users Group, a not for profit trade organization with a mission to increase the use of simulation technologies, and on the board of the Detroit Science Center. She is an active participant in FIRST robotics, a not for profit with the mission of inspiring young people to pursue careers in science and technology, serving as a judge and judge advisor at the District and World Championship level. She received her Master's degree in Manufacturing Systems Engineering and Bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering from Stanford University. Page 7 of 12

Rebecca Hathaway, RN, MSN, EDAC CEO, Bridgestar Consulting

Virginia Minolli President Empirical Solutions Corporation

Title: Stimulating M&S Technology Development and Applications through the EDGE Open Collaboration Network As director of the EDGE Innovation Network, Pete is responsible for leading the EDGE Innovation Network Enterprise and is a key contributor to new project development within the EDGE. He is also develops long-range strategy objectives to ensure continued growth of the EDGE network. Prior to joining General Dynamics C4 Systems, Pete performed over 32 years of active service as a commissioned officer in the United States Army, retiring in 2009 as a Brigadier General. His experience in the Army includes a wide range of assignments in the Infantry, both stateside and abroad. His Joint and Coalition experiences include four tours in NATO (Germany), SHAPE during Kosovo conflict, Dpty Commander TF Falcon in KOSOVO, Commander the Battle Command Training Program (BCTP) at the Combined Arms Center at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. BCTP is a simulation based virtual training environment focusing on training Brigade, Division and Army Commanders and Staff in Joint and Coalition mission command, C4ISR systems and processes. His most recent Joint and Coalition experience was in 2004-5 as Brigadier General, serving as deputy chief of staff for strategic plans and later as deputy Chief of staff for operations for the Multi-national Force in Operation Iraqi Freedom. As deputy Chief of staff for operations he served under MG Molan, Australian Army. In 2005, Pete was assigned to serve as the Director of Accelerated Capabilities Development for the Army Capabilities Integration Center (ARCIC) at Fort Monroe, Va. He managed a broad capabilities development portfolio with responsibility for the development and integration of Department of the Army future and current fight capabilities documents as well as Science and Technology capability documents for the Army and Joint and Multi-National forces. Pete was also instrumental in championing the Armys recent push into understanding and improving the relationship between the Soldier and technology. This is one aspect of the Human Dimension (HD) capabilities development initiative that encompasses the moral, physical, and cognitive components of Soldier development and performance. Petes experience as a thought leader in Human Dimension has kept him at the forefront of technology discovery and allowed him to interact with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), industry and academia. He is applying this experience to move the EDGE Innovation Network to the next level, keeping it at the forefront of understanding the technology gaps warfighters face and developing new ways for the warfighter to assess and manage information. Pete received his bachelors of science in electrical engineering and computer science from the United States Military Academy and a masters of arts in National Securities studies from the University of California San Bernardino. He also has two masters of military arts and science in operation and operational art from the US Army Command and General Staff College in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

Pete Palmer, BG USA (Ret.) Director, EDGE Innovation Network General Dynamics C4 Systems

Page 8 of 12

Title: Modeling and Simulation of a semiconductor supply chain Mani Janakiram is a Director of Supply Chain Strategy & Analytics at Intel Corporation. He has been with Intel for 15 years and has managed several strategic projects in factory operations, capacity planning, process control, analytics, strategy, supplier management, factory science and supply chain. In addition to his Hi-tech experience, his 25 years of experience includes Automotive and Aerospace industries. Prior to Intel, he worked at Honeywell and Motorola in operations, strategy, systems, engineering, analytics, manufacturing, quality, sourcing, research, planning, etc. He is located in Gilbert, AZ. Mani is an adjunct professor at Arizona State University, school of Business and also a visiting lecturer at MITs Center for Transportation & Logistics. Mani Janakiram, PhD Director, Supply Chain Strategy & Analytics Intel Corporation Mani has two patents and has published 50+ papers on supply chain, statistical modeling, capacity modeling, data mining, Lean Six Sigma, factory operations research and process control. One of his publications in Journal of Quality Control was awarded the "Brumbaugh Award" from ASQ for making the greatest contribution to the development of industrial applications of quality control. He has served on several committees including, Informs, CSCMP, ITRS FI, AZ Tech Council, Stanford AIM, International Sematech, NSF research panels and Factory Systems of Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC), he mentors several engineers and students (MS/PhD) and has been recognized by SRC twice as the outstanding mentor with the "Mahboob Khan Award". Mani holds a PhD in Industrial & Systems Engineering from Arizona State University and an MBA from Thunderbird School of Global Management. He is a recognized Six Sigma Master Black Belt and also an APICS certified supply chain professional (CSCP).

