Automotive Hall of Fame Moving From Dearborn to Detroit, Wants to Be More Than a Museum

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

The Automotive Hall of Fame thinks it can better tell the history of the automobile if it makes a move to the Motor City.

William Chapin, the museum’s president, wants to expand the facility’s scope and become part of Detroit’s resurgence, so he’s looking for space near downtown, according to the Detroit Free Press.

Founded in New York City in 1939, the year General Motors brought us the automatic transmission, the museum has occupied a 25,000 square foot building on Oakwood Boulevard in Dearborn since 1997. It’s close, but it could be a lot closer to the birthplace of American car culture.

“We feel there is a need to develop a visitor destination downtown that will tell the global stories of automotive innovators and their innovations over the past 90-plus years with a spotlight on Detroit’s automotive heritage,” Chapin said yesterday at the annual induction ceremony, reported by Freep. “We also want to talk about the rebirth of the industry … and the creation of a hub for autonomous vehicles and new age manufacturing.”

The planned move is still just an idea, but Chapin said he’d like to find a location along Woodward Avenue. The facility is adjacent to The Henry Ford, and the automaker’s recent shuffle of its Dearborn facilities was the kick the Hall of Fame needed.

“We are right in the dead center of that,” Chapin said. “And, we have always had a bit of a marketing problem because many people think we are associated with Ford.”

According to CBS News, Chapin said the move would allow the Hall of Fame to become “more than just a car museum.”

This year’s crop of inductees was diverse. The museum honored former Ford CEO Alan Mulally, Bertha Benz (wife of automobile inventor Karl Benz and first-ever road trip driver), Roy Lunn, creator of the original Ford GT40, and … Ralph Nader. He’s the man who found the Chevrolet Corvair a bit lacking.

[Image: Bryan Debus/ Flickr]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • TheEndlessEnigma TheEndlessEnigma on Jul 22, 2016

    "...wants to expand the facility’s scope and become part of Detroit’s resurgence..." What resurgence do you speak of?

    • Adam Tonge Adam Tonge on Jul 22, 2016

      If you were in the city's core in 2006 and then in 2016 you would see and feel the difference. You either haven't been to Detroit's Downtown/Midtown/New Center area then and now, or you are just trolling.

  • Jimbob457 Jimbob457 on Jul 23, 2016

    Why hot support a museum in the true birthplace of the automobile - Stuttgart.

    • See 2 previous
    • VoGo VoGo on Jul 24, 2016

      @jimbob457 Reasonable people can disagree over the origins of the automobile. Marcus certainly had a key role. The more obvious objection is why Americans would move the museum to Europe? It would be like deciding to move the Rock-n-Roll Hall of Fame from Cleveland to Liverpool.

  • Analoggrotto Tell us you aren't vying for more Hyundai corporate favoritism without telling us. That Ioniq N test drive must have really gotten your hearts.
  • Master Baiter EV mandates running into the realities of charging infrastructure, limited range, cost and consumer preferences. Who could possibly have predicted that?
  • Jkross22 Our experience is that the idea of leasing/owning an EV is better than the experience of getting a closer look at them and coming away underwhelmed.
  • Ajla I never thought I'd advocate for an alphanumeric but "Junior" is a terrible name.
  • Arthur Dailey So pay moving costs, pay penalties or continue to pay for space in the RenCen, and purchase all new furniture and equipment. Rather than just consolidating in place and subleasing. Another brilliant business decision.
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