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Wikipedia

Grand Rapids, Michigan

Grand Rapids is a city and county seat of Kent County in the U.S. state of Michigan.[4] At the 2020 census, the city had a population of 198,917[5] which ranks it as the second most-populated city in the state after Detroit. Grand Rapids is the central city of the Grand Rapids metropolitan area, which has a population of 1,087,592 and a combined statistical area population of 1,383,918.[2]

Grand Rapids
City of Grand Rapids
Images from top to bottom, left to right: downtown cityscape, Meyer May House, Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum,
La Grande Vitesse, pedestrian bridge over the Grand River, Van Andel Arena, Van Andel Institute on the Medical Mile
Nicknames: 
GR, River City, Beer City, Furniture City
Motto(s): 
Motu Viget (Latin)
(English: "Strength in activity")
Location within Kent County
Grand Rapids
Location within the state of Michigan
Grand Rapids
Location within the United States
Coordinates: 42°57′40″N 85°39′20″W / 42.96111°N 85.65556°W / 42.96111; -85.65556Coordinates: 42°57′40″N 85°39′20″W / 42.96111°N 85.65556°W / 42.96111; -85.65556
Country United States
State Michigan
County Kent
Founded1826
Incorporated1838 (village)
1850 (city)
Government
 • TypeCity commission
 • MayorRosalynn Bliss (D)
 • ManagerMark Washington
 • ClerkJoel Hondorp (R)
Area
 • City45.63 sq mi (118.19 km2)
 • Land44.78 sq mi (115.97 km2)
 • Water0.86 sq mi (2.22 km2)  1.92%
Elevation
640 ft (200 m)
Population
 (2023)
 • City202,181
 • RankUS: 115th
MI: 2nd
 • Density4,442.49/sq mi (1,715.26/km2)
 • Urban
605,666 (US: 70th)
 • Urban density2,207.6/sq mi (852.3/km2)
 • Metro
1,077,370[2] (US: 52nd)
 • CSA
1,412,470[2] (US: 42nd)
DemonymGrand Rapidian
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP Codes
49501–49508, 49510, 49514–49516, 49518, 49523, 49525, 49534, 49546, 49548, 49555, 49560, 49588, 49594
Area code616
FIPS code26-34000
GNIS feature ID0627105[3]
WebsiteGrandRapidsMI.gov

Situated along the Grand River approximately 25 miles (40 km) east of Lake Michigan, it is the economic and cultural hub of West Michigan, as well as one of the fastest-growing cities in the Midwest.[6] A historic furniture manufacturing center, Grand Rapids is home to five of the world's leading office furniture companies and is nicknamed "Furniture City". Other nicknames include "River City" and more recently, "Beer City" (the latter given by USA Today[7] and adopted by the city as a brand).[8] The city and surrounding communities are economically diverse, based in the health care, information technology, automotive, aviation, and consumer goods manufacturing industries, among others.

Grand Rapids was the childhood home of U.S. President Gerald Ford, who is buried with his wife Betty on the grounds of the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in the city.[9] The city's Gerald R. Ford International Airport and Gerald R. Ford Freeway are named after him.

History

Native American settlement

 
A 1772 engraving showing Odawa attire of the period.

For thousands of years, succeeding cultures of indigenous peoples occupied the area. Over 2000 years ago, people associated with the Hopewell culture occupied the Grand River Valley.[10] Later, a tribe from the Ottawa River traveled to the Grand River valley, fighting three battles with the Prairie Indians who were established in the area.[11] The tribe later split, with the Chippewas settling in the northern lower peninsula, the Pottawatomies staying south of the Kalamazoo River and the Odawa staying in central Michigan.[11]

By the late 1600s, the Odawa, who occupied territory around the Great Lakes and spoke one of the numerous Algonquian languages, moved into the Grand Rapids area and founded several villages along the Grand River.[10][12] The Odawa established on the river, which they called O-wash-ta-nong, or far-away-water due to the river's length, where they "raised corn, melons, pumpkins and beans, to which they added game of the woods and the fish from the streams".[11]

In 1740, an Odawa man who would later be known as Chief Noonday or Nowaquakezick and become the future chief of the Odawa, was born.[13][14] Between 1761 and 1763, Chief Pontiac visited the area annually, gathering over 3,000 natives and asking them to volunteer to lay siege to the British fort in Detroit, which would culminate into Pontiac's War.[11] By the end of the 1700s, there were an estimated 1,000 Odawa in the Kent County area.[11]

Nineteenth century: European-American settlement

Trading post

After the French established territories in Michigan, Jesuit missionaries and traders traveled down Lake Michigan and its tributaries.[11] At the start of the 19th century, European fur traders (mostly French Canadian and Métis) and missionaries established posts in the area among the Odawa. They generally lived in peace, trading European metal and textile goods for fur pelts.

In 1806, white trader Joseph La Framboise and his Métis wife, Magdelaine La Framboise, traveled by canoe from Mackinac and established the first trading post in West Michigan in present-day Grand Rapids on the banks of the Grand River, near what is now Ada Township, the junction of the Grand and Thornapple Rivers. They were French-speaking and Roman Catholic. They likely both spoke Odawa, Magdelaine's maternal ancestral language. In the fall of 1806, Joseph was fatally stabbed by a member of the Potawatomi tribe named Nequat. Joseph had been with his family and an entourage of voyageurs traveling between Grand River and Grand Rapids. The Indian had insisted that Joseph trade liquor with him. When Joseph refused, the Indian left only to return at dusk when Joseph, who faithfully performed the ritual of Angelus every day at that time, was in prayer. The Indian stabbed the trader, fatally wounding him, leaving Magdelaine suddenly a widow at age twenty-four.[15]

The next spring, a delegation from the Potawatomi tribe brought the offending Indian, Nequat, before Magdelaine for her sentence upon him for the death of her husband. It was their tradition for the victim’s family to avenge deaths within that tribe. Magdelaine refused to sentence him and, in an act of forgiveness, told the Potawatomi tribe members to let him go and that God would be his judge. Though Magdelaine had forgiven Nequat, the tribe had not. Nequat’s body was found stabbed with his own knife the next season.[16]

After the murder of her husband in 1806 while en route to Grand Rapids, Magdelaine La Framboise carried on the trade business, expanding fur trading posts to the west and north, creating a good reputation among the American Fur Company. La Framboise, whose mother was Odawa and father French, later merged her successful operations with the American Fur Company.[11]

By 1810, Chief Noonday established the village of Bock-a-tinck on the northwest side of present-day Grand Rapids near Bridge Street with about 500 Odawa, though the population would grow to over 1,000 on occasion.[13][14] During the War of 1812, Noonday was allied with Tecumseh during the Battle of the Thames. Tecumseh was killed in this battle, and Noonday inherited his tomahawk and hat.[17] A second village existed lower down the river with its center located at the intersection of what is now Watson Street and National Avenue, with Chief Black Skin – known by his native name as Muck-i-ta-oska or Mukatasha and was son of Chief Noonday – leading the village.[14]

European settlement

In 1820, General Lewis Cass, who was on his way to negotiate the first Treaty of Chicago with a group of 42 men, commissioned Charles Christopher Trowbridge to establish missions for Native Americans in the Grand River Valley to evangelize Native Americans.[18][14] In 1821, the Council of Three Fires signed the first Treaty of Chicago, ceding to the United States all lands in Michigan Territory south of the Grand River, except for several small reservations, and required a native to prepare land in the area to establish a mission.[14][19] The treaty also included "One hundred thousand dollars to satisfy sundry individuals, in behalf of whom reservations were asked, which the Commissioners refused to grant" of which Joseph La Framboise received 1,000 dollars immediately and 200 dollars a year, for life.[19] Madeline La Framboise retired the trading post to Rix Robinson in 1821 and returned to Mackinac.[11] That year, Grand Rapids was described as being the home of an Odawa village of about 50 to 60 huts on the north side of the river near the 5th Ward, with Kewkishkam being the village chief and Chief Noonday being the chief of the Odawa.[18]

The first permanent European-American settler in the Grand Rapids area was Isaac McCoy, a Baptist minister.[18] In 1823, McCoy, Paget, a Frenchman who brought along a Native American pupil, and a government worker traveled to Grand Rapids from Carey Mission near present-day Niles, Michigan to arrange a mission they called the "Thomas Mission", though negotiations fell through with the group returning to the Carey Mission for the Potawatomi on the St. Joseph River.[18][14] The government worker stayed into 1824 to establish a blacksmith shop, though the shop was burned down by the Odawa.[14] Later in May 1824, Baptist missionary Reverend Leonard Slater traveled with two settlers to Grand Rapids to perform missionary work, though the group began to return to the Carey Mission after only three days due to threats.[18][14] While the group was returning, they encountered Chief Noonday who asked for the group to stay and establish a mission, believing that the Odawa adapting to European customs was the only chance for them to stay in the area.[14] The winter of 1824 was difficult, with Slater's group having to resupply and return before the spring.[14][18] Chief Noonday, deciding to be an example for the Odawa, chose to be baptized by Slater in the Grand River, though some of his followers believed that this was a wrestling match between the two that Slater won.[14] Slater then erected the first settler structures in Grand Rapids, a log cabin for himself and a log schoolhouse.[18] In 1825, McCoy returned and established a missionary station.[20] He represented the settlers who began arriving from Ohio, New York and New England, the Yankee states of the Northern Tier.

