Music Man StingRay and Grand Rapids, Michigan: Difference between pages

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{{redirect|Grand Rapids}}
{{Infobox Guitar model|title=StingRay
{{Infobox Settlement
|image=[[Image:MusicmanStingray.jpg|thumb|center|The Musicman StingRay]]
|official_name = City of Grand Rapids
|bgcolor=#FFFFFF
|settlement_type = [[City]]
|manufacturer=[[Music Man (company)|Ernie Ball MusicMan]]
|nickname = "Furniture City"
|period=1976 — present
|image_skyline = Grdowntown.jpg
|bodytype=Solid
|imagesize =
|necktype=[[Bolt-on]]
|image_caption = ''[[List of tallest buildings in Grand Rapids|Downtown skyline]]''
|woodbody=[[Ash tree|Ash]], sometimes [[alder]]
|image_flag = GrandRapidsMI.png
|woodneck=Maple
|image_seal = Grand Rapids MI Seal.png
|woodfingerboard=[[Maple]], [[Rosewood]], [[Pao Ferro]]
|image_map = Kent_County_Michigan_Incorporated_and_Unincorporated_areas_Grand_Rapids_Highlighted.svg
|bridge=Fixed
|mapsize = 250x200px
|pickups=One or two high-output [[humbucker|humbucking]] pickups, with optional piezo pickups located in the bridge, with 2-band or 3-band active (powered) pre-amp. Five-string model includes 3-way coil selector switch. Note - Piezo pickups only available on 3-band model.
|map_caption = Location of Grand Rapids within [[Kent County, Michigan|Kent County]], [[Michigan]]|.
|colors=(Four-string, [[as of 2006]]) Black, white, egyptian smoke, sapphire black, rolls burgundy, graphite pearl, blue pearl, teal pearl, carbon blue pearl, candy red, desert gold, burnt apple, butter cream, teal green transparent, natural, lava pearl, radiance red, medallion gold, several variations of translucent and sunburst finishes.
|image_map1 =
|mapsize1 =
|map_caption1 =
|subdivision_type = [[List of countries|Country]]
|subdivision_type1 = [[Political divisions of the United States|State]]
|subdivision_type2 = [[List of counties in Michigan|County]]
|subdivision_name = [[United States]]
|subdivision_name1 = [[Michigan]]
|subdivision_name2 = [[Kent County, Michigan|Kent]]
|government_type = [[Council-Manager|City Commission-Manager]]
|leader_title = [[Mayor]]
|leader_name = George Heartwell
|leader_title1 = [[City Manager]]
|leader_name1 = Kurt Kimball
|established_title = Founded
|established_date = 1826
|established_title2 = Incorporation
|established_date2 = 1850
|area_magnitude = 1 E8
|area_total_sq_mi = 45.3
|area_land_sq_mi = 44.6
|area_water_sq_mi = 0.7
|area_water_percent =
|area_total_km2 = 117.4
|area_land_km2 = 115.6
|area_water_km2 = 1.8
|population_as_of = 2007
|population_note = (City & Urban: 2000 / Metro: 2007)
|population_total = 193,627
|population_urban = 539,080
|population_metro = 1,323,095
|population_density_sq_mi = 4434
|population_density_km2 = 1710.8
|timezone = [[North American Eastern Time Zone|EST]]
|utc_offset = -5
|timezone_DST = [[Eastern Daylight Time|EDT]]
|utc_offset_DST = -4
|latd = 42 |latm = 57 |lats = 40.5 |latNS = N
|longd = 85 |longm = 39 |longs = 20.59 |longEW = W
|elevation_m = 242
|elevation_ft = 640
|website = [http://www.grcity.us/ www.grcity.us]
|postal_code_type =
|postal_code =
|area_code = 616, 231
|blank_name = [[Federal Information Processing Standard|FIPS code]]
|blank_info = 26-34000{{GR|2}}
|blank1_name = [[Geographic Names Information System|GNIS]] feature ID
|blank1_info = 0627105{{GR|3}}
|footnotes =}}
'''Grand Rapids''' is a [[city]] in the [[U.S. state]] of [[Michigan]]. As of the [[United States 2000 Census|2000 census]], the city population was 197,800. The [[Grand Rapids-Wyoming metropolitan area|Grand Rapids-Wyoming]] [[Metropolitan Statistical Area]] (MSA) had a population of 776,742, while the [[Grand Rapids-Muskegon-Holland, Michigan combined statistical area|Grand Rapids-Muskegon-Holland]] [[Combined Statistical Area]] (CSA) had a population of 1,323,095 as of the 2007 census estimate.<ref>[http://www.michigan.gov/hal/0,1607,7-160-17451_18668_41233-165068--,00.html July 1, 2006 est. by Census Bureau]</ref> It is the [[county seat]] of [[Kent County, Michigan|Kent County]], [[Michigan]].{{GR|6}} It is the second largest city in the state and one of the principal cities in [[Western Michigan|West Michigan]].

== History ==
[[Image:GrandRapidsMI PearlSt 1885.jpg|thumb|left|325px|Pearl Street, located downtown, c.1885]]
Over 2,000 years ago, people associated with the [[Hopewell culture]] occupied the Grand River Valley. Around 1700 A.D., the [[Ottawa (people)|Ottawa Indians]] moved into the area and founded several villages along the [[Grand River (Michigan)|Grand River]].

The Grand Rapids area was first settled by Europeans near the start of the 19th century by [[Missionary|missionaries]] and [[fur trade]]rs. They generally lived in reasonable peace alongside the [[Ottawa (people)|Ottawa]] tribespeople, with whom they traded their European metal and textile goods for fur pelts. Joseph and [[Madeline La Framboise]] established the first Indian/European trading post in [[West Michigan]], and in present Grand Rapids, on the banks of the Grand River near what is now [[Ada Township, Michigan|Ada]]. After the death of her husband in 1806, Madeline La Framboise carried on, expanding fur trading posts to the west and north. La Framboise, whose ancestry was a mix of French and Indian, later merged her successful operations with the [[American Fur Company]]. She retired, at age 41, to [[Mackinac Island]]. The first permanent white settler in the Grand Rapids area was a [[Baptist]] minister named [[Isaac McCoy]] who arrived in 1825.

In 1826 Detroit-born [[Louis Campau]], the official founder of Grand Rapids, built his cabin, trading post, and blackmith shop on the east bank of the Grand River near the rapids. Campau returned to [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]], then came back a year later with his wife and $5,000 of trade goods to trade with the native tribes. In 1831 the federal survey of the Northwest Territory reached the Grand River and set the boundaries for Kent County, named after prominent New York jurist [[James Kent]]. Campau became perhaps the most important settler when, in 1831, he bought 72 acres (291,000 m²) of what is now the entire downtown business district of Grand Rapids. He purchased it from the federal government for $90 and named his tract Grand Rapids. Rival [[Lucius Lyon]], who purchased the rest of the prime land, called his the Village of Kent. [[Yankee]] immigrants and others began immigrating from [[New York]] and [[New England]] in the 1830s.

In 1836 [[John Ball (pioneer)|John Ball]], representing a group of New York land speculators, bypassed Detroit for a better deal in Grand Rapids. Ball declared the Grand River valley "the promised land, or at least the most promising one for my operations."

By 1838, the settlement had incorporated itself as a village, and encompassed an area of approximately three-quarters of a mile (1 km) <!-- this is a length, not an area -->. The first formal census occurred in 1845, which announced a population of 1,510 and recorded an area of four square miles. The city of Grand Rapids was officially created on May 1, 1850, when the village of Grand Rapids voted to accept the proposed city charter. The population at the time was 2,686. By 1857, the city of Grand Rapids' boundary totaled 10.5 square miles (27 km²).

Grand Rapids was also an early participant in the [[automobile industry]], serving as home to the [[Austin Automobile Company]] from 1901 until 1921.

{{wide image|Grand Rapids c1915 6a13439u.jpg|2000px|<center>''1915 panorama''</center>}}
{{wide image|Grand_Rapids_Michigan_Panorama.jpg|1264px|<center>''2008 panorama''</center>}}

{{USCensusPop
|1850= 2686
|1860= 8085
|1870= 16507
|1880= 32016
|1890= 60278
|1900= 87565
|1910= 112571
|1920= 137634
|1930= 168592
|1940= 164292
|1950= 176515
|1960= 177313
|1970= 197649
|1980= 181843
|1990= 189126
|2000= 197800
|estyear=2007
|estimate=193627
}}
}}


==== Transportation History ====
'''Music Man StingRay''' is an [[bass guitar|electric bass guitar]] by [[Music Man (company)|Music Man]], introduced in 1976.


The first improved road into the city was completed in 1855. This road was a private, toll plank road from [[Kalamazoo, Michigan|Kalamazoo]] through [[Wayland, Michigan|Wayland]], and was a primary route for freight and passengers until about 1868. This road connected to the outside world via the [[Michigan Central Railroad]] at Kalamazoo.
== History ==
In 1971, [[Fender Musical Instruments Corporation|Fender]] employees Forrest White and Tom Walker, unhappy with the way [[CBS Corporation|CBS]] was managing the company, left their positions with Fender to start their own [[venture]]. First known as Tri-Sonic and then later Musitek, Inc., the new company eventually settled on the name of MusicMan, Inc. by 1974. The company began producing a hybrid tube-solid state amplifier co-designed by Tom Walker and [[Leo Fender]], who was participating as a silent partner to the firm due to a "no compete" clause in the sales contract Fender had signed when he sold his original company to CBS in 1965. After the clause expired in 1975, he was made president of MusicMan, Inc., and by 1976 his consulting firm CLF Research had begun producing instruments bearing the MusicMan name.


