General Motors world headquarters building at the Renaissance Center in the skyline of city’s downtown on November 21, 2008 in Detroit. In 2025, GM is downsizing its headquarters to a new Detroit location. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Getty Images
In the 2000s, two of the three Detroit automakers (General Motors Co. and Chrysler) received a U.S. bailout. The third, Ford Motor Co., avoided that fate because of a massive borrowing program where the company put its assets – including its Blue Oval logo — up for collateral.
More than 15 years later, the Detroit Three (formerly the Big Three) are still struggling.
During the bailout, GM and the U.S. negotiated whether that automaker would move its headquarters from Detroit to the automaker’s technical center in the suburb of Warren to save money. That was the version told by Steven Rattner, a U.S. negotiator in a 2010 book. GM’s headquarters remained in Detroit.
Today? GM is downsizing its HQ footprint from Detroit’s Renaissance Center to a new downtown development, a move announced in April 2024. The Warren technical center will be home to much of GM’s Detroit-area footprint with the move.
With the bailout, Chrysler linked up with Italy’s Fiat with the merged company dubbed Fiat Chrysler. Since then, Fiat Chrysler merged with France’s PSA Group to form Stellantis. Chrysler helps Stellantis financial results with its pickups and SUVs. But, outside of Detroit, the Chrysler name isn’t remembered much.
Ford’s borrowing program (made in 2006) provided that automaker enough cash to avoid bankruptcy and a U.S. bailout.
In November Ford unveiled a new headquarters. The new structure aims to boost collaboration while minimizing the time members of various teams need to travel between buildings in Ford’s Dearborn, Michigan campus. Ford wants to behave more like a tech company.
Still, all three automakers face severe challenges from Chinese automakers. That county’s auto industry is moving faster to design vehicles and reduce costs. Chinese automakers can develop new models in 14 to 18 months compared with 36 to 48 months for traditional automakers.
What’s more the Detroit Three have been whipsawed by Washington. The Biden administration wanted the industry to move full speed ahead on electric vehicles. The Trump administration pumped the brakes. The U.S. bailout bought time but wasn’t a permanent solution.