 
A sketch of Grand Rapids in 1831. The collection of houses across the river on its west side is the Baptist mission. The three buildings in the middle right are Louis Campau's trading post.

Shortly after, Detroit-born Louis Campau, known as the official founder of Grand Rapids, was convinced by fur trader William Brewster, who was in a rivalry with the American Fur Company, to travel to Grand Rapids and establish trade there.[18] In 1826, Campau built his cabin, trading post, and blacksmith shop on the south bank of the Grand River near the rapids, stating the Native Americans in the area were "friendly and peaceable".[18] Campau returned to Detroit, then returned a year later with his wife and $5,000 of trade goods to trade with the Odawa and Ojibwa, with the only currency being fur.[18] Campau's younger brother Touissant would often assist him with trade and other tasks at hand.[18]

Lucius Lyon, a Yankee Protestant who would later become a rival to Campau, was contracted by the federal government to survey the Grand River Valley in the fall of 1830 and in the first quarter of 1831, the federal survey of the Northwest Territory reached the Grand River, with Lyon using a surveyor's compass and chain to set the boundaries for Kent County, named after prominent New York jurist James Kent.[18][14] In 1833, a land office was established in White Pigeon, Michigan, with Campau and fellow settler Luther Lincoln seeking land in the Grand River valley.[18] Lincoln purchased land in what is now known as Grandville, while Campau became perhaps the most important settler when he bought 72 acres (291,000 m2) from the federal government for $90 and named his tract Grand Rapids. Over time, it developed as today's main downtown business district.[10] In the spring of 1833, Campau sold to Joel Guild, who traveled from New York, a plot of land for $25.00, with Guild building the first frame structure in Grand Rapids, which is now where McKay Tower stands.[18][21] Guild later became the postmaster, with mail at the time being delivered monthly from the Gull Lake, Michigan to Grand Rapids.[18] Grand Rapids in 1833 was only a few acres of land cleared on each side of the Grand River, with oak trees planted in light, sandy soil standing between what is now Lyon Street and Fulton Street.[18]

 
The large framed building constructed by Campau in 1834, seen in this image converted into part of the Rathbun House.

By 1834, the settlement had become more organized. Rev. Turner had established a school on the east side of the river, with children on the west side of the river being brought to school every morning by a Native American on a canoe who would shuttle them across the river. Multiple events happened at Guild's frame structure, including the first marriage in the city, one that involved his daughter Harriet Guild and Barney Burton, as well as the first town meeting that had nine voters. It was also this year Campau began constructing his own frame building—the largest at the time—near present-day Rosa Parks Circle.[18]

In 1835, many settlers arrived in the area with the population growing to about 50 people, including its first doctor, Dr. Wilson, who was supplied with equipment from Campau.[18] Lucius Lyon, using his knowledge from surveying the area, returned to Grand Rapids to purchase the rest of the prime land and called his plot the Village of Kent.[18][14] When Lyon and his partner N. O. Sergeant returned after their purchase, they arrived along with a posse of men carrying shovels and picks, intending to build a mill race. The group arrived to the music of a bugle which startled the settlement, with Chief Noonday offering Campau assistance to drive back Lyon's posse believing they were invaders. Also that year, Rev. Andrew Vizoisky, a Hungarian native educated in Catholic institutions in Austria, arrived, presiding over the Catholic mission in the area until his death in 1852.[18]

That year, Campau, Rix Robinson, Rev. Slater, and the husband of Chief Noonday's daughter, Meccissininni, traveled to Washington, D.C. to speak about the purchase of Odawa land on the west side of the river with President Andrew Jackson.[13] Jackson was originally unimpressed with Meccissininni, though Meccissininni, who often acquired white customs, asked Jackson for a similar suit to the one the president was wearing. While later wearing his suit that was made similar to Jackson's, Meccissininni also unknowingly imitated Jackson's hat, placing a piece of weed in it, which impressed Jackson since it symbolized mourning the death of his wife.[13]

John Ball, representing a group of New York land speculators, bypassed Detroit for a better deal in Grand Rapids traveling to the settlement in 1836. Ball declared the Grand River valley "the promised land, or at least the most promising one for my operations".[22] That year, the first steamboat was constructed on the Grand River named the Gov. Mason, though the ship wrecked two years later in Muskegon.[18] Yankee migrants (primarily English-speaking settlers) and others began migrating from New York and New England through the 1830s. Ancestors of these people included not only English colonists but people of mixed ethnic Dutch, Mohawk, French Canadian, and French Huguenot descent from the colonial period in New York. However, after 1837, the area saw poor times, with many of the French returning to their places of origin, with poverty hitting the area for the next few years.[18]

The first Grand Rapids newspaper, The Grand River Times, was printed on April 18, 1837, describing the village's attributes, stating:[18]

Though young in its improvements, the site of this village has long been known and esteemed for its natural advantages. It was here that the Indian traders long since made their great depot.

The Grand River Times continued, saying the village had grown quickly from a few French families to about 1,200 residents, the Grand River was "one of the most important and delightful to be found in the country," and described the changing Native American culture in the area.[18]


Incorporation and cityhood

 
An 1868 pictorial map of Grand Rapids

By 1838, the settlement incorporated as a village, and encompassed approximately .75 square miles (1.9 km2).[23]

An outcropping of gypsum, where Plaster Creek enters the Grand River, was known to the Native American inhabitants of the area. Pioneer geologist Douglass Houghton commented on this find in 1838.[24][25] Settlers began to mine this outcrop in 1841, initially in open cast mines, but later underground mines as well. Gypsum was ground locally for use as a soil amendment known as "land plaster."

The first formal census in 1845 recorded a population of 1,510[26] and an area of 4 square miles (10 km2).[26] The city of Grand Rapids was incorporated April 2, 1850.[27] It was officially established on May 2, 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' area totaled 10.5 square miles (27 km2).[23] Through the 1850s, the land containing forty-six Indian mounds located on the west side between Bridge Street and the Grand River to the south were sold by the United States government, with the mounds being destroyed to fill low-lying land in the area while the Native American artifacts contained within were taken or sold to museums, including the Grand Rapids Public Museum.[28] In October 1870, Grand Rapids became a desired location for immigrants, with about 120 Swedes arriving in the United States to travel and create a "colony" in the area in one week.[29]

During the second half of the nineteenth century, the city became a major lumbering center, processing timber harvested in the region. Logs were floated down the Grand River to be milled in the city and shipped via the Great Lakes. The city became a center of fine wood products as well. By the end of the century, it was established as the premier furniture-manufacturing city of the United States.[30] It was the Centennial Exposition of 1876 in Philadelphia that brought attention to Grand Rapids' furniture on the national stage, providing a new growing industry to help the city recover from the Panic of 1873.[31][32] In 1880, the country's first hydro-electric generator was put to use on the city's west side.[33]

Twentieth century: Furniture City

Due to its flourishing furniture industry, Grand Rapids began being recognized as "Furniture City". Grand Rapids was also an early center for the automobile industry, as the Austin Automobile Company operated there from 1901 until 1921.

 
A 1915 panorama, when the furniture industry peaked before the Great Depression.

Furniture companies included the William A. Berkey Company and its successors, Baker Furniture Company, Williams-Kimp, and Widdicomb Furniture Company.[34] The furniture industry began to grow significantly into the twentieth century; in 1870 there were eight factories employing 280 workers and by 1911, Old National Bank wrote that about 8,500 were employed by forty-seven factories.[31][35] At least a third of the workers in Grand Rapids were employed by furniture companies.[31] The Grand Rapids Furniture Record was the trade paper for the city's industry. Its industries provided jobs for many new immigrants from Europe in the late 19th and early 20th century, and a Polish neighborhood developed on the west side of the city.