The first railroad into the city was the [[Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad]], which commenced service in 1858. In 1869 the [[Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad]] connected to the city.
Designed by Fender, Walker and Sterling Ball (Sterling was a beta tester for the instrument), the StingRay bass appeared in 1976 and, though physically similar to a [[Fender Precision Bass]], was a highly innovative instrument. It employed a "soapbar" humbucking pickup and an active pre-amp powered by a 9-volt battery. The early versions had 2 band EQ (i.e., bass and treble controls), and the range was later augmented by the addition of a 3 band EQ (bass, mid and treble) model, and then piezo pickups located in the bridge became an option with the 3 band model. The StingRay's 3 band equalization system was highly innovative; making it possible to boost midrange frequencies as well as low and high, something which had not been possible on basses without active preamps. Along with its electronic advancements, the StingRay had physical attributes that set it apart from other Fender-inspired designs, such as a heavy satin finish on the back of the neck to allow players' hands to slide effortlessly up and down during play, a symmetrical egg-shaped pickguard and separate chromed "boomerang" control plate, and its distinctive "3+1" headstock (on which three tuning machines are situated on the top and one on the bottom) made it an instantly recognizable and distinguishable instrument.


The [[Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad]] began passenger and freight service to [[Cedar Springs, Michigan|Cedar Springs]], [[Michigan]] on [[December 25]] [[1867]] and to Fort Wayne, Indiana in 1870. This railroad expanded service to Muskegon in 1886.
Early models have through-body stringing at the bridge, which is fitted with adjustable string mutes. Later models omit both features, except for the 30th Anniversary model of [[2006]], which uses the string-through-body design and features a solid [[mahogany]] body finished in a luxurious Crimson Red Transparent finish.


The [[Grand Rapids, Newaygo and Lake Shore Railroad]] completed a line to [[White Cloud, Michigan|White Cloud]] in 1875,
Later advancements on the StingRay included a 5-string version (the StingRay 5), which has a 3-way toggle switch that allows the player to split the humbucking pickup's coils, and a unique truss-rod neck adjustment system that incorporated a [[Teflon]] washer which made it highly resistant to rust and corrosion and made adjusting the neck of a StingRay relatively easy.


In 1888 the [[Detroit, Lansing and Northern Railroad]] connected with Grand Rapids.
In the early 2000s a budget version of the StingRay known as the SUB was produced, featuring a textured body finish and [[diamond plate]] pickguard. This model was discontinued in 2007 due to rising production costs.


Grand Rapids was a home to one of the first regularly scheduled passenger airline in the United States when Stout Air Services began flights from Grand Rapids to [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]] (actually [[Ford Airport (Dearborn)|Ford Airport]] in [[Dearborn, Michigan|Dearborn]], [[Michigan]]) on [[July 31]] [[1926]].
In 2005, two-pickup versions of the StingRay (known as "HH" and "HS") were introduced, following the success of the Bongo Bass, one of Ernie Ball's latest bass designs. This dual-pickup version includes a 5-way switch, allowing the user to select different combinations of pickup coils and thus greatly increasing the diversity of available tones. The dual pickup configuration was also adopted on the StingRay 5 and the Sterling that same year.


Nowadays, [http://www.ridetherapid.org The Rapid] provides public transportation with several regular and special routes throughout the greater metro area. There are plans in the works to add more express routes, secondary stations, a streetcar and dedicated (exclusive) highway lanes.
StingRays are generally known for the punch of their sound, making it very suitable for rock/funk applications and excellent for slapping, and for being of extremely high build quality. The 6-bolt neckplate is an example of this. The neck is also quite wide, especially compared to that of [[Fender Jazz Bass]]-type models, as well as having the above mentioned truss-rod adjustment mechanism which means that players do not have to remove the neck to adjust the truss-rod. Some users have also noticed an audiable difference in volume between the lower three strings (E, A, D) and the highest G string, with the G string suffering from a lack of volume. This problem has not been observed in five string StingRays.


==Notable Users==
====Furniture City====
During the second half of the 19th century, the city became a major lumbering center and the premier furniture manufacturing city of the [[United States]]. For this reason it was nicknamed "Furniture City". After an international exhibition in Philadelphia in 1876, Grand Rapids became recognized worldwide as a leader in the production of fine furniture. National home furnishing markets were held in Grand Rapids for about 75 years, concluding in the 1960s. Today, Grand Rapids is considered a world leader in the production of office furniture.
The StingRay has been a favorite of several influential bassists, particularly those renowned for their [[slapping]] technique, such as [[Louis Johnson (bassist)|Louis Johnson]], [[Bernard Edwards]], [[Guy Pratt]] and [[Flea (musician)|Flea]].


In 1880, the country's first hydro-electric generator was put to use on the city's west side<ref name="hydro">{{
Hard rocker [[Cliff Williams]] of [[AC/DC]] has commonly used the StingRay. Also, Louis Johnson of [[The Brothers Johnson]] was one of the first prominent bassists to use the instrument. [[Tim Commerford]] of [[Rage Against the Machine]] and [[Audioslave]] used a StingRay on Rage's [[Rage Against the Machine (album)|self-titled debut album]] before switching to [[Fender Jazz Bass]]es. [[Flea]] of the [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]] used various StingRays on recordings including the hit "Me and my Friends", live performances and music videos (up until ''[[Californication (album)|Californication]]'' when [[Modulus Guitars|Modulus]] began production of his own signature model bass). Also Johnny Christ of [[Avenged Sevenfold]] usually uses this bass for recordings and live shows.
cite web
|url=http://www1.eere.energy.gov/windandhydro/hydro_history.html
|publisher=U.S. Department of Energy
|title=Wind and Hydropower Technologies Program: History of Hydropower
|date=[[September 9]] [[2005]]
}}</ref>. At the turn of the twentieth century, the people of Grand Rapids numbered 87,565. In 1916, the citizens of Grand Rapids voted to adopt a home rule charter that abolished the old aldermanic systems and replaced it with a commission-manager form of government, one of the first in the country. That 1916 Charter, although amended several times, is still in effect.


In 1945, Grand Rapids became the first city in the United States to add [[fluoridation|fluoride]] to its drinking water.
[[Queen (band)|Queen]]'s [[John Deacon]] was often seen playing a StingRay (his is on display at the [[Hard Rock Cafe]] in [[Cleveland, Ohio]].[http://sebastian.queenconcerts.com/j-musicman.htm]), as was Rick Wills of [[Foreigner (band)|Foreigner]]. [[Randy Jackson]] (of Journey) had a signature purple/white polka dot Stingray. [[Tony Levin]], a well known user of StingRays and their 5 string counterpart, also commissioning Music Man to build him a custom 3-string version, lacking the top G. [[Garry Tallent]] of [[Bruce Springsteen]]'s [[E Street Band]] also played a StingRay around the ''[[Darkness on the Edge of Town]]'' period; he later stopped using the bass due to its excessive weight (around 12 pounds). Tallent also refinished the bass in black as he found the original finish too shiny and light. [[Supertramp]]'s [[Dougie Thomson]] used a StingRay during the ''[[Breakfast in America]]'' album and tour documented on the ''[[Paris (Supertramp album)|Paris]]'' and used as a back-up bass on the early part of the ''[[...Famous Last Words...]]'' tour during "[[Fool's Overture]]". [[Bernard Edwards]] of [[Chic (band)|Chic]] used the StingRay bass almost exclusively; after his death in 1996, his bass was inherited by [[Nigel John Taylor|John Taylor]] of [[Duran Duran]]. Benjamin Orr of the Cars and post-[[Roger Waters]] [[Pink Floyd]] bassist [[Guy Pratt]] also favored the StingRay.
[[Jonathan Gallant]] of [[Billy Talent]] is also a notable user. Also [[Mark Hoppus]] of [[blink-182]] used StingRay basses during the recordings of [[Buddha (album)]], [[Cheshire Cat]] and [[Dude Ranch]]. He also used them recording a few songs on the [[Enema Of The State]] album, before switching to [[Fender Precision Bass]]es. [[Colin Greenwood]] of [[Radiohead]] used various StingRays up until the band's equipment was stolen in 1995. He used them to record the albums [[Pablo Honey]] and [[The Bends]] and used them for live performances up until the equipment theft in 1995 when he switched to [[Fender Precision Bass]]es. [[Jesse F. Keeler]] of [[Death From Above 1979]] and [[MSTRKRFT]] is known to play a StingRay as well. [[Justin Chancellor]] of [[tool]] used a stingray in the songs "H.", "[[Forty-Six & 2]]", and "No Quarter".


