The Renaissance Center along the riverfront, the Ambassador Bridge stretching to Windsor, the Penobscot's old crown still holding its corner of the skyline. Detroit's working face from the water. Singles past 50 here often have careers tied to the auto industry or the schools, and a long memory of how the city has changed. However you arrived at this point (late divorce, decades on your own, a recent loss), there's a steady, plain-spoken way of meeting.
You don't have to know what you're after. Some members are looking for a partner; others want a Saturday-walk friend, a museum companion, somebody to share dinner once a week. Both are normal, and people say so on their profile. No assumption everyone's hunting the same thing. Free to set up and read around.
For a first walk, Detroit members favor Eastern Market on Saturday or coffee in Corktown. The Riverwalk gives you a flat loop with a view across to Canada; Belle Isle works for a slow afternoon. Midtown around the DIA suits something quieter; Greektown runs differently after dark. The suburbs (Royal Oak, Ferndale, Birmingham, Grosse Pointe) meet at downtown Royal Oak or along Woodward. Ann Arbor or a drive up north earns a Saturday.