Strike of 1911

By the early twentieth century, the quality of furniture produced in Grand Rapids was renowned throughout furniture industry, mainly due to the skill of its workers.[35] Government reports in 1907 revealed that while Grand Rapids lead the industry in product output, though its furniture workers were paid lower wages than in other areas.[35] After a minor dispute, workers were inspired to form labor unions; workers requested furniture companies to increase wages, less working hours, the creation of collective bargaining and the institution of a minimum wage to replace piece work.[31][35] The furniture businesses refused to respond with unions as they believed that any meeting represented recognition of unions.[31][35]

Workers in Grand Rapids then began a four month long general strike on April 19, 1911.[31][36] Much of the public, the mayor, the press and the Catholic diocese supported the strike, believing that the unwillingness of business leaders to negotiate was unjust. Skilled and unskilled factory labor was mainly Dutch (60 percent) and Polish (25 percent), primarily immigrants. According to the 1911 Immigration Commission report, the Dutch had an average of 8 percent higher wages than the Poles even when they did the same work. The pay difference was based on seniority and not ethnicity, but given that the Dutch had arrived earlier, seniority was linked to ethnicity.[31][35] Ultimately, the Christian Reformed Church – where the majority of Dutch striking workers congregated – and the Fountain Street Church – led opposition to the strike, which resulted in its end on August 19, 1911.[31][36]

The strike resulted with substantial changes to the governmental and labor structure of the city.[36] With businesses upset with Mayor Ellis for supporting the strike lobbied for the city to change from a twelve-ward government – which more accurately represented the city's ethnic groups – to a smaller three ward system that placed more power into the demands of Dutch citizens, the city's largest demographic.[37][36] Some workers who participated in the strike were blacklisted by companies and thousands of dissatisfied furniture workers emigrated to higher paying regions.[31][35]

Move to retail and suburbanization

 
Monroe Center in January 1965, with Sears, S. S. Kresge Company, Steketee's and Wurzburg's visible

Shifting from its furniture-centric industry, downtown Grand Rapids temporarily became a retail destination for the region, hosting four department stores: Herpolsheimer's (Lazarus), Jacobson's, Steketee's (founded in 1862), and Wurzburg's. In 1945, Grand Rapids became the first city in the United States to add fluoride to its drinking water. National home furnishing conferences were held in Grand Rapids for about seventy-five years, concluding in the 1960s. By that time, the furniture-making industry had largely shifted to North Carolina.[38]

As with many older cities in the United States, retail in the city suffered as the population moved to suburbs in the postwar era with federal subsidization of highway construction. The Grand Rapids suburb Wyoming began to develop rapidly in the 1950s and 1960s following the opening of retail outlets such as Rogers Plaza and Wyoming Village Mall on 28th Street, with developments built so quickly that they were finished without utilities.[39] Consolidation of department stores occurred in Grand Rapids and nationally in the 1980s and 1990s.

Geography

Neighborhoods

According to the city city government data, Grand Rapids has 37 distinct neighborhoods:

  • Alger Heights
  • Baxter
  • Belknap Lookout
  • Black Hills
  • Creston
  • Downtown
  • East Hills
  • Eastern-Burton
  • Eastgate
  • Eastown
  • Fulton Heights
  • Garfield Park
  • Grandville
  • Heartside
  • Heritage Hill
  • Highland Park
  • John Ball Park
  • Ken-O-Sha Park
  • Lake Eastbrook
  • Leffingwell-Twin Lakes
  • Michigan Oaks
  • Midtown
  • Millbank
  • North End
  • North Park
  • Northeast
  • Ottawa Hills
  • Richmond-Oakleigh
  • Ridgemoor Park
  • Roosevelt Park
  • Shangrai-La
  • Shawmut Hills
  • Shawnee Park
  • Southeast Community
  • Southeast End
  • Southwest
  • West Grand

[40]

Topography

 
The Grand Rapids metropolitan area taken by the Sentinel-2 satellite in June 2022.

Grand Rapids developed 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. Ships could navigate on the river up to this fall line, stopping because of the rapids. The river valley is flat and narrow, surrounded by steep hills and bluffs. The terrain becomes more rolling hills away from the river. The countryside surrounding the metropolitan area consists of mixed forest and farmland, with large areas of orchards to the northwest. It is approximately 25 mi (40 km) east of Lake Michigan. The state capital of Lansing lies about 60 mi (97 km) to the east-by-southeast, and Kalamazoo is about 50 mi (80 km) to the south.

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

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 45.27 square miles (117.25 km2), of which, 44.40 square miles (115.00 km2) of it is land and 0.87 square miles (2.25 km2) is water.[41]

Climate

Grand Rapids
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
2.1
 
 
31
18
 
 
1.8
 
 
34
20
 
 
2.4
 
 
44
27
 
 
3.4
 
 
58
38
 
 
4
 
 
70
48
 
 
3.8
 
 
79
58
 
 
3.8
 
 
83
62
 
 
3.6
 
 
81
61
 
 
4.3
 
 
73
53
 
 
3.3
 
 
60
42
 
 
3.5
 
 
47
33
 
 
2.5
 
 
35
24
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Source: NOAA[42]
Metric conversion
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
53
 
 
−1
−8
 
 
45
 
 
1
−7
 
 
60
 
 
7
−3
 
 
85
 
 
15
3
 
 
101
 
 
21
9
 
 
96
 
 
26
14
 
 
96
 
 
28
17
 
 
91
 
 
27
16
 
 
109
 
 
23
12
 
 
83
 
 
16
5
 
 
89
 
 
9
1
 
 
64
 
 
2
−5
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm

Grand Rapids has a humid continental climate (Köppen Dfa),[43] with very warm and humid summers, cold and snowy winters, and short and mild springs and autumns.

Even though it is in the middle of the continent, the city experiences some maritime effects due to its location east of Lake Michigan, including a high number of cloudy days during the late fall and winter, delayed heating in the spring, delayed cooling in fall, somewhat moderated temperatures during winter and lake effect snow. The city averages 75.6 in (192 cm) of snow a year, making it one of the snowiest major cities in the United States.[44] The area often receives quick and sudden lake effect snowstorms, producing significant amounts of snowfall.

The months of March, April, October and November are transitional months and the weather can vary. March has experienced a record high of 87 °F (31 °C) and record low of −13 °F (−25 °C). The average last frost date in spring is May 1, and the average first frost in fall is October 11, giving the area a growing season of 162 days.[45] The city is in plant hardiness zone 6a, while outlying areas are 5b. Some far western suburbs closer to the insulating effect of Lake Michigan are in zone 6b.[46] Summers are warm or hot, and heat waves and severe weather outbreaks are common during a typical summer.

The average temperature of the area is 49 °F (9 °C). The highest temperature in the area was recorded on July 13, 1936, at 108 °F (42 °C), and the lowest was recorded on February 13–14, 1899, at −24 °F (−31 °C).[47] During an average year, sunshine occurs in 46% of the daylight hours. On 138 nights, the temperature dips to below 32 °F (0 °C). On average, 9.2 days a year have temperatures that meet or exceed the 90 °F (32 °C) mark, and 5.6 days a year have lows that are 0 °F (−18 °C) or colder.

The coldest maximum temperature on record was −6 °F (−21 °C) in 1899, whereas the most recent subzero Fahrenheit daily maximum was −2 °F (−19 °C) in 1994.[48] During the reference period of 1991 to 2020, the coldest daily maximum on average was 11 °F (−12 °C).[48] Summer nights influenced by the lake can be hot and muggy on occasion. The warmest night on record was 82 °F (28 °C) in 1902 and lows above 72 °F (22 °C) have been measured in every month between April and October.[48] On average, the warmest low of the year stood at 74 °F (23 °C) for the 1991–2020 normals.[48]

In April 1956, the western and northern portions of the city and its suburbs were hit by a violent tornado which locally produced F5 damage and killed 18 people.[49]

With the Grand River flowing through the center of Grand Rapids, the city has been prone to floods. From March 25 to 29, 1904, more than one-half of the entire populated portion of the city lying on the west side of the river was completely underwater, over twenty-five hundred houses, affecting fourteen thousand persons, being completely surrounded. On March 28, the river registered at 19.6 feet (6.0 m), more than two feet (0.61 m) above its highest previous mark.[50]

More than one-hundred years later, the 2013 Grand Rapids flood occurred from April 12 to 25, 2013, with the river cresting at 21.85 feet (6.66 m) on the 21st, causing thousands of residents to evacuate their homes and over $10 million in damage.[51]