Downtown Grand Rapids used to host four department stores: Herpolsheimer's ([[Lazarus (department store)|Lazarus]] in 1987), [[Jacobson's]], [[Steketee's]] (founded in 1862), and Wurzburg's. Like most downtown regional department stores, they suffered the same fate of falling sales, caused largely by the flight to the suburbs, and consolidation in the 1980s and 1990s.
Music Man StingRays are also commonly used in the ska music genre notably by [[Rick Johnson]] ([[Mustard Plug]]), [[Roger Manganelli]] ([[Less than Jake]]) and [[Matt Wong]] (formerly of [[Reel Big Fish]]). Matt Wong is known for his signature candy red Music Man Sting Ray 5 bass with a trademark black pickguard and a piezo pickup. Also, Mcfly bassist [[Dougie Poynter]] uses commonly a green one and a white one. When [[Nathan East]] was with [[Eric Clapton]] before he started using his

[[Nathan East Signature Bass]] from [[Yamaha]], he played a honey sunburst StingRay 5 with a [[black]] [[pickguard]] and a [[rosewood]] fretboard; this bass has been also used during the [[24 Nights]] concerts in [[1991]]. [[Dave Bronze]] used a cherry sunburst StingRay 5 during the Fillmore Blues Nights tour with [[Eric Clapton]] in [[1994]].
==Geography and climate==
[[Image:Grand River, Grand Rapids.jpg|thumb|The [[Grand River (Michigan)|Grand River]]]]
Grand Rapids sits on the banks of the [[Grand River (Michigan)|Grand River]], where there was once a set of rapids, at an altitude of {{convert|610|ft|m|0}} above sea level. It is approximately 30 miles (50 km) east of [[Lake Michigan]]. The state capital of [[Lansing, Michigan|Lansing]] lies about 60 miles (100 km) to the east-by-southeast, and [[Kalamazoo, Michigan|Kalamazoo]] is about 50 miles (80 km) to the south.

Grand Rapids is divided into four [[quadrants]] which form a part of mailing addresses in the city. The quadrants are NE (northeast), NW (northwest), SE (southeast), and SW (southwest). Fulton Street serves as the north-south dividing line, while Division Avenue serve as the east-west dividing line separating these quadrants.

According to the [[United States Census Bureau]], the city has a total area of 45.3 [[square mile|sq&nbsp;mi]] (117.4 km²). 44.6 sq&nbsp;mi (115.6 km²) of it is land and 0.7 sq&nbsp;mi (1.8 km², 1.50%) of it is water (primarily the Grand River).

{| class="wikitable" "text-align:center;font-size:90%;"|
| colspan="13" style="text-align:center;font-size:120%;"|Monthly Normal and Record High and Low Temperatures
|-
! style="background: #F3552E; color: #000000" height="17" | Month
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Jan
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Feb
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Mar
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Apr
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | May
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Jun
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Jul
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Aug
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Sep
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Oct
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Nov
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" | Dec
|-
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" height="16;" | Rec High °F
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 62
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 69
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 78
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 88
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 92
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 98
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 100
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 100
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 93
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 87
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 77
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 69
|-
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" height="16;" | Norm High °F
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 29.3
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 32.6
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 43.3
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 56.6
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 69.6
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 78.4
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 82.3
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 79.7
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 71.7
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 59.6
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 45.5
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 33.7
|-
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" height="16;" | Norm Low °F
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 15.6
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 17.4
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 25.9
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 36.1
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 46.6
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 55.8
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 60.5
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 59
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 51
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 40.2
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 31.2
| style="text-align:center; background: #F4FFC0; color:#000000;" | 21.4
|-
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" height="16;" | Rec Low °F
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | -22
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | -19
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | -8
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 3
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 22
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 33
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 41
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 39
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 27
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 18
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | 5
| style="text-align:center; background: #FEE040; color:#000000;" | -18
|-
! style="background: #F3552E; color:#000000;" height="16;" | Precip (in)
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 2.03
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 1.54
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 2.59
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 3.48
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 3.35
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 3.67
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 3.56
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 3.78
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 4.28
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 2.8
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 3.35
| style="text-align:center; background: #FB9B13; color:#000000;" | 2.7
|-
| colspan="13" style="text-align:center;font-size:90%;"|''Source: USTravelWeather.com [http://www.ustravelweather.com/weather-michigan/grand-rapids-weather.asp]''
|}

==Demographics==
As of the [[census]] of 2000<ref name="census">{{
cite web
|url=http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/26/2634000.html
|title=Grand Rapids QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau
|publisher=U.S. Census Bureau
}}</ref>, there were 197,800 people, 73,217 households, and 44,369 families residing in the city. The [[population density]] was 4,431.2/sq&nbsp;mi (1,710.8/km²). There were 77,960 housing units at an average density of 1,746.5/sq&nbsp;mi (674.3/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 67.30% [[White American]] (62.5% non-Hispanic White), 20.41% [[African American]], 0.74% [[Native American (U.S. Census)|Native American]], 1.62% [[Asian American]], 0.12% [[Pacific Islander American]], 6.63% from other races, and 3.19% from two or more races. 13.05% of the population were [[Hispanic]] or [[Latino]] of any race. The city had a foreign-born population of 10.5%.

There were 73,217 households out of which 32.0% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 40.3% were [[Marriage|married couples]] living together, 15.8% had a female householder with no husband present, and 39.4% were non-families. 30.8% of all households were made up of individuals and 10.0% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.57 and the average family size was 3.24.

In the city the population was spread out with 27.0% under the age of 18, 13.1% from 18 to 24, 31.5% from 25 to 44, 16.7% from 45 to 64, and 11.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 30 years. For every 100 females there were 95.8 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 92.5 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $37,224, and the median income for a family was $44,224. Males had a median income of $33,050 versus $26,382 for females. The [[per capita income]] for the city was $17,661. 15.7% of the population and 11.9% of families were below the poverty line. Out of the total people living in poverty, 19.4% are under the age of 18 and 10.4% are 65 or older.

== Government and politics ==
Like the surrounding counties, the Grand Rapids area has traditionally been a stronghold for the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]], but the city itself leans [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]].

The city is the center of the [[Michigan's 3rd congressional district|3rd Congressional District]], represented by Republican [[Vern Ehlers]]. Former [[President of the United States|President]] [[Gerald Ford]] represented the district from 1949 to 1974. Ford died on [[December 26]], [[2006]] at his home in Palm Springs, California, and was buried on the grounds of his Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids on [[January 3]], [[2007]].

Grand Rapids (including the suburbs of Ada, [[East Grand Rapids]], Wyoming, Grandville, Walker, and Kentwood) also serves as the home business base of one of the largest past political funders of the national Republican Party, Richard and Helen De Vos, and former Ambassador to Italy, [[Peter F. Secchia|Peter Secchia]].

However, despite Grand Rapids' reputation for conservatism, the city tends to elect Democrats. Both of its representatives in the [[Michigan State House of Representatives]] are Democrats, and in the four most recent presidential elections [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]] candidates [[Bill Clinton]], [[Al Gore]] and [[John Kerry]] won the majority of votes in the city of Grand Rapids. (The city itself hasn't elected a Republican candidate for President since [[George H W Bush]] in 1988.)

=== Commission-Manager plan ===
Under Michigan law, Grand Rapids is a [[Home Rule Cities Act (Michigan)|home rule city]] and adopted a city charter in 1916 providing for the [[Council-manager government|Commission-Manager]] form of [[municipal government]]. Under this system, the political responsibilities are divided between an elected City Commission and a hired full-time City Manager. Two part-time Commissioners are elected to four-year terms from each of three wards, with half of these seats up for election every two years. The part-time Mayor is elected every four years by the city at large, and serves as chair of the Commission, with a vote equal to that of a Commissioner. The races—held in odd-numbered years—are formally non-partisan, although the party and other political affiliations of candidates do sometimes come up during the campaign period. The Commission sets policy for the city, and is responsible for hiring the City Manager and other appointed officials [http://www.ci.grand-rapids.mi.us/index.pl?page_id=350].

=== Mayor ===
George Heartwell was elected mayor of Grand Rapids after long-serving mayor [[John H. Logie]] declined to run for re-election in 2003. Logie felt the position should be made full-time, but to avoid the question becoming a referendum on whether ''he'' should hold the job full-time, he announced that he would not run for re-election. The voters decided to keep the position part-time, and Heartwell was elected.

Heartwell assumed office on January 1, 2004. Prior to being mayor, Heartwell was a City Commissioner for the third ward, 1992-1999. Heartwell currently serves as President and CEO of Pilgrim Manor Retirement Community. He was Director of the Community Leadership Institute at [[Aquinas College Grand Rapids|Aquinas College]], where he also was a professor in the Community Leadership undergraduate study program. Mayor Heartwell is an ordained minister for the [[United Church of Christ]], and served for 14 years at [[Heartside Ministry]], a program for the homeless in Grand Rapids. He was previously the president of Heartwell Mortgage Corporation [http://www.ci.grand-rapids.mi.us/1010].

In August, 2007, Mayor Heartwell was re-elected to a second mayoral term in Grand Rapids. He won the primary election with 51% of the vote.

{{seealso|List of mayors of Grand Rapids, Michigan}}

== Economy ==
Grand Rapids has long been a center for [[furniture]] and [[automobile]] [[manufacturing]]; however, the presence of both industries has declined in the region along with manufacturing in general. [[American Seating]], [[Steelcase]] and [[Herman Miller]], major manufacturers of office furniture, are based in the Grand Rapids area.

In 1880, [http://www.sligh.com][Sligh Furniture Company] started manufacturing furniture.<ref name="sligh">{{cite web|url=http://www.sligh.com/history.php|title=Sligh Furniture Company|work=History of Sligh Furniture Company|accessmonthday=August 2|accessyear=2007}}</ref> In 1881, the Furniture Manufacturers Association (FMA) was organized in Grand Rapids, it was apparently the first furniture manufacturing advocacy group in the country.<ref name="FMA">{{cite web|url=http://www.iserv.net/~plucas/grafma.htm|title=Furniture Manufacturers Association|work=History of FMA, |accessmonthday=August 2|accessyear=2007}}</ref>
Also Since 1912, Kindel Furniture Company,<ref name="KF">{{cite web|url=http://www.kindelfurniture.com|title=Kindel Furniture|work=Kindel Furniture|accessmonthday=August 2|accessyear=2007}}</ref> and since 1922, the Hekman/Woodmark Furniture Company,<ref name="hekman">{{cite web|url=http://www.hekman.com|title=Hekman/Woodmark Furniture Company|work=Hekman/Woodmark Furniture Company|accessmonthday=August 2|accessyear=2007}}</ref> have been designing and manufacturing traditional American furniture in Grand Rapids. All of these companies are still producing furniture today.

