A free in-car tour guide. Coming 2026.
RoadStory looks ahead at every landmark, town, and forgotten corner on your route — then tells you the real story of each one, out loud, right as you pass it. No searching. No typing. Just the road, narrating itself.
Every story traces back to documented public records and is cross-checked before it ever reaches you — never invented, never AI-guessed. When the facts aren’t there, RoadStory stays quiet instead of filling the silence. A missing pin is fine. A false pin is not.
"The first lighthouse authorized by the U.S. government — and the first federal construction project under the Constitution."
Standing at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, the old Cape Henry Lighthouse holds a remarkable distinction: completed in 1792, it was not only the first lighthouse authorized by the U.S. government, but the first federal construction project carried out under the Constitution itself. The tab came to $15,200 under the original contract — though it took an extra $2,500 to actually finish the job, a small overrun for a building that would guide countless ships into one of America's busiest waterways. Decades later, concerns arose about the old tower's stability, so construction began on a second lighthouse in 1879, finished in 1881, just a few hundred feet away.
It plays out loud for the whole car — front seat to back row. Screens go down, questions come up, and a long drive turns into a conversation. We're more connected than ever, yet we've stopped talking to the people right next to us. This is a small fix for that.
No subscription. No paywall. No catch. RoadStory exists to make the ride better and the people in it a little closer — that's the whole idea.
Be first in the car.
One note when we open the road. Nothing else.
RoadStory is just getting started. For business development, advertising, and investing opportunities, reach out anytime.
info@roadstoryai.com