Climate data for Grand Rapids, Michigan (Gerald Ford Int'l), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1892−present[a]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 68
(20)
69
(21)
87
(31)
90
(32)
95
(35)
102
(39)
108
(42)
102
(39)
98
(37)
89
(32)
81
(27)
69
(21)
108
(42)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 51
(11)
52
(11)
68
(20)
79
(26)
86
(30)
92
(33)
92
(33)
91
(33)
88
(31)
79
(26)
65
(18)
54
(12)
94
(34)
Average high °F (°C) 31.0
(−0.6)
33.7
(0.9)
44.5
(6.9)
57.8
(14.3)
69.8
(21.0)
79.4
(26.3)
83.1
(28.4)
80.9
(27.2)
73.9
(23.3)
60.7
(15.9)
47.2
(8.4)
36.1
(2.3)
58.2
(14.6)
Daily mean °F (°C) 24.8
(−4.0)
26.6
(−3.0)
35.7
(2.1)
47.6
(8.7)
59.2
(15.1)
68.9
(20.5)
72.8
(22.7)
71.1
(21.7)
63.5
(17.5)
51.5
(10.8)
40.0
(4.4)
30.4
(−0.9)
49.3
(9.6)
Average low °F (°C) 18.6
(−7.4)
19.5
(−6.9)
26.9
(−2.8)
37.3
(2.9)
48.6
(9.2)
58.3
(14.6)
62.5
(16.9)
61.2
(16.2)
53.1
(11.7)
42.2
(5.7)
32.8
(0.4)
24.7
(−4.1)
40.5
(4.7)
Mean minimum °F (°C) −3
(−19)
0
(−18)
8
(−13)
23
(−5)
33
(1)
44
(7)
51
(11)
49
(9)
39
(4)
29
(−2)
16
(−9)
6
(−14)
−6
(−21)
Record low °F (°C) −22
(−30)
−24
(−31)
−13
(−25)
3
(−16)
21
(−6)
32
(0)
41
(5)
39
(4)
27
(−3)
18
(−8)
−10
(−23)
−18
(−28)
−24
(−31)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 2.52
(64)
2.12
(54)
2.39
(61)
3.99
(101)
4.00
(102)
3.94
(100)
3.86
(98)
3.55
(90)
3.43
(87)
4.02
(102)
3.10
(79)
2.48
(63)
39.40
(1,001)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 22.6
(57)
17.2
(44)
7.6
(19)
2.0
(5.1)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.3
(0.76)
7.1
(18)
20.8
(53)
77.6
(197)
Average extreme snow depth inches (cm) 9
(23)
9
(23)
6
(15)
1
(2.5)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
2
(5.1)
6
(15)
12
(30)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 16.8 13.1 11.8 12.8 12.5 10.7 10.0 9.9 10.2 12.5 12.9 15.5 148.7
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 14.9 11.2 5.9 2.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.4 4.5 11.9 50.9
Average relative humidity (%) 77.2 74.2 71.1 66.8 65.4 68.1 69.6 73.3 76.1 74.6 76.9 79.5 72.7
Mean monthly sunshine hours 88.3 116.0 168.2 210.2 255.9 286.8 296.5 264.2 206.0 152.4 82.0 62.1 2,188.6
Percent possible sunshine 30 39 45 52 56 62 64 61 55 45 28 22 49
Source: NOAA (relative humidity and sun 1961−1990)[48][53][54]

Cityscape

The city skyline shows the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel, formerly the Pantlind, which reopened in 1981 after extensive renovations by Marvin DeWinter & Associates. This work included the addition of a 29–story glass tower offering panoramic views of the city, river and surrounding area. The Pantlind Hotel's original architects, Warren & Wetmore, were inspired by the work of the Scottish neoclassical architect Robert Adam. In its prime, the hotel was rated as one of the top ten hotels in the US. The hotel features several restaurants well known in Grand Rapids. The hotel is owned by Amway Hotel Collection, a subsidiary of Amway's holding company Alticor.[55]

 
The skyline of Grand Rapids as seen in August 2021

Other prominent large buildings include the JW Marriott Grand Rapids, the first JW Marriott Hotel in the Midwest. It is themed from cityscapes of Grand Rapids' sister cities: Omihachiman, Japan; Bielsko-Biała, Poland; Perugia, Italy; Ga District, Ghana; and Zapopan, Mexico. When the hotel opened, Amway Hotel corporation hired photographer Dan Watts to travel to each of the sister cities and photograph them for the property. Each floor of the hotel features photography from one of the cities, which is unique to that floor. Cityscapes of these five cities are alternated in order, up the 23 floors.

The city's tallest building is the River House Condominiums, a 34-story (123.8 m) condominium tower completed in 2008 that stands as the tallest all-residential building in the state of Michigan.[56]

 
A barn belonging to the Blandford School at the Blandford Nature Center in early springtime

Grand Rapids is also home to two large urban nature centers. The Calvin Ecosystem Preserve and Native Gardens, operated by Calvin University on the city's southeast side, is 104 acres (42 ha). It is home to over 44 acres (18 ha) of public-access nature trails, a 60-acre (24 ha), restricted-access wildlife preserve, as well as the Bunker Interpretive Center, which hosts university classes and educational programs for the wider community.[57] The Blandford Nature Center, located on the city's northwest side, opened in 1968 and contains extensive nature trails, an animal hospital, and a "heritage village" made up of several well-preserved 19th-century buildings, including a log cabin, schoolhouse, and barn.[58] The nature center is also home to Blandford School, a highly selective environmental education program for sixth graders from the metropolitan region, which is run by Grand Rapids Public Schools and serves as a feeder school for City High-Middle School. At 264 acres (107 ha), Blandford is one of the largest urban nature centers in the United States.[59]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
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%
2010188,036−4.9%
2020198,9175.8%
U.S. Decennial Census[60]
2010[61] 2020[62]

2020 census

Grand Rapids city, Michigan – Demographic Profile
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
Race / Ethnicity Pop 2010[61] Pop 2020[62] % 2010 % 2020
White alone (NH) 110,890 114,290 58.97% 57.46%
Black or African American alone (NH) 37,890 36,493 20.15% 18.35%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) 788 659 0.42% 0.33%
Asian alone (NH) 3,445 4,483 1.83% 2.25%
Pacific Islander alone (NH) 58 70 0.03% 0.04%
Some Other Race alone (NH) 287 916 0.15% 0.46%
Mixed Race/Multi-Racial (NH) 5,421 9,209 2.88% 4.63%
Hispanic or Latino (any race) 29,261 32,797 15.56% 16.49%
Total 188,040 198,917 100.00% 100.00%

Note: The US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos can be of any race.

2010 census

As of the 2010 census,[63] there were 188,036 people, 72,126 households, and 41,015 families residing in the city. The population density was 4,235.1 inhabitants per square mile (1,635.2/km2). There were 80,619 housing units at an average density of 1,815.7 per square mile (701.0/km2). The city's racial makeup was 64.6% White (59.0% Non-Hispanic White[64]), 20.9% African American, 0.7% Native American, 1.9% Asian, 0.1% Pacific Islander, 7.7% from other races, and 4.2% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino residents of any race were 15.6% of the population.[65]

Of the 72,126 households, 31.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 35.5% were married couples living together, 16.4% had a female householder with no husband present, 5.0% had a male householder with no wife present, and 43.1% were non-families. 32.3% of all households were made up of individuals, and 10.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.49 and the average family size was 3.20.

The median age in the city was 30.8 years. 24.7% of residents were under the age of 18; 14.5% were between the ages of 18 and 24; 28.6% were from 25 to 44; 21.2% were from 45 to 64; and 11.1% were 65 years of age or older. The city's gender makeup was 48.7% male and 51.3% female.

2000 census

There were 73,217 households, 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 age distribution shows 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 city's median household income was $37,224, and the median family income was $44,224. Males had a median income of $33,050 versus $26,382 for females. The city's per capita income 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.