More recently the city has had some success in developing and attracting businesses focusing on the [[health science]]s, with facilities such as the [[Van Andel Research Institute]] (primarily focused on cancer research), [[Grand Valley State University]]'s Cook-DeVos Center for Health Sciences (undergraduate and graduate health-related programs, doctorate program in Physical Therapy, upcoming Doctorate of Nursing Practice (DNP)), and [[Michigan State University]]'s planned medical school, adjacent to GVSU's Cook-DeVos Center and [http://www.spectrum-health.org Spectrum Health]'s Butterworth Hospital.This year, several million dollars will be spent on new hospitals (including the Spectrum Health Cancer Pavilion and the Spectrum Health Helen DeVos Children's Hospital), medical research centers and health facilities. Most of these facilities are based on Michigan Avenue [[Grand Rapids Medical Corridor|medical corridor]], and is commonly known as "Medical Mile". Employment opportunities thrive and the growth has developed specialized health science employment groups to facilitate the influx, such as the [http://www.MedicalMileGroup.com]Medical Mile Group].

The Grand Rapids area is also home to a number of well known companies that include; [[Alticor]]/[[Amway]] (a consumer goods manufacturer and distributor), Foremost Insurance Company (a specialty lines insurance company), [[Meijer]] (a [[Supercenter]] chain), GE Aviation (formerly [[Smiths Industries]], an [[Aerospace]] products company), [[Wolverine World Wide]] (a designer and manufacturer of shoes, boots and clothing), [[MC Sports, Inc.]] (a regional sports retail chain) and [[Universal Forest Products]] (a building materials company).

The city is also known as a center of Christian publishing, home to [[Zondervan]], [[Baker Books]], [[Kregel Publications]], and [[Eerdmans]] Publishing.

The surrounding area is noted for its fruit production. Due to its close proximity to [[Lake Michigan]] the climate is considered prime for apple, peach, and blueberry farming.

In recent years, the convention business has seen an increase following the construction of the [[DeVos Place Convention Center]].

== Education ==
[[Image:GR Library.jpg|thumb|left|The Main Branch of the [[Grand Rapids Public Library]]]]
Grand Rapids is home to several colleges and universities. [[Aquinas College Grand Rapids|Aquinas College]], [[Calvin College]], [[Cornerstone University]], Grace Bible College, and [[Kuyper College]] are private, religious schools, each with a campus within the city. [[Grand Rapids Community College]] maintains a campus downtown and facilities in other parts of the city and surrounding region. [[Grand Valley State University]] continues to develop its presence in the city with an expanding downtown campus, begun in the late 1990s on the west bank of the Grand River. [[ITT Technical Institute]] has a variety of technical programs and it continues to grow as they are moving to a new campus later on this year right next door to the new Metro Health Hospital in Wyoming. [[Ferris State University]] has a growing campus downtown, including the Applied Technology Center (operated with GRCC) and the prestigious [[Kendall College of Art and Design]]. [[Thomas M. Cooley Law School]], a private institution, has a campus in Grand Rapids. [[Davenport University]], a state-wide educational institution, has its main campus in Grand Rapids as well as several satellite locations. [[Western Michigan University]] has a long-standing graduate program in the city, with facilities downtown and in the southeast. [[Clinical Pastoral Education]] is also offered at [[Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Services]] in nearby [[Cutlerville, Michigan|Cutlerville]], [[Michigan]].

K-12 public education is provided by the [[Grand Rapids Public Schools]] as well as a number of [[charter schools]].

Grand Rapids is home of the oldest co-educational Catholic high school in the United States, [[Catholic Central High School (Grand Rapids, Michigan)]]

As of 2006, there is an active movement among community leaders to have [[Michigan State University]] open a new medical school in Grand Rapids.[http://special.newsroom.msu.edu/msu_wmms/index.html]. Michigan State University College of Human Medicine will relocate and expand from East Lansing to downtown Grand Rapids. The College of Human Medicine is one of three fully accredited four-year medical schools at MSU, along with the College of Osteopathic Medicine and College of Veterinary Medicine. On April 21, 2008, the Secchia Center medical education building, a $90 million, seven-story, {{convert|180000|sqft|m2|sing=on}} facility, began construction at Michigan Street hill and Division Avenue.

== Culture ==
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:Grand Rapids Cavallo 2.jpg|left|thumb|200px|''[[Leonardo da Vinci]]'s Horse: The American Horse'' by Nina Akamu at [[Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park|Meijer Gardens]], located just outside of Grand Rapids.]] -->
[[Image:Van Andel Museum Center.jpg|thumb|250px|The Van Andel Museum Center]]
Beginning with the installation of [[Alexander Calder]]'s abstract sculpture ''La Grande Vitesse'' (French for "The Grand Rapids"), the very first financially funded project in the United States by the [[National Endowment for the Arts]] in 1969, the city has been host to the annual ''[[Festival of the Arts]]'' downtown since 1970, known to locals simply as ''Festival''. During the first weekend in June, several blocks of downtown surrounding the [[Alexander Calder|Calder]] [[stabile]] in [[Arthur H. Vandenberg|Vandenberg]] Plaza are closed to traffic. Festival features several stages with free live performances, food booths selling a variety of ethnic cuisine, art demonstrations and sales, and other arts-related activities. Organizers bill it as the largest all-volunteer arts festival in the United States, though this is a bit of a misnomer since sound companies and other professionals are paid for their services. [[Arthur H. Vandenberg|Vandenberg]] Plaza also hosts various ethnic festivals that take place throughout the summer season.

Summer concludes with [[Celebration on the Grand]] the weekend after [[Labor Day]] featuring free concerts, West Michigan's largest fireworks display and food booths. [[Celebration on the Grand]] is an all volunteer event to celebrate life in the Grand River valley.

In Grand Rapids in 1973, Main Street America celebrated mainstream art, as the city hosted ''Sculpture off the Pedestal'', an exemplar of public sculpture exhibitions, which assembled 13 world-renowned artists, including [[Mark di Suvero]], [[John Henry (artist)|John Henry]], [[Kenneth Snelson]], [[Robert Morris (artist)|Robert Morris]], [[John Mason (artist)|John Mason]] and [[Stephen Antonakos]], in a single, citywide celebration. ''Sculpture off the Pedestal'' was a public/private partnership, which included financial support by the [[National Endowment for the Arts]], educational support from the [[Michigan Council for the Arts]] and in-kind contributions from individuals, business and industry. Fund-raising events, volunteers and locals housing artists contributed to the public character of the event.

On November 10, 2004, the grand premier of the film [[The Polar Express]] was held in Grand Rapids, the movie's setting and home of the book's author [[Chris Van Allsburg]], and its main character. The [[Meijer Gardens]] created a Polar Express display which was part of their larger Christmas Around the World exhibit.

In mid-2004, the [[Grand Rapids Art Museum]] (GRAM) began construction on a new, larger building for its art museum collection, which opened in October, 2007 at 101 Monroe Center NW. The new building site faces downtown's ''Ecliptic'' by [[Maya Lin]] at [[Rosa Parks]] Circle. The Museum was completed in 2007 and became the first LEED certified Art Museum in the world.

=== Sites of interest ===
[[Image:Fords grave.jpg|250px|left|thumb|President Ford's Tomb at his [[Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum|Presidential Museum]] in Grand Rapids, Michigan]]
[[Image:GRFMuseum.JPG|right|thumb|250px|The [[Gerald R. Ford Museum]], located on the west bank of the Grand River.]]
[[Image:Heritage Hill.JPG|thumb|right|250px|The [[Heritage Hill]] Neighborhood]]
[[Image:Wealthy Theatre.JPG|thumb|250px|The Wealthy Street Theatre]]
Grand Rapids is the home of [[John Ball Park]], [[Belknap Hill]], and the [[Gerald R. Ford Museum]], the final resting place of the 38th President of the United States. Significant buildings in the downtown include the [[DeVos Place Convention Center]], [[Van Andel Arena]], the [[Amway Grand Plaza Hotel]], and now the JW Marriott Hotel. The Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts is located downtown, and houses art exhibits, a movie theater, and the urban clay studio.

Along the [[Grand River (Michigan)|Grand River]] are symbolic [[burial mounds]] which were used by the [[Hopewell culture|Hopewell tribe]], a [[fish ladder]], and a [[riverwalk]].

[[Image:GRFORDSPACEStatue.jpg|250px|left|thumb|Space Statue, [[Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum|Presidential Museum]] in Grand Rapids, Michigan]]
Grand Rapids is also home to the [[Public Museum of Grand Rapids|Van Andel Museum Center]]. Founded in 1854, it is among the oldest history museums in the United States. The museum's sites currently include the main site constructed in 1994 on the west bank of the [[Grand River (Michigan)|Grand River]] (home to the [[Roger B. Chaffee Planetarium]], the [[Voigt House Victorian Museum]], and the [[City Archives and Records Center]], which was the site of the museum and planetarium prior to 1994. The museum has, in the past few years, played host to a handful of notable exhibitions, including the [[Dead Sea Scrolls]], and [[The Quest for Immortality: the Treasures of Ancient Egypt]]. The museum is set up as a non-profit institution owned and managed by the [[Public Museum of Grand Rapids Foundation]].

