The station first signed on the air on October 3, 1955, as the 17th educational station to go on air. WTVS began broadcasting in
color in 1968. The studios were originally located at 9345 Lawton in Detroit, along with the studios of
WRCJ; WTVS moved to the former
WJBK studio facility in the
New Center area of Detroit in 1971. WTVS vacated the facility in the 1990s, and the building would be used for its fixed satellite services until 2009, when it was sold to the
Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit; Prior to the digital TV switchover, WTVS transmitted its analog signal from a tower located near the intersection of 11 Mile and Inkster Roads in
Southfield, along with the analog signal of
WMYD (channel 20) and then-
CW O&O
WKBD-TV (channel 50). Today, only WKBD-TV and Ion Television affiliate WPXD-TV (channel 31) broadcast from that tower. On January 11, 2016, Detroit Public Television announced a partnership with
WKAR-TV, the PBS station serving Mid-Michigan operated by
Michigan State University, in which they would jointly operate a 24-hour children's television service to be carried by both stations. The partnership culminated in the establishment of the Michigan Learning Channel in 2021 which is carried by all six PBS member organizations throughout Michigan. In 2023, Detroit Public Television sold its headquarters in
Wixom, Michigan, and temporarily relocated to another site in the area. On April 16, 2024, the broadcaster announced that it had purchased the
234 Piquette Avenue building in Detroit, and would convert it into a new $30 million campus expected to open in 2026. Concurrently, the organization announced that it had been renamed Detroit Public Media, and that WTVS would be rebranded as Detroit PBS. ==Controversy==