Ethnicity

According to a 2007 American Community Survey, the largest ancestry groups in Grand Rapids reported (not including "American") were those of German (23.4% of the population), Dutch (21.2%), Irish (11.4%), English (10.8%), Polish (6.5%), and French (4.1%) heritage.[66]

After the Fall of Saigon, Grand Rapids welcomed thousands of Vietnamese refugees. Local nonprofits helped them settle throughout West Michigan. Special attention was paid to Grand Rapids because of President Gerald R. Ford's Grand Rapids roots. [67]

In recent decades, Grand Rapids and its suburban areas have seen their Latino communities grow. Between 2000 and 2010 the Latino population in Grand Rapids grew from 25,818 to 29,261, increasing over 13% in a decade.[68]

Into the 21st century, the African American population of Grand Rapids continually declined.[69] In 2015, Grand Rapids was rated as the second-worst city for African Americans, behind only Milwaukee to succeed economically based on disparities in employment, income, and home ownership levels.[70] In 2022, The Grand Rapids Press reported that the population of African Americans in the city declined 4% over the decade, with the newspaper writing that gentrification, increasing rent, urban sprawl into the neighboring cities of Kentwood and Wyoming—which experienced increased African American population growth—and New Great Migration trends contributed to the loss of black residents.[69][71] The decline of African American residents occurred primarily in the northeast and southeast areas of the city.[72]

Religion

Grand Rapids has a significant Dutch Reformed population. The Christian Reformed Church in North America (CRCNA) has a large following in Grand Rapids; its denominational offices are on the city's southeast side. The CRCNA has over 230 congregations and almost 100,000 members in Michigan as of 2010.[73] The denomination is concentrated in the western part of the state, where a substantial number of immigrants from the Netherlands settled; most were followers of the Reformed faith who took part in the Secession of 1834.[74] As of 2012, the Christian Reformed Church in North America has nearly 1,100 congregations and over 250,000 members nationwide.[75] The Grand Rapids-Wyoming Metropolitan Area has 149 Christian Reformed Churches with 77,389 members.[76]

 

The Reform Judaism congregation of Temple Emanuel was founded in 1857 and the fifth oldest Reform congregation in the United States.[77] The congregation built its first synagogue in 1882 on the corner of Fountain and Ransom Streets. The current location was constructed in 1952.[78]

Grand Rapids is home to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids, which was created on May 19, 1882, by Pope Leo XIII. The Diocese comprises 176,098 Catholics in West Michigan, 102 parishes, and five high schools: Catholic Central High School, Grand Rapids; Muskegon Catholic Central High School, Muskegon; St. Patrick High School, Portland; Sacred Heart Academy, Grand Rapids; and West Catholic High School, Grand Rapids.[79] David John Walkowiak is the Bishop of Grand Rapids.

The Reformed Church in America (RCA) has about 154 congregations and 76,000 members mainly in Western Michigan,[80] heavily concentrated in the cities in Grand Rapids, Holland, and Zeeland. The denomination's main office is also in Grand Rapids.[81] The Grand Rapids-Wyoming metropolitan area has 86 congregations with almost 49,000 members. The Protestant Reformed Churches in America (PRCA) traces its roots to the First Protestant Reformed Church (Grand Rapids, Michigan) whose pastor was Herman Hoeksema, the founder of the church.[82] A majority of the PRCA's Classis East churches, about 13 congregations, are around Grand Rapids.[76][83][84]

 
Grand Rapids aerial view in the 1930s

The United Reformed Churches in North America has 12 congregations in Grand Rapids area; these congregations form the Classis of Michigan.[85] The Heritage Reformed Congregations' flagship and largest church is in Grand Rapids. The Netherlands Reformed Congregations in North America has 2 churches.[86] The PC(USA) had 12 congregations and 7,000 members in the Grand Rapids-Wyoming Metropolitan statistical area, the United Church of Christ had also 14 congregations and 5,400 members.[76]

The offices of the West Michigan Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church are in the East Hills Neighborhood of Grand Rapids. The West Michigan Annual Conference represents more than 400 local United Methodist churches in the western half of the lower peninsula with approximately 65,000 members in total.[87] Grand Rapids is also home to the United Methodist Community House, whose mission is to increase the ability of children, youth, adults and families to succeed in a diverse community.[88] In 2010, The United Methodist Church had 61 congregations and 21,450 members in the Grand Rapids Metropolitan area.[76]

Economy

Top Employers in Grand Rapids Metro (2019)

Source: The Right Place

Rank Company/Organization #
1 Spectrum Health 25,000
2 Meijer 10,340
3 Mercy Health 8,500
4 Gentex 5,800
5 Gordon Food Service 5,000
6 Amway Corporation 3,791
7 Herman Miller 3,621
8 Perrigo Company 3,500
9 Steelcase Inc. 3,500
10 Farmers Insurance Group 3,500
11 Grand Valley State University 3,306
12 Lacks Enterprises 3,000
13 Grand Rapids Public Schools 2,800
14 Arconic 2,350
15 Hope Network 2,162
16 Metro Health Hospital 2,100
17 Roskam Baking Co. 2,090
18 Fifth Third Bank 2,280
19 Haworth 2,000
20 SpartanNash 2,000
 
A collection of Spectrum Health facilities and affiliates on the Medical Mile.
 
Grand Rapids, Michigan products treemap, 2020

Headquartered in Grand Rapids, Spectrum Health is West Michigan's largest employer, with 25,600 staff and 1,700 physicians in 2017.[89] Spectrum Health's Meijer Heart Center, Lemmen-Holton Cancer Pavilion, and Butterworth Hospital, a level I trauma center, are on the Grand Rapids Medical Mile, which has world-class facilities that focus on the health sciences. They include the Van Andel Research Institute, Grand Valley State University's Cook-DeVos Center for Health Sciences, and the Michigan State University College of Human Medicine medical school's Secchia Center, along with Ferris State University's College of Pharmacy. Nearly a billion dollars has been invested in the Spectrum Health Cancer Pavilion, the Spectrum Health Helen DeVos Children's Hospital, and the expansion to the Van Andel Institute. These facilities have attracted many health science businesses to the area.

Grand Rapids has long been a center for manufacturing, dating back to its original roots in furniture manufacturing. Office furniture manufacturers such as American Seating, Steelcase (and its subsidiaries Coalesse and Turnstone), Haworth, and Herman Miller are based in and around the Grand Rapids area.[90][91][92][93][94][95] In 1881, the Furniture Manufacturers Association (FMA) was organized in Grand Rapids; making it the country's first furniture manufacturing advocacy group.[96] The Kindel Furniture Company[97] and the Hekman Furniture Company[98] have been designing and manufacturing furniture in Grand Rapids since 1912 and 1922 respectively.

The Grand Rapids area is also known for its automobile and aviation manufacturing industries, with GE Aviation Systems having a location in the city.[99]

The Grand Rapids area is home to a number of well-known companies including Alticor/Amway (a multi-level marketing company), Bissell (a privately owned vacuum cleaner and floor care product manufacturer), SpartanNash (a food distributor and grocery store chain), Foremost Insurance Company (a specialty lines insurance company), Meijer (a regional supercenter chain), GE Aviation (formerly Smiths Industries, an aerospace products company), Wolverine World Wide (a designer and manufacturer of shoes, boots and clothing), Universal Forest Products (a building materials company), and Schuler Books & Music, one of the country's largest independent bookstores.[citation needed]

The city is known as a center of Christian publishing, home to Zondervan, Kregel Publications, Eerdmans Publishing and Our Daily Bread Ministries.

The city and its surrounding region house a successful food processing and agribusiness industry, which has experienced a 10-year job growth rate of 45% from 2009-2019. With Michigan being the second most agriculturally diverse state in the nation, the Greater Grand Rapids region is well-known for its fruit production. Due to its proximity to Lake Michigan, the climate is considered especially prime for apple, peach, and blueberry farming. Greater Grand Rapids produces 1/3 of Michigan's total agricultural sales.

In 2010 Grand Rapids was named the "most sustainable midsize city in the U.S." by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Civic Leadership Center and Siemens Corp. Grand Rapids was chosen over finalist cities Davenport, Iowa and Hoover, Alabama.[100] The city has also been named in several other notable rankings since, including:

  • No. 1 Cities with the Most Manufacturing Jobs: Grand Rapids/Kentwood (Smartest Dollar, 2020)[101]
  • No. 1 Mid-Sized Metro for Economic Growth Potential: Grand Rapids (Business Facilities, 2019)[102]
  • No. 1 Top Metro for Sustainable Development: Grand Rapids (Site Selection Magazine, 2019)[103]
  • Top 20 Cities for 7-Year Job Growth: Grand Rapids (Reuters, 2019)[104]

Education

 
The Main Branch of the Grand Rapids Public Library; the Ryerson Building, its oldest wing, opened in 1904

K–12 public education is provided by the Grand Rapids Public Schools (GRPS) as well as a number of charter schools. City High-Middle School, a magnet school for academically talented students in the metropolitan region operated by GRPS, is habitually ranked among the nation's top high schools.[105] Grand Rapids is also home to the oldest co-educational Catholic high school in the United States, Catholic Central High School.[106] National Heritage Academies, which operates charter schools across several states, has its headquarters in Grand Rapids.[107]

Grand Rapids is home to several colleges and universities. The private, religious schools: Aquinas College, Calvin University, Cornerstone University, Grace Christian University, and Kuyper College, each have a campus within the city. The seminaries Calvin Theological Seminary, Grand Rapids Theological Seminary, and Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary are in Grand Rapids. Thomas M. Cooley Law School, a private institution, also has a campus in Grand Rapids. Northwood University, a private university with its main campus in Midland, Michigan, has a satellite campus downtown near the "medical mile." Davenport University, a private, non-profit, multi-location university with 14 campuses statewide, has its main campus just outside Grand Rapids.