[[Heritage Hill]], a neighborhood in the southeastern section of town. It is one of the largest Urban Historic Districts in the country, with over 1000 [[Victorian architecture|Victorian]] homes. Of particular significance is the [[Meyer May House]], designed by [[Frank Lloyd Wright]] in 1908 was commissioned by local merchant [[Meyer May]] who operated a men's clothing store ([[May's of Michigan]]). The house is now a free museum owned and operated by [[Steelcase]] who restored the property in the 1980s.

Grand Rapids is home to a myriad of theatres and stages, including the newly-reconstructed Civic Theatre (also known as the Meijer Majestic), the city's largest theatre DeVos hall, and the convertible Van Andel Arena. Further east of downtown is the historic [[Wealthy Street Theatre]].

In [[Grand Rapids Township, Michigan|Grand Rapids Township]], the [[Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park]] combine {{convert|125|acre|km2|0}} of world-class botanical gardens and artwork from such sculptors as [[Mark di Suvero]], [[Alexander Calder]], [[Edgar Degas]], and [[Auguste Rodin]]. The Gardens' amphitheatre plays host to numerous concerts each summer, featuring such eccelctic acts as [[Jonny Lang]], [[The Pointer Sisters]], [[Lyle Lovett]], [[Cowboy Junkies]], and [[B.B. King]]. As Michigan's second most popular destination (after [[The Henry Ford Museum]] in [[Dearborn, MI|Dearborn]]), the Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park is rapidly gaining national renown.

Slightly east of the downtown area is the [[Eastown, Grand Rapids|Eastown]] business district, home to many popular independently owned businesses such as Yesterdog (recreated in the film [[American Pie (film)|American Pie]]), 76 Coffee, Kava House, Magnum Opus Manga & Anime, Billy's Lounge, New Yorker Men's Wear, Bombay Cuisine, and Mulligan's Bar. Eastown, along with Grand Rapids' Heartside District, is regarded as a center of the city's counter-culture and music scene. The neighborhood is also home to the Barack Obama campaign headquarters in Grand Rapids.

=== Music ===

Melodic metal band ''[[Still Remains]]'' hail from Grand Rapids. The band split in May 2008.
Soulful family recording artist Debarges hails from Grand Rapids, as does [[Anthony Kiedis]] of [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]] and Matt Granfield of [[The Black Market Rhythm Co.]]. Local singer songwriter Ralston Bowles released his 2nd CD (''Rally at the Texas Hotel'') internationally on Judy Collins Wildflower Records label in 2008. The newest talent to come out of Grand Rapids is the rock band [[Pop Evil]]. Grand Rapids also has a number of popular concert venues in which a large assortment of bands have preformed, including the Orbit Room, the Intersection, DeVos Hall, the Van Andel Arena, the Royce Auditorium, the Forest Hills Fine Arts Center, and the Deltaplex.

===Sports===
Several professional sports teams call Grand Rapids home:

{|border=0 cellpadding=2 cellspacing=2 width=98%
|- bgcolor="#ADADAD"
|'''Club'''
|'''Sport'''
|'''Year Founded'''
|'''League'''
|'''Venue'''
|'''Championships'''
|-
|[[West Michigan Whitecaps]]
|[[Baseball]]
|1994
|[[Midwest League]]
|[[Fifth Third Ballpark]]
|Championship Series winners: 1996, 1998, 2004, 2006, 2007; Best regular season record: 1997, 1998, 2000, 2006, 2007
|
|-
|[[Grand Rapids Flight]]
|[[Basketball]]
|2004
|[[International Basketball League]]
|[[DeltaPlex Arena]]
|The Flight have yet to win a Championship
|
|-
|[[Grand Rapids Griffins]]
|[[Ice Hockey]]
|1996
|[[American Hockey League]]
|[[Van Andel Arena]]
|IHL [[Joseph Turner Memorial Cup]] Runner-up: 2000; IHL [[Fred A. Huber Trophy]] (regular season champion): 2001
|
|-
|[[Grand Rapids Rampage]]
|[[Arena Football]]
|1998
|[[Arena Football League]]
|[[Van Andel Arena]]
|ArenaBowl XV Champions and best regular season record: 2001
|
|}

=== Media ===
{{main|Media in Grand Rapids, Michigan}}
The ''[[Grand Rapids Press]]'' is the daily [[newspaper]], while [[Advance Newspapers]] publishes a group of weekly papers providing more community-based news. [[Gemini Publications]] is a niche, regional publishing company that produces the weekly newspaper ''[[Grand Rapids Business Journal]]'', the magazines ''Grand Rapids Magazine'', ''Grand Rapids Family'' and ''Michigan Blue'', and several other quarterly and annual business-to-business publications. There are two free monthly entertainment guides: [http://www.revuewm.com REVUE], which covers music and the arts, and RECOIL, which covers music and offers Onion-style satire.

Grand Rapids, combined with nearby Kalamazoo and [[Battle Creek, Michigan|Battle Creek]], was ranked in 2008 as the 39th largest television market in the U.S. by [[Nielsen Media Research]].<ref name="Nielsen">{{cite web |url=http://www.nielsenmedia.com/nc/portal/site/Public/menuitem.55dc65b4a7d5adff3f65936147a062a0/?vgnextoid=bc0e47f8b5264010VgnVCM100000880a260aRCRD |publisher=[[Nielsen Media Research]] |title=Sampling the Population |date=2007-09-22 |accessdate=2008-08-18 |publisher=Nielsen Media Research}}</ref> The market is served by stations affiliated with major American networks including: [[WOOD-TV]] (channel 8, [[NBC]]), [[WZZM-TV]] (channel 13, [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]]), [[WXMI]] (channel 17, [[Fox Broadcasting Company|Fox]]), [[WXSP]] (channel 15, [[My Network Television|MYTV]]) and Kalamazoo-based [[WWMT]] (channel 3, [[CBS]]). [[WGVU-TV]] is the area's [[Public Broadcasting Service|PBS]] member station.

The Grand Rapids area is served by 16 [[AM broadcasting|AM]] [[radio station]]s and 28 [[FM broadcasting|FM]] stations.<ref name="Radio">{{cite web |url=http://radiostationworld.com/locations/United_States_of_America/Michigan/radio.asp?m=gra |title=Michigan – Radio Broadcasting Stations |accessdate=2008-08-18 |publisher=RadioStationWorld}}</ref>

==Transportation==
===Major highways===
====Interstates====
* [[Image:I-96.svg|25px]] [[Interstate 96|I-96]] runs along the northern and northeastern sides of the city, linking with [[Muskegon, Michigan|Muskegon]] to the west and [[Lansing, Michigan|Lansing]] to the east.
* [[Image:I-196.svg|31px]] [[Interstate 196|I-196]], also named the [[I-196|Gerald R. Ford Freeway]], runs east-west through the city.
* [[Image:I-296.svg|31px]] [[Interstate 296|I-296]], an unsigned route running concurrently with US-131 between [[Interstate 96|I-96]] and [[Interstate 196|I-196]].
* [[Image:Business Loop 196.svg|31px]] [[Interstate 196 Business (Grand Rapids, Michigan)|I-196 Business Spur]] or BS I-196

====U.S. highways====
* [[Image:US 131.svg|31px]] [[U.S. Route 131|US 131]] runs north-south through the city, linking with [[Kalamazoo, Michigan|Kalamazoo]] to the south and [[Cadillac, Michigan|Cadillac]] to the north.
* &nbsp;[[Image:Business plate.svg|25px]]<br />[[Image:US 131.svg|31px]] [[U.S. Route 131 Business (Grand Rapids, Michigan)|BUS US 131]] traversing downtown Grand Rapids.

====Michigan State Trunklines====
* [[Image:M-6.svg|25px]] [[M-6 (Michigan highway)|M-6]] ([[Paul B. Henry]] Freeway)
* [[Image:M-11.svg|25px]] [[M-11 (Michigan highway)|M-11]]
* [[Image:M-21.svg|25px]] [[M-21 (Michigan highway)|M-21]]
* [[Image:M-37.svg|25px]] [[M-37 (Michigan highway)|M-37]]
* [[Image:M-44.svg|25px]] [[M-44 (Michigan highway)|M-44]]
* [[Image:Connector plate.svg|25px]]<br>[[Image:M-44.svg|25px]] [[M-44 (Michigan highway)|M-44]] Connector
* [[Image:M-45.svg|25px]] [[M-45 (Michigan highway)|M-45]] (Lake Michigan Avenue)
* [[Image:M-121.svg|25px]] [[M-121 (Michigan highway)|M-121]]

====Intercounty Highways====
* [[Image:Michigan A-45 Kent County.svg|25px]] [[A-45 (Michigan county highway)|A-45]]

===Mass Transit===
====Bus====
Public bus transportation is provided by the [[Interurban Transit Partnership]], which brands itself as [http://www.ridetherapid.org ''The Rapid'']. Transportation is also provided by the DASH buses: the "Downtown Area Shuttle". These provide transportation to and from the parking lots in the city of Grand Rapids to various designated loading and unloading spots around the city.

====Air====
Commercial air service to Grand Rapids is provided by [[Gerald R. Ford International Airport]] (GRR). Previously named Kent County International Airport, it holds Grand Rapids' mark in modern history with the United States' first regularly scheduled airline service, beginning July 31, 1926, between Grand Rapids and Detroit.

====Rail====
[[Amtrak]] provides direct train service to [[Chicago]] from the [[Grand Rapids (Amtrak station)|passenger station]] via the [[Pere Marquette (passenger train)|Pere Marquette]] line.

