4 questions key to Detroit keeping its Motor City nickname in 2024

What makes Detroit the Motor City? The most obvious answer is that it is the center of the U.S. auto industry and as such it and the region are defined by over a century of moving people with machines.

But as the industry grows and evolves, especially because of new technology, questions come up about its future. It impacts every pore of our community, our region, our politics and our state as a draw for more residents.

People wait their turn to ride in a Jeep on an obstacle course during the North American International Detroit Auto Show's public day inside Huntington Place in Detroit on Saturday, Sept. 16, 2023.
People wait their turn to ride in a Jeep on an obstacle course during the North American International Detroit Auto Show's public day inside Huntington Place in Detroit on Saturday, Sept. 16, 2023.

As we enter 2024, I believe there are four questions that will help define what the Motor City’s prospects are as we head into the new year. Here are the questions, and some answers I've pulled together after many conversations with top leaders in the region.

Is it time for the Detroit auto show to return to its January roots?

A few years of being held in the fall after the Detroit Auto Dealers Association, with its partners, moved it from January to September allowed people to wear sandals, with no jacket needed to attend or cover the show but the switch didn't do much to increase traffic or attention for it.

Which is why there’s a growing drumbeat of CEOs I’ve talked to who want to move it back to January.

January may be less convenient (with winter coats and boots needed) but it’s a month that commands greater attention for the show, with fewer things going on (which is better for manufacturers, tech firms, businesses and hotels, too, as they get a boost during a slower month with fewer distractions).

What's notable about this image from a stand featuring an all-electric 2023 Cadillac Lyriq at the Detroit auto show at Huntington Place in Detroit in 2022 is that the car enthusiasts are in short sleeves. Auto insiders are questioning whether the change from January to warmer September is helping or hurting the annual event.
What's notable about this image from a stand featuring an all-electric 2023 Cadillac Lyriq at the Detroit auto show at Huntington Place in Detroit in 2022 is that the car enthusiasts are in short sleeves. Auto insiders are questioning whether the change from January to warmer September is helping or hurting the annual event.

September is always busy with school, football games, etc., to take attention away from the show.

Holding it in winter is how it all began 100 years ago.

Rod Alberts, executive director of the DADA , told me this week on “Michigan Matters” that conversations were being held about the show but that's all he would say.

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I never thought I would say this, but, count me among those who miss the old days — freezing weather and all — and know it would shine brighter in January where it belongs.

Will Detroit hold onto its Mobility Capitol moniker?

If actions and conversations in 2023 are a barometer, the momentum would lead some to say the answer is probably yes.

As one example, the Michigan Central Station has been coming to life since Bill Ford championed the venture when Ford Motor Co. bought the station in 2018 and began investing over $1 billion to turn the iconic shuttered train station into a mobility/innovation hub.

Michigan Central Station’s grand opening is expected to be held this spring.