As for public tertiary institutions, Grand Rapids Community College (GRCC) maintains a campus downtown and facilities in other parts of the city and surrounding region.

 
The Cook-DeVos Center for Health Sciences, on Grand Rapids' "Medical Mile," is part of Grand Valley State University's Pew Grand Rapids campus[108]

Grand Valley State University, with its main campus in nearby Allendale, continues to develop its presence downtown by expanding its Pew Campus, begun in the 1980s on the west bank of the Grand River.[108] This downtown campus comprises 67 acres (27 ha) in two locations and is home to 12 buildings and three leased spaces.[109] Into the 2000s, Grand Valley State University expanded its medical education programs into Medical Mile, constructing various facilities such as the Cook-DeVos Center for Health Sciences in 2003.[110] The university expanded across I-196 from the Medical Mile into the Belknap Lookout neighborhood in the 2010s, constructing the Raleigh Finkelstein Hall to assist with medical and nursing studies.[111]

Ferris State University has a growing campus downtown, including the Applied Technology Center (operated with GRCC) and the Kendall College of Art and Design, a formerly private institution that now is part of Ferris. Ferris State also has a branch of the College of Pharmacy downtown on the medical mile. Western Michigan University has a long-standing graduate program in the city, with facilities downtown, and in the southeast. The Van Andel Institute, a cancer research institute established in 1996, also resides on the medical mile; the institute established a graduate school in 2005 to train Ph.D. students in cellular, genetic, and molecular biology.[citation needed]

Grand Rapids is home to the Secchia Center medical education building, a $90 million, seven-story, 180,000-square-foot (17,000 m2) facility, at Michigan Street and Division Avenue, part of the Grand Rapids Medical Mile. The building is home to the Grand Rapids Campus of the Michigan State University College of Human Medicine. This campus trains medical students through all four years of their medical education. The state-of-the-art facility includes clinical examination rooms, simulation suites, classrooms, offices, and student areas.[112]

Culture

 
2016 Independence Day celebration on the Grand River.

In 1969, Alexander Calder's abstract sculpture, La Grande Vitesse, which translates from French as "the great swiftness" or more loosely as "grand rapids," was installed downtown on Vandenberg Plaza, the redesigned setting of Grand Rapids City Hall.[113] It was the first work of public art in the United States funded by the National Endowment for the Arts.[114] The sculpture is informally known as "the Calder", and since its installation the city has hosted an annual Festival of the Arts in the area surrounding the sculpture, now known informally as "Calder Plaza".[113][115] During the first weekend in June, several blocks of downtown surrounding the Calder stabile in Vandenberg Plaza are closed to traffic. The 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. Vandenberg Plaza also hosts various ethnic festivals throughout the summer season.

Each October, the city celebrates Polish culture, historically based on the West side of town, with Pulaski Days.

 
The Grand Rapids Public Museum stretches along the Grand River.

In 1973, Grand Rapids hosted Sculpture off the Pedestal, an outdoor exhibition of public sculpture, which assembled works by 13 world-renowned artists, including Mark di Suvero, John Henry, Kenneth Snelson, Robert Morris, John Mason, Lyman Kipp, and Stephen Antonakos, in a single, citywide celebration. Sculpture off the Pedestal was a public/private partnership, including 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.

From 1980 to 2015, Celebration on the Grand was held the weekend after Labor Day, featuring free concerts, fireworks display and food booths. 'Celebration on the Grand' is an event that celebrates life in the Grand River valley.

On November 10, 2004, the grand premiere of the film The Polar Express was held in Grand Rapids. It was adapted from the children's book by author and illustrator Chris Van Allsburg, who lives in the city. His main character in the book (and movie) also lives in Grand Rapids, and the movie was set in the city. The Meijer Gardens created a Polar Express display as part of their larger Christmas Around the World exhibit.

In mid-2004, the Grand Rapids Art Museum (GRAM) began construction of a new, larger building for its collection; it opened in October 2007 at 101 Monroe Center NW. The new building site faces the sculpture Ecliptic, by Maya Lin, at Rosa Parks Circle. The museum was completed in 2007. It was the first new art museum to achieve gold-level LEED certification by the U.S. Green Building Council.

ArtPrize, the world's largest annual art competition determined by public voting, first took place in Grand Rapids from September 23 through October 10, 2009. This event was founded by Rick DeVos, grandson of Amway Corp. co-founder Richard DeVos, who offered $449,000 in cash prizes. A total of 1,262 artists exhibited their work for two weeks, and a total of 334,219 votes were cast. First prize, including a $250,000 cash prize, went to Brooklyn painter Ran Ortner.[116] ArtPrize 2010 was held September 22 through October 10, 2010, with work by 1,713 artists on display. The first prize was awarded to Grand Rapids artist Chris LaPorte.[117] The twelfth annual ArtPrize will be held from September 16 to October 3, 2021.

In 2012, Grand Rapids tied with Asheville, North Carolina for "Beer City USA." The competition was held by casting votes online for cities around the United States. Prominent breweries in the area such as B.O.B's Brewery, Brewery Vivant, Founders Brewing Company, Grand Rapids Brewing Co., Harmony Brewing, HopCat and Schmohz have created the culture necessary to win the award.[118] In 2013, Grand Rapids was the sole winner of "Beer City USA", taking the prize with more votes than those combined for the second-place Kalamazoo, Michigan, and the third-place Asheville, North Carolina.[119]

Tourism

 
The Gerald R. Ford Museum, dedicated in 1981, is located downtown on the west bank of the Grand River. President Ford and First Lady Betty Ford are buried on the museum's grounds.

Grand Rapids is the home of John Ball Zoological Garden, Belknap Hill, and the Gerald R. Ford Museum. He and former First Lady Betty Ford were buried on the site. Significant buildings in the downtown include the DeVos Place Convention Center, Van Andel Arena, the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel, and the JW Marriott Hotel. The Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts is downtown, and houses art exhibits, a movie theater, and the urban clay studio.[120]

Along the Grand River are reconstructed earthwork burial mounds, which were constructed by the prehistoric Hopewell tribe; a fish ladder, and a riverwalk.

Grand Rapids is 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 include its main building, 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. The latter held the museum and planetarium before 1994. Since the late 20th century, the museum has hosted notable exhibitions, including one on the Dead Sea Scrolls, and The Quest for Immortality: the Treasures of Ancient Egypt. A non-profit institution, it is owned and managed by the Public Museum of Grand Rapids Foundation.

 
An example of Châteauesque architecture in the Heritage Hill Historic District, a neighborhood immediately east of downtown

Heritage Hill, a neighborhood directly east of downtown, is one of the largest urban historic districts in the country. The first "neighborhood" of Grand Rapids, its 1,300 homes date from 1848 and represent more than 60 architectural styles. Of particular significance is the Meyer May House, a Prairie-style home Frank Lloyd Wright designed in 1908.[121] It was commissioned by local merchant Meyer May, who operated a men's clothing store (May's of Michigan).

The house is now owned and operated by Steelcase Corporation. Steelcase manufactured the furniture for the Johnson Wax Building in Racine, Wisconsin, which was also designed by Wright and is recognized as a landmark building. Because of those ties, Steelcase purchased and restored the property in the 1980s. The restoration has been heralded as one of the most accurate and complete of any Wright restoration. The home is used by Steelcase for special events and is open to the public for tours.

 
Space Statue at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan

Grand Rapids is home to many theaters and stages, including the newly reconstructed Civic Theatre (also known as the Meijer Majestic), the city's largest theater; DeVos Hall, and the convertible Van Andel Arena. Further east of downtown is the historic Wealthy Theatre. Studio 28, the first megaplex in the United States, is in Grand Rapids; it reopened in 1988 with a seating capacity of 6,000.[122] The megaplex ceased operations on November 23, 2008.[123][124] The Grand Rapids company also owns many theaters around West Michigan.