==Sister cities==
Grand Rapids has [[town twinning|city partnerships]] with the following cities:

*{{flagicon|Japan}} [[Omihachiman]], [[Japan]]
*{{flagicon|Poland}} [[Bielsko-Biala]], [[Poland]]
*[[Image:Flag of Italy.svg|20px|]] [[Perugia]], [[Italy]]
*{{flagicon|Ghana}} [[Ga District]], [[Ghana]]
*{{flagicon|Mexico}} [[Zapopan]], [[Mexico]]<ref name="Grsister">

{{cite web |url=http://grandrapidssistercity.blogspot.com/ |title= sister city|work= |accessmonthday= January 16|accessyear=2008}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
* [[List of people associated with Grand Rapids, Michigan]]
* [[Music Man (company)|Music Man]]

* [[Leo Fender]]
==Notes==
* [[Fender Musical Instruments Corporation]]
{{reflist|2}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{commonscat|Grand Rapids, Michigan}}
* [http://www.ernieball.com/mmonline/ Official MusicMan Website]
* [http://www.howtoslapbass.com/1980-stingray/ Example of vintage Stingray]
*[http://www.grcity.us/ Official Website of the City of Grand Rapids, Michigan]
*[http://www.visitgrandrapids.org/ Convention and Visitors Bureau]
*[http://www.downtowngr.org/ Downtown Grand Rapids]
*[http://www.grandrapids.org/ Grand Rapids Area Chamber of Commerce]
*[http://www.grnow.com/ GRNow.com]
*[http://www.davenport.edu/ Davenport University]
*[http://www.grcc.edu/ Grand Rapids Community College]
*[http://www.spectrum-health.org/ Spectrum Health System]
*[http://www.gvsu.edu/healthsciences/ Cook-De Vos Center for Health Sciences]
*[http://www.vai.org/ Van Andel Research Institute]
*[http://www.grpl.org/ Grand Rapids Public Library]
*[http://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/museum/aboutmus.asp Gerald R. Ford Museum]
*[http://www.grmuseum.org/ Public Museum of Grand Rapids]
*[http://www.meijergardens.org/ Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park]
*[http://www.revuewm.com/ REVUE: West Michigan's Entertainment Guide]
*[http://www.sculpturesitesgr.org/ Sculpture Grand Rapids]
*[http://www.uica.org/ The Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts]
*[http://www.historygrandrapids.org/ Grand Rapids Historical Commission's Online Grand Rapids History Archive]
*[http://www.gvsu.edu/ Grand Valley State University]
*[http://www.grandrapidsgateway.com/ Grand Rapids News Weather and School Closings]
{{geolinks-US-cityscale|42.96125|-85.65572}}
{{Cities of Kent County, Michigan}}
{{Michigan}}
{{AllAmericanCity}}


[[Category:Music Man electric bass guitars]]
[[Category:Cities in Michigan]]
[[Category:County seats in Michigan]]
[[Category:Grand Rapids, Michigan| ]]
[[Category:Kent County, Michigan]]
[[Category:Grand Rapids-Wyoming metropolitan area]]


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Revision as of 22:32, 12 October 2008

City of Grand Rapids
Downtown skyline
Nickname: 
"Furniture City"
Location of Grand Rapids within Kent County, Michigan
Location of Grand Rapids within Kent County, Michigan
CountryUnited States
StateMichigan
CountyKent
Founded1826
Incorporation1850
Government
 • TypeCity Commission-Manager
 • MayorGeorge Heartwell
 • City ManagerKurt Kimball
Area
 • City45.3 sq mi (117.4 km2)
 • Land44.6 sq mi (115.6 km2)
 • Water0.7 sq mi (1.8 km2)
Elevation
640 ft (242 m)
Population
 (2007)
 • City193,627
 • Density4,434/sq mi (1,710.8/km2)
 • Urban
539,080
 • Metro
1,323,095
 (City & Urban: 2000 / Metro: 2007)
Time zoneUTC-5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-4 (EDT)
Area code(s)616, 231
FIPS code26-34000Template:GR
GNIS feature ID0627105Template:GR
Websitewww.grcity.us

Grand Rapids is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2000 census, the city population was 197,800. The Grand Rapids-Wyoming Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) had a population of 776,742, while the Grand Rapids-Muskegon-Holland Combined Statistical Area (CSA) had a population of 1,323,095 as of the 2007 census estimate.[1] It is the county seat of Kent County, Michigan.Template:GR It is the second largest city in the state and one of the principal cities in West Michigan.

History

Pearl Street, located downtown, c.1885

Over 2,000 years ago, people associated with the Hopewell culture occupied the Grand River Valley. Around 1700 A.D., the Ottawa Indians moved into the area and founded several villages along the Grand River.

The Grand Rapids area was first settled by Europeans near the start of the 19th century by missionaries and fur traders. They generally lived in reasonable peace alongside the Ottawa tribespeople, with whom they traded their European metal and textile goods for fur pelts. Joseph and Madeline La Framboise established the first Indian/European trading post in West Michigan, and in present Grand Rapids, on the banks of the Grand River near what is now Ada. After the death of her husband in 1806, Madeline La Framboise carried on, expanding fur trading posts to the west and north. La Framboise, whose ancestry was a mix of French and Indian, later merged her successful operations with the American Fur Company. She retired, at age 41, to Mackinac Island. The first permanent white settler in the Grand Rapids area was a Baptist minister named Isaac McCoy who arrived in 1825.

In 1826 Detroit-born Louis Campau, the official founder of Grand Rapids, built his cabin, trading post, and blackmith shop on the east bank of the Grand River near the rapids. Campau returned to Detroit, then came back a year later with his wife and $5,000 of trade goods to trade with the native tribes. In 1831 the federal survey of the Northwest Territory reached the Grand River and set the boundaries for Kent County, named after prominent New York jurist James Kent. Campau became perhaps the most important settler when, in 1831, he bought 72 acres (291,000 m²) of what is now the entire downtown business district of Grand Rapids. He purchased it from the federal government for $90 and named his tract Grand Rapids. Rival Lucius Lyon, who purchased the rest of the prime land, called his the Village of Kent. Yankee immigrants and others began immigrating from New York and New England in the 1830s.

In 1836 John Ball, representing a group of New York land speculators, bypassed Detroit for a better deal in Grand Rapids. Ball declared the Grand River valley "the promised land, or at least the most promising one for my operations."

By 1838, the settlement had incorporated itself as a village, and encompassed an area of approximately three-quarters of a mile (1 km) . The first formal census occurred in 1845, which announced a population of 1,510 and recorded an area of four square miles. The city of Grand Rapids was officially created on May 1, 1850, when the village of Grand Rapids voted to accept the proposed city charter. The population at the time was 2,686. By 1857, the city of Grand Rapids' boundary totaled 10.5 square miles (27 km²).

Grand Rapids was also an early participant in the automobile industry, serving as home to the Austin Automobile Company from 1901 until 1921.

1915 panorama
2008 panorama
Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18502,686
18608,085201.0%
187016,507104.2%
188032,01694.0%
189060,27888.3%
190087,56545.3%
1910112,57128.6%
1920137,63422.3%
1930168,59222.5%
1940164,292−2.6%
1950176,5157.4%
1960177,3130.5%
1970197,64911.5%
1980181,843−8.0%
1990189,1264.0%
2000197,8004.6%
2007 (est.)193,627

Transportation History

The first improved road into the city was completed in 1855. This road was a private, toll plank road from Kalamazoo through Wayland, and was a primary route for freight and passengers until about 1868. This road connected to the outside world via the Michigan Central Railroad at Kalamazoo.

The first railroad into the city was the Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad, which commenced service in 1858. In 1869 the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad connected to the city.

The Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad began passenger and freight service to Cedar Springs, Michigan on December 25 1867 and to Fort Wayne, Indiana in 1870. This railroad expanded service to Muskegon in 1886.

The Grand Rapids, Newaygo and Lake Shore Railroad completed a line to White Cloud in 1875,

In 1888 the Detroit, Lansing and Northern Railroad connected with Grand Rapids.

Grand Rapids was a home to one of the first regularly scheduled passenger airline in the United States when Stout Air Services began flights from Grand Rapids to Detroit (actually Ford Airport in Dearborn, Michigan) on July 31 1926.

Nowadays, The Rapid provides public transportation with several regular and special routes throughout the greater metro area. There are plans in the works to add more express routes, secondary stations, a streetcar and dedicated (exclusive) highway lanes.

Furniture City

During the second half of the 19th century, the city became a major lumbering center and the premier furniture manufacturing city of the United States. For this reason it was nicknamed "Furniture City". After an international exhibition in Philadelphia in 1876, Grand Rapids became recognized worldwide as a leader in the production of fine furniture. National home furnishing markets were held in Grand Rapids for about 75 years, concluding in the 1960s. Today, Grand Rapids is considered a world leader in the production of office furniture.

In 1880, the country's first hydro-electric generator was put to use on the city's west side[2]. At the turn of the twentieth century, the people of Grand Rapids numbered 87,565. In 1916, the citizens of Grand Rapids voted to adopt a home rule charter that abolished the old aldermanic systems and replaced it with a commission-manager form of government, one of the first in the country. That 1916 Charter, although amended several times, is still in effect.

In 1945, Grand Rapids became the first city in the United States to add fluoride to its drinking water.

Downtown Grand Rapids used to host four department stores: Herpolsheimer's (Lazarus in 1987), Jacobson's, Steketee's (founded in 1862), and Wurzburg's. Like most downtown regional department stores, they suffered the same fate of falling sales, caused largely by the flight to the suburbs, and consolidation in the 1980s and 1990s.