Title: Development in Medical Simulation Training and Future Opportunities Dr Gerald Moses, PhD, joined the staff of GDIT on June 21 2013, coming from the Society for Simulation in Healthcare where he served as Director of Accreditation and Certification. From 2007 until the end of 2010, Dr. Moses served as Director of the MASTRI Center at the University of Maryland Medical Center. From 1998 to 2007, Dr. Moses directed the Clinical Applications Division of the DOD Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC). He served as Program Manager for the medical simulation research portfolio which emerged as the largest source of funding for advanced technology research related to simulation training. Gerry was active in the establishment of the Advanced Initiative in Medical Simulation (AIMS), a grass-roots initiative to raise medical simulation to the level of the national agenda by advocating for congressional legislation. He served on the Board of Directors of AIMS before joining the SSH staff. He received his Bachelor of Science degree in Psychology from Loyola University (Chicago); his Master of Arts degree in Speech Pathology from Western Michigan University; and his doctoral degree in Speech Science from The Ohio State University. After a fifteen year career in higher education at Miami University and Eastern Michigan University, Gerry served on active duty in the Army from 1980 to 1993, culminating his military career with first deployment and then the return of troops from Desert Shield and Desert Storm.
st

Dr. Gerald R. Moses, PhD Medical Simulation Program Manager General Dynamics Information Technology (GDIT)

Page 9 of 12

Title: Modeling & Simulation in Department of Defense Training Dr. Dee H. Andrews, is a member of the scientific and technical cadre of senior executives. He recently retired as a Senior Scientist, Human Effectiveness Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory, Mesa, Ariz. As Senior Scientist, Dr. Andrews was the laboratory's principal scientific authority for training research. His responsibilities included sustaining technological superiority for training by planning and conducting theoretical and experimental studies. He also mentored and developed the technical staff to assure quality in training research, and represents the laboratory in training research matters to the external scientific and technical community. Dee H Andrews PhD Dr. Andrews graduated from Brigham Young University with a degree in psychology in 1976. He holds a master's degree in instructional design and development from Florida State University and in 1980 earned a doctorate in instructional systems. Dr. Andrews entered federal civil service in 1979. He began work with the Naval Training Systems Center, Orlando, Fla., first as a training analyst and then as training researcher. In 1985 he worked as a senior training researcher with the Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences in Orlando. From 1987 until 2002, he was the Technical Director of the Warfighter Training Research Division of the Air Force Research Laboratory in Mesa, Ariz. Dr. Andrews' research interests include training in distributed environments, instructoroperator station design, performance measurement, command and control, cost effectiveness, cyber training research, and decay and retention of higher order cognitive skills. He serves as a contributing or consulting editor for seven professional journals and has written more than 70 technical publications. Dr. Andrews is a certified Level III acquisition professional in systems planning, research, development and engineering. He is a Fellow in the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society; American Psychological Association; Royal Aeronautical Society of the United Kingdom; and the Air Force Research Laboratory. Dr. Andrews is a Certified Human Performance Technologist by the International Society for Performance and Instruction and the American Society for Training and Development.

Title: Modeling, Simulation, and Virtual Test for Systems-of-Systems Engineering of Integrated Health Care Systems Dr. Doohwan Kim is the founder and president of RTSync corporation, a company which specializes in modeling and simulation products and services. He is involved in the design, development and delivery of the advanced M&S solutions for highly complex real world information science and engineering problems. Dr. Kim has managed many large scale research and development projects on complex systems integration problems, including Data Strategy, Data Engineering, and agentbased test instrumentation infrastructure for Department of Defense Net-centric Enterprise Services over Global Information Grid. His most current work includes M&S solutions to enable virtual test of integrated healthcare systems. He is the first to introduce the commercial innovation of the DEVS modeling and simulation methodology and framework based software toolsets and Cloud based model store environment. Previously, Dr. Kim was working on M&S projects at IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, NY from 1997 to 2002 and held a research professorship at the University of Arizona from 2004 to 2009. He received his Ph.D. from the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering of the University of Arizona in 1996.