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 American sculptors as Mark di Suvero and Alexander Calder, and French artists Edgar Degas and Auguste Rodin. The Gardens' amphitheater plays host to numerous concerts each summer, featuring such acts as Jonny Lang, The Pointer Sisters, Lyle Lovett, Cowboy Junkies, and B.B. King. The Gardens were mentioned in Patricia Schultz's book 1,000 Places to See Before You Die.[125]

In 2014, Grand Rapids was named the No. 1 U.S. travel destination by Lonely Planet.[126] In 2016, The New York Times ranked Grand Rapids 20th on the 52 Places to Go in 2016 list.[127]

Grand Rapids' prominent craft beer culture has continued to garner the city national and international recognition in recent years, making it a destination for increasing numbers of tourists. In 2019, CNN Travel named Grand Rapids one of the world's "15 Best Beer Cities." The article made special mention of Founders Brewing Company, Brewery Vivant, and The Mitten Brewing Company on the city's West Side.[128]

Entertainment and performing arts

Grand Rapids has several popular concert venues in which numerous bands have performed, including 20 Monroe Live, the DAAC, the Intersection, DeVos Performance Hall, Van Andel Arena, Royce Auditorium in St. Cecilia Music Center, Forest Hills Fine Arts Center, The Pyramid Scheme, and the Deltaplex.

The Schubert Male Chorus of Grand Rapids was founded by Henry C. Post on November 19, 1883; the chorus continues to perform a variety of music.

The Grand Rapids Symphony, founded in 1930, is the largest performing arts organization in Grand Rapids with a roster of about 50 full-time and 30 part-time musicians. In addition to its own concert series, the orchestra under music director Marcelo Lehninger accompanies productions by Grand Rapids Ballet and Opera Grand Rapids, presenting more than 400 performances a year.[129]

The Grand Rapids Barbershop Chapter Great Lakes Chorus is an all-male a cappella barbershop harmony chorus, including quartets. It is one of the oldest chapters in the Barbershop Harmony Society (formally known as the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America, or SPEBSQSA). The Grand Rapids chapter organized on November 1, 1939, for quartet singers; it is credited for holding the first society-sanctioned quartet contest in the "Michigan District" (now Pioneer District) in March 1941. In 1944 the Grand Rapids Chapter is credited with having the first International Quartet champions, "The Harmony Halls." In 1947 the Great Lakes Chorus (then called the Grand Rapids Chorus) was founded. In 1953 the first International Chorus Competition was held, and the Great Lakes Chorus took First Place, the first "International Convention Championship Chorus," under the direction of Robert Weaver.[130] The chorus is still very active as a non-profit singing for community, competition, and contracted performances.

Grand Rapids Ballet Company was founded in 1971 and is one of Michigan's few professional ballet companies.[131] The ballet company is on Ellsworth Avenue in the Heartside neighborhood, where it moved in 2000. In 2007, it expanded its facility by adding the LEED-certified Peter Wege Theater.[131]

Opera Grand Rapids, founded in 1966, is the state's longest-running professional company.[132] In February 2010, the opera moved into a new facility in the Fulton Heights neighborhood.[133]

A January 21, 2011 Newsweek article listed Grand Rapids as a "dying city" because of its drop in population from 2000 to 2009.[134] Director Rob Bliss and producer Scott Seven filmed a vigorous, 5,000-person community response titled The Grand Rapids LipDub, released May 26, which was the first-ever citywide lip dub video; film critic Roger Ebert described it as "the greatest music video ever made".[135] The video held the world record for largest lip dub for two years and has amassed over 5 million views on YouTube; PRNewswire awarded its producers the "Earnie Award" for Best Use of Video in Social Media.[136]

Grand Rapids is also home to Art Prize, the largest art exposition in the U.S. Art Prize began in 2009 with the over 200,000 visitors and has since doubled the number of visitors it receives each year. Artprize receives many international visitors each year and is still growing with over 1,500 entries from 48 countries across 200+ venues in 2015.[137][138]

Sports

 
Van Andel Arena, a popular sports venue in Grand Rapids.

Grand Rapids is home to several professional and semi-professional sports teams. The West Michigan Whitecaps of the Midwest League play at LMCU Ballpark and won the Championship Series six times (1996, 1998, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2015) and had the best regular-season record six times (1997, 1998, 2000, 2006, 2007, 2017). The Whitecaps are the Class High A affiliate of the Detroit Tigers. The Grand Rapids Griffins, an ice hockey team of the American Hockey League, play at the Van Andel Arena and won the IHL Fred A. Huber Trophy in 2001, and were AHL Calder Cup Champions in the 2012–2013 and 2016–2017 seasons. The Griffins are the AHL affiliate of the Detroit Red Wings. Grand Rapids Gold is an NBA G League basketball team that plays at the Van Andel Arena, with the team being an affiliate of the Denver Nuggets. Midwest United FC is a United Women's Soccer soccer club that plays at Aquinas College and won a national championship in the 2017 season.

Former professional sports teams include the Grand Rapids Danger, Grand Rapids Dragonfish, Grand Rapids Cyclones, Grand Rapids Rampage, Grand Rapids Hoops (Grand Rapids Mackers), Grand Rapids Flight, Grand Rapids Owls (1977–80), Grand Rapids Rockets, and Grand Rapids Chicks, Grand Rapids Blazers and the Grand Rapids Shamrocks. The Grand Rapids Blazers won the United Football League Championship in 1961.

Each year the Amway River Bank Run is held in downtown Grand Rapids. It draws participants from around the world; in 2010 there were over 22,000 participants. The Grand Rapids Marathon is held in downtown Grand Rapids in mid-October, usually on the same weekend as the Detroit Marathon. Special Olympics Michigan launched a campaign in 2021 to build a publicly-funded $20 million facility called the Unified Sports and Inclusion Center that is destined to be the largest Special Olympics facility in the world.[139]

Amateur sporting organizations in the area include Grand Raggidy Roller Derby WFTDA league, Grand Rapids Rowing Association,[140] Grand Rapids Rugby Club,[141] and the West Michigan Wheelchair Sports Association.[142] The West Michigan Sports Commission was the host organizing committee for the inaugural State Games of Michigan, held in Grand Rapids from June 25 to 27, 2010.[143][144]

Media

The Grand Rapids Press is a daily newspaper, while Advance Newspapers publishes a group of weekly papers that provide community-based news. Gemini Media 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. Two free monthly entertainment guides are distributed: REVUE,[145] which covers music and the arts, and RECOIL, which covers music and offers Onion-style satire. The Rapidian is an online-based citizen journalism project funded by grants from the Knight Foundation and local community foundations.[146] It is reprinted or cited by other local media outlets.[147]

Grand Rapids, combined with nearby Kalamazoo and Battle Creek, was ranked in 2019 as the 45th-largest television market in the U.S. by Nielsen Media Research.[148] The market is served by stations affiliated with major American networks including: WLLA (channel 64, Independent), WOOD-TV (channel 8, NBC), WOTV (channel 41, ABC), WZZM-TV (channel 13, ABC), WXMI (channel 17, Fox), WXSP-CD (channel 15, MyNetworkTV) and Kalamazoo-based WWMT (channel 3, CBS), along with surrounding stations based from Muskegon and Battle Creek. WGVU-TV is the area's PBS member station.

The Grand Rapids area is served by 16 AM radio stations and 28 FM stations.[149]

Public safety

Law enforcement

 

The Grand Rapids Police Department is tasked with law enforcement in Grand Rapids and has been serving the city since 1871.[150] Since 2001, the police department has been located at a renovated Herpolsheimer's department store at 1 Monroe Center NW.[151][152] In 2011, the Kent County Dispatch Authority consolidated the dispatch operations of the Grand Rapids Police Department and the Wyoming Police Department, the public safety department of Grand Rapids' suburb, Wyoming.[153]

On April 4, 2022, Officer Christopher Schurr of the Grand Rapids Police Department killed a 26-year-old black man, Patrick Lyoya, during a traffic stop in self defense. Lyoya was heavily intoxicated, resisting arrest, and had fought for control of the officers taser. [154] The department later released footage of the killing on April 13, spawning a demonstration with hundreds of protestors demonstrating throughout the city.[155] Lyoya was a refugee from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, who had arrived in Michigan with his family in 2014, and had accumulated a substantial record of criminal activity.[156]

Crime

The homicide rate in Grand Rapids was at its highest in the early 1990s, with the highest number of homicides being 34 in 1993.[157][158] The average annual number of homicides in Grand Rapids between 2010 and 2020 was 12.4.[159] In 2014, Grand Rapids experienced the lowest homicide rate in fifty years, with six murders occurring that year.[160] By the end of the 2010s, the number of homicides began to increase, with a total of 17 occurring in 2019.[159]

In 2020 Grand Rapids had 38 homicides. This is the highest number ever recorded in Grand Rapids.[161] In recent years, Grand Rapids has seen an increase in auto thefts; in both 2020 and 2021 there were over 800 cars stolen in Grand Rapids.[162]

Government and politics

 
Calder Plaza, where the Grand Rapids City Hall is located.