Geography and climate

The Grand River

Grand Rapids sits on the banks of the Grand River, where there was once a set of rapids, at an altitude of 610 feet (186 m) above sea level. It is approximately 30 miles (50 km) east of Lake Michigan. The state capital of Lansing lies about 60 miles (100 km) to the east-by-southeast, and Kalamazoo is about 50 miles (80 km) to the south.

Grand Rapids is divided into four quadrants which form a part of mailing addresses in the city. The quadrants are NE (northeast), NW (northwest), SE (southeast), and SW (southwest). Fulton Street serves as the north-south dividing line, while Division Avenue serve as the east-west dividing line separating these quadrants.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 45.3 sq mi (117.4 km²). 44.6 sq mi (115.6 km²) of it is land and 0.7 sq mi (1.8 km², 1.50%) of it is water (primarily the Grand River).

Monthly Normal and Record High and Low Temperatures
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Rec High °F 62 69 78 88 92 98 100 100 93 87 77 69
Norm High °F 29.3 32.6 43.3 56.6 69.6 78.4 82.3 79.7 71.7 59.6 45.5 33.7
Norm Low °F 15.6 17.4 25.9 36.1 46.6 55.8 60.5 59 51 40.2 31.2 21.4
Rec Low °F -22 -19 -8 3 22 33 41 39 27 18 5 -18
Precip (in) 2.03 1.54 2.59 3.48 3.35 3.67 3.56 3.78 4.28 2.8 3.35 2.7
Source: USTravelWeather.com [1]

Demographics

As of the census of 2000[3], there were 197,800 people, 73,217 households, and 44,369 families residing in the city. The population density was 4,431.2/sq mi (1,710.8/km²). There were 77,960 housing units at an average density of 1,746.5/sq mi (674.3/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 67.30% White American (62.5% non-Hispanic White), 20.41% African American, 0.74% Native American, 1.62% Asian American, 0.12% Pacific Islander American, 6.63% from other races, and 3.19% from two or more races. 13.05% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. The city had a foreign-born population of 10.5%.

There were 73,217 households out of which 32.0% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 40.3% were married couples living together, 15.8% had a female householder with no husband present, and 39.4% were non-families. 30.8% of all households were made up of individuals and 10.0% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.57 and the average family size was 3.24.

In the city the population was spread out with 27.0% under the age of 18, 13.1% from 18 to 24, 31.5% from 25 to 44, 16.7% from 45 to 64, and 11.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 30 years. For every 100 females there were 95.8 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 92.5 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $37,224, and the median income for a family was $44,224. Males had a median income of $33,050 versus $26,382 for females. The per capita income for the city was $17,661. 15.7% of the population and 11.9% of families were below the poverty line. Out of the total people living in poverty, 19.4% are under the age of 18 and 10.4% are 65 or older.

Government and politics

Like the surrounding counties, the Grand Rapids area has traditionally been a stronghold for the Republican Party, but the city itself leans Democratic.

The city is the center of the 3rd Congressional District, represented by Republican Vern Ehlers. Former President Gerald Ford represented the district from 1949 to 1974. Ford died on December 26, 2006 at his home in Palm Springs, California, and was buried on the grounds of his Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids on January 3, 2007.

Grand Rapids (including the suburbs of Ada, East Grand Rapids, Wyoming, Grandville, Walker, and Kentwood) also serves as the home business base of one of the largest past political funders of the national Republican Party, Richard and Helen De Vos, and former Ambassador to Italy, Peter Secchia.

However, despite Grand Rapids' reputation for conservatism, the city tends to elect Democrats. Both of its representatives in the Michigan State House of Representatives are Democrats, and in the four most recent presidential elections Democratic candidates Bill Clinton, Al Gore and John Kerry won the majority of votes in the city of Grand Rapids. (The city itself hasn't elected a Republican candidate for President since George H W Bush in 1988.)

Commission-Manager plan

Under Michigan law, Grand Rapids is a home rule city and adopted a city charter in 1916 providing for the Commission-Manager form of municipal government. Under this system, the political responsibilities are divided between an elected City Commission and a hired full-time City Manager. Two part-time Commissioners are elected to four-year terms from each of three wards, with half of these seats up for election every two years. The part-time Mayor is elected every four years by the city at large, and serves as chair of the Commission, with a vote equal to that of a Commissioner. The races—held in odd-numbered years—are formally non-partisan, although the party and other political affiliations of candidates do sometimes come up during the campaign period. The Commission sets policy for the city, and is responsible for hiring the City Manager and other appointed officials [2].

Mayor

George Heartwell was elected mayor of Grand Rapids after long-serving mayor John H. Logie declined to run for re-election in 2003. Logie felt the position should be made full-time, but to avoid the question becoming a referendum on whether he should hold the job full-time, he announced that he would not run for re-election. The voters decided to keep the position part-time, and Heartwell was elected.

Heartwell assumed office on January 1, 2004. Prior to being mayor, Heartwell was a City Commissioner for the third ward, 1992-1999. Heartwell currently serves as President and CEO of Pilgrim Manor Retirement Community. He was Director of the Community Leadership Institute at Aquinas College, where he also was a professor in the Community Leadership undergraduate study program. Mayor Heartwell is an ordained minister for the United Church of Christ, and served for 14 years at Heartside Ministry, a program for the homeless in Grand Rapids. He was previously the president of Heartwell Mortgage Corporation [3].

In August, 2007, Mayor Heartwell was re-elected to a second mayoral term in Grand Rapids. He won the primary election with 51% of the vote.

Economy

Grand Rapids has long been a center for furniture and automobile manufacturing; however, the presence of both industries has declined in the region along with manufacturing in general. American Seating, Steelcase and Herman Miller, major manufacturers of office furniture, are based in the Grand Rapids area.

In 1880, [4][Sligh Furniture Company] started manufacturing furniture.[4] In 1881, the Furniture Manufacturers Association (FMA) was organized in Grand Rapids, it was apparently the first furniture manufacturing advocacy group in the country.[5] Also Since 1912, Kindel Furniture Company,[6] and since 1922, the Hekman/Woodmark Furniture Company,[7] have been designing and manufacturing traditional American furniture in Grand Rapids. All of these companies are still producing furniture today.

More recently the city has had some success in developing and attracting businesses focusing on the health sciences, with facilities such as the Van Andel Research Institute (primarily focused on cancer research), Grand Valley State University's Cook-DeVos Center for Health Sciences (undergraduate and graduate health-related programs, doctorate program in Physical Therapy, upcoming Doctorate of Nursing Practice (DNP)), and Michigan State University's planned medical school, adjacent to GVSU's Cook-DeVos Center and Spectrum Health's Butterworth Hospital.This year, several million dollars will be spent on new hospitals (including the Spectrum Health Cancer Pavilion and the Spectrum Health Helen DeVos Children's Hospital), medical research centers and health facilities. Most of these facilities are based on Michigan Avenue medical corridor, and is commonly known as "Medical Mile". Employment opportunities thrive and the growth has developed specialized health science employment groups to facilitate the influx, such as the [5]Medical Mile Group].

The Grand Rapids area is also home to a number of well known companies that include; Alticor/Amway (a consumer goods manufacturer and distributor), Foremost Insurance Company (a specialty lines insurance company), Meijer (a Supercenter chain), GE Aviation (formerly Smiths Industries, an Aerospace products company), Wolverine World Wide (a designer and manufacturer of shoes, boots and clothing), MC Sports, Inc. (a regional sports retail chain) and Universal Forest Products (a building materials company).

The city is also known as a center of Christian publishing, home to Zondervan, Baker Books, Kregel Publications, and Eerdmans Publishing.

The surrounding area is noted for its fruit production. Due to its close proximity to Lake Michigan the climate is considered prime for apple, peach, and blueberry farming.

In recent years, the convention business has seen an increase following the construction of the DeVos Place Convention Center.

Education

The Main Branch of the Grand Rapids Public Library

Grand Rapids is home to several colleges and universities. Aquinas College, Calvin College, Cornerstone University, Grace Bible College, and Kuyper College are private, religious schools, each with a campus within the city. Grand Rapids Community College maintains a campus downtown and facilities in other parts of the city and surrounding region. Grand Valley State University continues to develop its presence in the city with an expanding downtown campus, begun in the late 1990s on the west bank of the Grand River. ITT Technical Institute has a variety of technical programs and it continues to grow as they are moving to a new campus later on this year right next door to the new Metro Health Hospital in Wyoming. Ferris State University has a growing campus downtown, including the Applied Technology Center (operated with GRCC) and the prestigious Kendall College of Art and Design. Thomas M. Cooley Law School, a private institution, has a campus in Grand Rapids. Davenport University, a state-wide educational institution, has its main campus in Grand Rapids as well as several satellite locations. Western Michigan University has a long-standing graduate program in the city, with facilities downtown and in the southeast. Clinical Pastoral Education is also offered at Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Services in nearby Cutlerville, Michigan.

K-12 public education is provided by the Grand Rapids Public Schools as well as a number of charter schools.

Grand Rapids is home of the oldest co-educational Catholic high school in the United States, Catholic Central High School (Grand Rapids, Michigan)

As of 2006, there is an active movement among community leaders to have Michigan State University open a new medical school in Grand Rapids.[6]. Michigan State University College of Human Medicine will relocate and expand from East Lansing to downtown Grand Rapids. The College of Human Medicine is one of three fully accredited four-year medical schools at MSU, along with the College of Osteopathic Medicine and College of Veterinary Medicine. On April 21, 2008, the Secchia Center medical education building, a $90 million, seven-story, 180,000-square-foot (17,000 m2) facility, began construction at Michigan Street hill and Division Avenue.