Doohwan Kim, PhD President & Founder RTSync

Page 10 of 12

Title: Modeling and Simulation Research for Incident Commanders Larry Thacker is the President of Thacker Consulting LLC. This company specializes in the design and development of Incident Command and Emergency Operations Centers training facilities for Emergency responders, Hospitals, Military, Educational facilities, Correctional facilities, and Railroads. Mr. Thacker has over 20 years of experience as a first responder with the City of Phoenix Fire Department where he was a Captain Paramedic. He also has 29 years of higher education experience with Mesa Community College where he served as Faculty, Department Chair, and Dean of instruction. In 2010, he was asked to devote his efforts full time to the creation of the Virtual Incident Command Center, (VICC), where he served as Director until his retirement in 2013. The VICC serves as a total immersion virtual reality incident command facility that made it possible to greatly decrease the time necessary to gain competency for incident commanders. The VICC also serves as a total immersion Emergency Operations Center training and research facility that has been used by the Arizona Army National Guard, various Colleges, Schools, Hospitals and Police and Fire agencies. The VICC also serves as a research laboratory for Arizona State University and Northern Arizona University. This facility provides the opportunity to research and practice methods that will greatly enhance the complex decision making processes that occur in the stressful environment of emergency management. Larry also serves on the Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology Directorate Office of University programs. He also has a Masters degree in Higher Education Leadership from Northern Arizona University and is a Doctoral candidate from North Central University.

Larry Thacker President Thacker Consulting, LLC

TITLE: Simulations as Research Test-beds Nancy J. Cooke is a professor of Cognitive Science and Engineering at Arizona State University and is Science Director of the Cognitive Engineering Research Institute in Mesa, AZ. She also chairs the National Academies of Sciences Board on Human Systems Integration and a study panel at the National Academies of Science on the Science of Team Science. Dr. Cooke is also a member of the National Academies Panel on Human Factors Science at the Army Research Laboratory. Dr. Cookes research interests include the study of individual and team cognition and its application to the development of cognitive and knowledge engineering methodologies, sensor operator threat detection, homeland security systems, remotely-operated vehicles, healthcare systems, and emergency response systems. In particular, Dr. Cooke specializes in the development, application, and evaluation of methodologies to elicit and assess individual and team cognition in the context of team task simulators in domains of unmanned vehicle control, sensor operation, cyber security, incident command, emergency medical procedures, and Naval mission planning. Based on her empirical work in her team testbeds over the last two decades, Dr. Cooke has proposed a theory of Interactive Team Cognition which is published (with Gorman, Myers, & Duran) in the journal, Cognitive Science.

Dr. Nancy J. Cooke Ph.D. Professor of Cogntiive Science and Engineering Arizona State University; Science Director Cognitive Engineering Research Institute Mesa, AZ

Page 11 of 12

PROGRAM UPDATES: click

http://www.scribd.com/doc/201182456/2014-Modeling-Simulationhttp://2014scottsdalemandsconference.eventbrite.com

Conference-Scottsdale-AZ WEB SITE REGISTRATION: click

EVENT SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES: Please contact Sheila Martin - 602-300-2682 or email events@azbizopps.org for further information CANCELLATIONS AND TICKET REFUND POLICY: Cancellations and ticket refunds requests must be received in writing prior to 14 calendar days from the start date of the Event. Submit refund requests via email at eventsales@azbizopps.org.No verbal requests for ticket refunds will be honored. HOTEL SUGGESTIONS
Tempe Mission Palms, 60 E. Fifth Street, Tempe, AZ 85281 (480/894-1400)- Close to the airport and located in Downtown Tempe- Shuttle service available from Sky Harbor and to SkySong Conference Center Hampton Inn & Suites, 1429 N. Scottsdale Road, Tempe AZ 85281 (480/675-9799)- Shuttle Service Four Points by Sheraton, 1333 S. Rural Road, Tempe, AZ 85281 (480/968-3451)-Shuttle Service to and from SkyHarbor and to SkySong- Located at ASU Quality Suites, 1635 N. Scottsdale Road, Tempe, AZ 85281 (480/947-3711)- 1 mile from SkySong Scottsdale Marriott Suites Old Town, 7325 East 3rd Avenue, Scottsdale, AZ 85251 Holiday Inn Express Hotel & Suites Scottsdale - Old Town, 3131 North Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, AZ 85251 Courtyard Scottsdale Old Town, 3311 North Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, AZ 85251 Hampton Inn & Suites Scottsdale Riverwalk, 9550 East Indian Bend Road, Scottsdale, AZ 85256

Page 12 of 12

You might also like