
Detroit gets moving on autonomous vehicles
The Accessibili-D autonomous vehicle system connects seniors and people with disabilities to well-being resources.
NO OTHER CITY
MOVES QUITE
LIKE DETROIT.

The Situation
A little after 11 p.m. on March 6, 1896, Charles Brady King took a hard right turn onto Woodward Ave in the first gas-powered vehicle to drive the streets of Detroit. The roofless automobile left him bare to the late-winter wind and the unbelieving eyes of pedestrians as he drove the future right through the heart of the city. The momentum of that moment (metaphorically more so than literally: the automobile just barely reached 5 mph)¹ made him confident enough to spill a far-fetched idea to The Detroit Journal. “I am convinced,” King said. “[Automobiles] will in time supersede the horse.”²
The far-fetched became the ubiquitous as Detroit went all in on the automobile, shaping the way the city’s infrastructure has developed over the decades, with effects that continue to reverberate today. Despite a bus system and a train line that goes up and down Woodward Ave (where King took that first late-night drive), wide tracts of Metro Detroit are inaccessible without a car. The city has made strides in improving public transportation and expanding mobility options in recent years, but gaps in access to transportation remain. These gaps can disproportionately impact seniors and people with disabilities who are unable to drive, limiting their access to health care and opportunities to stay connected within their community.
But with automotive innovation in its DNA, Detroit’s Office of Mobility Innovation (OMI) wondered: If people could welcome the transition to “horseless carriages,” what about driverless cars? Could autonomous vehicles (AVs) help address public health needs and improve the well-being of seniors and people with disabilities? When the US Department of Transportation (USDOT) issued the Autonomous Driving System Demonstrate Grant in 2018, OMI knew its opportunity had come.
THE SOLVE
CUTTING-EDGE
TECHNOLOGY
MEETS A DIRECT
FOCUS ON
COMMUNITY NEEDS.
The Impact
By the end of July, the maybe-just-a-little-far-fetched felt like wide-open possibility. The fleet drove 1,313 miles, connecting more than 100 participants to health care resources and loved ones, with zero safety incidents and a 100% rider satisfaction rate. Since then, May Mobility has expanded the service to include 110 stops and increased operational hours in response to the needs of the Accessibili-D riders. As of the end of 2024, more than 70% of the riders have taken more than one trip and the service has achieved an 89% on-time rating.
Three years of collaboration between federal, state, and city governments; universities; Deloitte; commercial automotive companies; and local Detroit merchants and health care providers demonstrated the capabilities and value of AVs and created a playbook for deploying similar systems in other cities and communities. In fact, Deloitte and May Mobility have combined efforts to make their data platform and AV services adaptable for other cities looking to tap into Deloitte’s IndustryAdvantage framework to replicate or expand on Detroit’s program.
OMI continues to explore how Accessibili-D could complement Detroit’s other modes of transit and to collect data to prioritize safety and accessibility, all while engaging the community to promote even more communication and trust. The descendants of that first slow, rumbling automobile have taken turns no one would have predicted 100 years ago, but the same spirit of innovation drives the city forward toward a future where people have new transportation options to help them live healthier, more connected lives.
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