The Flight Experience Detroit ("The Motor City") offers a unique geopolitical flying experience: it is the only major US city where you look south to see Canada. The flight environment is defined by the massive Detroit River, which separates the high-rise skyline of downtown Detroit from the lower-density suburbs of Windsor, Ontario.
For virtual pilots, the airspace offers a stark choice. You have Detroit Metro (KDTW), a massive fortress of Delta Air Lines operations to the west, or the historic Coleman A. Young International (KDET)—formerly City Airport. KDET is the simmer’s favorite because it sits right in the middle of the photogrammetry zone, offering a gritty, industrial approach over dense neighborhoods just minutes from downtown.
Visual Highlights
The Renaissance Center (RenCen): The General Motors headquarters is the anchor of the skyline. Its central cylindrical tower and surrounding smaller towers are rendered in high detail, standing right on the water’s edge.
Ambassador Bridge: This suspension bridge connects the US to Canada and is a critical VFR checkpoint. Flying over the traffic on the bridge gives you a perfect view of both nations simultaneously.
Belle Isle: This island park sits in the middle of the river. Its distinct shape (and the MacArthur Bridge connecting it) makes it the primary visual waypoint for pilots entering the river corridor from the north.
Comerica Park & Ford Field: The baseball and football stadiums are located right next to each other downtown. You can clearly see the "D" logo on the Comerica Park field and the massive domed roof of Ford Field.
Michigan Central Station: The recently restored historic train station (now a tech hub) is a massive Beaux-Arts structure that stands tall in the Corktown district, distinct from the modern glass towers.
Pilot’s Note: Fly the "River Run." Depart KDET and fly to the river at 1,500ft. Turn south and follow the water. You must exercise extreme precision here: the International Boundary runs right down the middle of the river. To your left is Canadian airspace; to your right is US airspace. Navigating this corridor without accidentally violating the airspace of the neighboring country is a fun test of situational awareness.