Culture

The Van Andel Museum Center

Beginning with the installation of Alexander Calder's abstract sculpture La Grande Vitesse (French for "The Grand Rapids"), the very first financially funded project in the United States by the National Endowment for the Arts in 1969, the city has been host to the annual Festival of the Arts downtown since 1970, known to locals simply as Festival. During the first weekend in June, several blocks of downtown surrounding the Calder stabile in Vandenberg Plaza are closed to traffic. Festival features several stages with free live performances, food booths selling a variety of ethnic cuisine, art demonstrations and sales, and other arts-related activities. Organizers bill it as the largest all-volunteer arts festival in the United States, though this is a bit of a misnomer since sound companies and other professionals are paid for their services. Vandenberg Plaza also hosts various ethnic festivals that take place throughout the summer season.

Summer concludes with Celebration on the Grand the weekend after Labor Day featuring free concerts, West Michigan's largest fireworks display and food booths. Celebration on the Grand is an all volunteer event to celebrate life in the Grand River valley.

In Grand Rapids in 1973, Main Street America celebrated mainstream art, as the city hosted Sculpture off the Pedestal, an exemplar of public sculpture exhibitions, which assembled 13 world-renowned artists, including Mark di Suvero, John Henry, Kenneth Snelson, Robert Morris, John Mason and Stephen Antonakos, in a single, citywide celebration. Sculpture off the Pedestal was a public/private partnership, which included financial support by the National Endowment for the Arts, educational support from the Michigan Council for the Arts and in-kind contributions from individuals, business and industry. Fund-raising events, volunteers and locals housing artists contributed to the public character of the event.

On November 10, 2004, the grand premier of the film The Polar Express was held in Grand Rapids, the movie's setting and home of the book's author Chris Van Allsburg, and its main character. The Meijer Gardens created a Polar Express display which was part of their larger Christmas Around the World exhibit.

In mid-2004, the Grand Rapids Art Museum (GRAM) began construction on a new, larger building for its art museum collection, which opened in October, 2007 at 101 Monroe Center NW. The new building site faces downtown's Ecliptic by Maya Lin at Rosa Parks Circle. The Museum was completed in 2007 and became the first LEED certified Art Museum in the world.

Sites of interest

File:Fords grave.jpg
President Ford's Tomb at his Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan
The Gerald R. Ford Museum, located on the west bank of the Grand River.
The Heritage Hill Neighborhood
The Wealthy Street Theatre

Grand Rapids is the home of John Ball Park, Belknap Hill, and the Gerald R. Ford Museum, the final resting place of the 38th President of the United States. Significant buildings in the downtown include the DeVos Place Convention Center, Van Andel Arena, the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel, and now the JW Marriott Hotel. The Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts is located downtown, and houses art exhibits, a movie theater, and the urban clay studio.

Along the Grand River are symbolic burial mounds which were used by the Hopewell tribe, a fish ladder, and a riverwalk.

Space Statue, Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan

Grand Rapids is also home to the Van Andel Museum Center. Founded in 1854, it is among the oldest history museums in the United States. The museum's sites currently include the main site constructed in 1994 on the west bank of the Grand River (home to the Roger B. Chaffee Planetarium, the Voigt House Victorian Museum, and the City Archives and Records Center, which was the site of the museum and planetarium prior to 1994. The museum has, in the past few years, played host to a handful of notable exhibitions, including the Dead Sea Scrolls, and The Quest for Immortality: the Treasures of Ancient Egypt. The museum is set up as a non-profit institution owned and managed by the Public Museum of Grand Rapids Foundation.

Heritage Hill, a neighborhood in the southeastern section of town. It is one of the largest Urban Historic Districts in the country, with over 1000 Victorian homes. Of particular significance is the Meyer May House, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1908 was commissioned by local merchant Meyer May who operated a men's clothing store (May's of Michigan). The house is now a free museum owned and operated by Steelcase who restored the property in the 1980s.

Grand Rapids is home to a myriad of theatres and stages, including the newly-reconstructed Civic Theatre (also known as the Meijer Majestic), the city's largest theatre DeVos hall, and the convertible Van Andel Arena. Further east of downtown is the historic Wealthy Street Theatre.

In Grand Rapids Township, the Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park combine 125 acres (1 km2) of world-class botanical gardens and artwork from such sculptors as Mark di Suvero, Alexander Calder, Edgar Degas, and Auguste Rodin. The Gardens' amphitheatre plays host to numerous concerts each summer, featuring such eccelctic acts as Jonny Lang, The Pointer Sisters, Lyle Lovett, Cowboy Junkies, and B.B. King. As Michigan's second most popular destination (after The Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn), the Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park is rapidly gaining national renown.

Slightly east of the downtown area is the Eastown business district, home to many popular independently owned businesses such as Yesterdog (recreated in the film American Pie), 76 Coffee, Kava House, Magnum Opus Manga & Anime, Billy's Lounge, New Yorker Men's Wear, Bombay Cuisine, and Mulligan's Bar. Eastown, along with Grand Rapids' Heartside District, is regarded as a center of the city's counter-culture and music scene. The neighborhood is also home to the Barack Obama campaign headquarters in Grand Rapids.

Music

Melodic metal band Still Remains hail from Grand Rapids. The band split in May 2008. Soulful family recording artist Debarges hails from Grand Rapids, as does Anthony Kiedis of Red Hot Chili Peppers and Matt Granfield of The Black Market Rhythm Co.. Local singer songwriter Ralston Bowles released his 2nd CD (Rally at the Texas Hotel) internationally on Judy Collins Wildflower Records label in 2008. The newest talent to come out of Grand Rapids is the rock band Pop Evil. Grand Rapids also has a number of popular concert venues in which a large assortment of bands have preformed, including the Orbit Room, the Intersection, DeVos Hall, the Van Andel Arena, the Royce Auditorium, the Forest Hills Fine Arts Center, and the Deltaplex.

Sports

Several professional sports teams call Grand Rapids home:

Club Sport Year Founded League Venue Championships
West Michigan Whitecaps Baseball 1994 Midwest League Fifth Third Ballpark Championship Series winners: 1996, 1998, 2004, 2006, 2007; Best regular season record: 1997, 1998, 2000, 2006, 2007
Grand Rapids Flight Basketball 2004 International Basketball League DeltaPlex Arena The Flight have yet to win a Championship
Grand Rapids Griffins Ice Hockey 1996 American Hockey League Van Andel Arena IHL Joseph Turner Memorial Cup Runner-up: 2000; IHL Fred A. Huber Trophy (regular season champion): 2001
Grand Rapids Rampage Arena Football 1998 Arena Football League Van Andel Arena ArenaBowl XV Champions and best regular season record: 2001

Media

The Grand Rapids Press is the daily newspaper, while Advance Newspapers publishes a group of weekly papers providing more community-based news. Gemini Publications is a niche, regional publishing company that produces the weekly newspaper Grand Rapids Business Journal, the magazines Grand Rapids Magazine, Grand Rapids Family and Michigan Blue, and several other quarterly and annual business-to-business publications. There are two free monthly entertainment guides: REVUE, which covers music and the arts, and RECOIL, which covers music and offers Onion-style satire.

Grand Rapids, combined with nearby Kalamazoo and Battle Creek, was ranked in 2008 as the 39th largest television market in the U.S. by Nielsen Media Research.[8] The market is served by stations affiliated with major American networks including: WOOD-TV (channel 8, NBC), WZZM-TV (channel 13, ABC), WXMI (channel 17, Fox), WXSP (channel 15, MYTV) and Kalamazoo-based WWMT (channel 3, CBS). WGVU-TV is the area's PBS member station.

The Grand Rapids area is served by 16 AM radio stations and 28 FM stations.[9]

Transportation

Major highways

Interstates

U.S. highways

Michigan State Trunklines

Intercounty Highways

Mass Transit

Bus

Public bus transportation is provided by the Interurban Transit Partnership, which brands itself as The Rapid. Transportation is also provided by the DASH buses: the "Downtown Area Shuttle". These provide transportation to and from the parking lots in the city of Grand Rapids to various designated loading and unloading spots around the city.

Air

Commercial air service to Grand Rapids is provided by Gerald R. Ford International Airport (GRR). Previously named Kent County International Airport, it holds Grand Rapids' mark in modern history with the United States' first regularly scheduled airline service, beginning July 31, 1926, between Grand Rapids and Detroit.

Rail

Amtrak provides direct train service to Chicago from the passenger station via the Pere Marquette line.

Sister cities

Grand Rapids has city partnerships with the following cities:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ July 1, 2006 est. by Census Bureau
  2. ^ "Wind and Hydropower Technologies Program: History of Hydropower". U.S. Department of Energy. September 9 2005. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ "Grand Rapids QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau". U.S. Census Bureau.
  4. ^ "Sligh Furniture Company". History of Sligh Furniture Company. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ "Furniture Manufacturers Association". History of FMA,. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  6. ^ "Kindel Furniture". Kindel Furniture. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ "Hekman/Woodmark Furniture Company". Hekman/Woodmark Furniture Company. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ "Sampling the Population". Nielsen Media Research. 2007-09-22. Retrieved 2008-08-18.
  9. ^ "Michigan – Radio Broadcasting Stations". RadioStationWorld. Retrieved 2008-08-18.
  10. ^ "sister city". {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)

External links

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