Under Michigan law, Grand Rapids is a home rule city and adopted a city charter in 1916 providing for the council-manager form of municipal government.[163][164] Under this system, the political responsibilities are divided between an elected City Commission, an elected City Comptroller 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 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. The elected City Comptroller verifies financial policies and budgets are followed and prepares the annual financial report.[163] The city levies an income tax of 1.5 percent on residents and 0.75 percent on nonresidents.[165]

Mayor

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 a commissioner.[163] The mayor, although a weak mayor per the system of government, spends approximately 20 hours per week on mayoral activities from serving on various oversight boards and attending conferences.[164]

Three-term 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 he would not run for re-election.[166] The voters kept the position part-time, and George Heartwell succeeded him in January 2004.[167] In 2014 a narrowly-approved ballot initiative imposed a limit of two terms on the mayor and city commissioners, preventing Heartwell from seeking a fourth term.[168] Commissioner Rosalynn Bliss, also unable to run for another term in that position, was then elected mayor, receiving a clear majority in the August 2015 primary.

Politics

The city proper and inner-suburbs favor the Democratic Party, while outer-suburbs of Grand Rapids tend to support the Republican Party.[169][170]

Traditionally, Grand Rapids supported the Republican Party.[169][170] The city is the center of the 3rd Congressional District, represented by Democrat Hillary Scholten.[171] Former President Gerald Ford represented the district (then numbered as the 5th) from 1949 to 1973 and is buried on the grounds of his Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids. The city and its suburbs are home to several major donors to the national Republican Party, including the DeVos family and Peter Secchia, former Ambassador to Italy.[citation needed]

Both representatives in the Michigan State House of Representatives are Democrats, and the city's State Senate seat was taken by a Democrat in 2018. In the eight most recent presidential elections, Democratic candidates Bill Clinton, Al Gore, John Kerry, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and Joe Biden won a majority or plurality of votes in the city of Grand Rapids. The last Republican candidate for president to carry the city was George H. W. Bush in 1988.[172]

Transportation

Transportation history

Roadways

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

Railroad

The Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad, which began service in 1858, was the first railroad into the city. In 1869, the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway 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. Until the mid-1950s Grand Rapids Union Station was a hub for passenger trains from different directions in Michigan and beyond.

Street railways

 
Map of Grand Rapids street car and railway lines in 1921

Early railway transportation in Grand Rapids began in 1865, to connect with the Detroit–Milwaukee train station. Over time, several independent lines were opened and operated as well. The railways were combined into one company, Street and Railway Company, in 1883. Competition within the city soon sprang up. In February 1885, the Valley City Street and Cable Company was formalized and became operational in 1888. Valley City Street and Cable Company brought the first cable cars to Grand Rapids in order to bring transportation service to Michigan and Lyon street hills. The lack of a connection between the two companies caused confusion among riders. This led to the unifying of the two companies in 1890 under the name Consolidated Street Railway Company.

Under the Consolidated Street Railway Company, new electric lines were introduced. After struggling for ten years, Consolidated Street Railway Company was bought out in 1900 by E. W. Clark Company of Philadelphia and was renamed the Grand Rapids Railway Company. The change brought many improvements to the railway service, including heavier tracks, double cars and expanded service which bolstered a healthy ridership that would last for many years. In 1925, the Grand Rapids Railway Company suffered a serious setback when a fire destroyed 57 streetcars. The process of rebuilding brought to light a lack of streetcar improvements within the industry. With Grand Rapids at the forefront, industry-wide improvements were made to streetcar design and the new modern streetcars were introduced into the city in 1927.

The onset of the Great Depression in 1929 crippled the streetcar industry in Grand Rapids. Streetcars were phased out in favor of buses. The process was hastened by a city-wide street widening, which would have required a resetting of the tracks. By 1934 buses had taken over all of the systems, and in 1935 the last streetcar in Grand Rapids made its final run. The Grand Rapids Railway Company sold its assets and re-consolidated as Grand Rapids Motor Coach Company in 1937 after declaring bankruptcy. It retained some interest in Ramona Park until their closure in 1950.[173][174][175][176][177]

Air transportation

Grand Rapids was home to one of the first regularly scheduled passenger airlines in the United States when Stout Air Services began flights from the old Grand Rapids airport to Detroit (Ford Airport in Dearborn, Michigan), on July 31, 1926.[178]

Major highways

 
A view looking north of Grand Rapids: US 131 runs vertically through the center of the image while interchanges are visible with I-196 in the center and I-96 near the top.

  I-96 runs along the northern and northeastern sides of the city, linking with Muskegon to the west and Lansing and Detroit, Michigan, to the east
  I-196, also named the Gerald R. Ford Freeway, runs east–west through the city, connecting to I-96 just east of Grand Rapids and I-94 in Benton Township
  I-296, an unsigned route running concurrently with US 131 between I-96 and I-196
  US 131 runs north–south through the city, linking with Kalamazoo to the south and Cadillac to the north
  M-6 is the Paul B. Henry Freeway running along the south side connecting I-96 and I-196
  M-11 runs along Ironwood/Remembrance Road, Wilson Avenue, and 28th Street
  M-21 is Fulton Street to the east
  M-37 follows Alpine Avenue to the north, I-96, East Beltline Avenue and Broadmoor Avenue to the south
  M-44 is East Beltline north of I-96
 
 
Conn. M-44 runs along Plainfield Avenue
  M-45 follows Lake Michigan Drive west toward Allendale and Lake Michigan
  A-45 is Old US 131 south of 28th Street

Mass transit

Bus

 

The Interurban Transit Partnership, which brands itself as The Rapid, provides public bus transportation. Transportation is also provided by the DASH buses: the "Downtown Area Shuttle." DASH bus rides are free.[179] These provide transportation to and from the parking lots in the city of Grand Rapids to designated loading and unloading spots around the city. The area's Greyhound Bus terminal is integrated into the Central Station of the Rapid, simplifying transfers between Greyhound and local buses.

Indian Trails provides daily intercity bus service of varying frequencies between Grand Rapids and Petoskey, Michigan,[180] between Grand Rapids and Benton Harbor, Michigan,[181] and between Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo, Michigan[182] with intermediate stops.

In August 2014, the SilverLine opened, Michigan's first bus rapid transit line, an express bus line designed to function like a light rail system.[183] There are plans in the works to add more express routes, secondary stations, a streetcar and dedicated (exclusive) highway lanes.[184]

Air

Commercial air service to Grand Rapids is provided by Gerald R. Ford International Airport (GRR). Eight passenger airlines and two cargo airlines operate over 150 daily flights to 34 nonstop destinations across the United States. International service was formerly operated to Toronto, Canada by Air Canada Express. The airport was formerly named Kent County International Airport before gaining its present name in 1999.[citation needed]

The first regularly scheduled air service in the United States was between Grand Rapids and Detroit (actually Dearborn's Ford Airport) on a Ford-Stout monoplane named Miss Grand Rapids, which began on July 26, 1926. Delta Air Lines continues to operate this route today to their hub at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport (DTW).[citation needed]

Rail

 
Amtrak train at Grand Rapids station

Amtrak provides direct train service to Chicago from the passenger station via the Pere Marquette line.[185][186] Freight service is provided by CSX, the Grand Elk Railroad, Marquette Rail, and the Grand Rapids Eastern Railroad.

Sister cities

Grand Rapids' sister cities are:[187]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Official records for Grand Rapids kept June 1892 to December 1940 at downtown, at the first Grand Rapids Airport some 4 mi (6.4 km) south of downtown from January 1941 to November 23, 1963, and at Gerald Ford Int'l since its opening on November 24, 1963. For more information, see Threadex.[52]

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Further reading

  • Bratt, Peter A. (2010). "Renewing a Grand Center: Postwar Planning in Grand Rapids, Michigan: 1949 to 1959". Michigan Historical Review. 36 (2): 126–158. doi:10.1353/mhr.2010.0034. ISSN 2327-9672. Retrieved via Project Muse.
  • Carron, Christian G. (1998). Grand Rapids Furniture: The Story of America's Furniture City. Grand Rapids, MI: Grand Rapids Public Museum.
  • Fernández, Delia (Spring 2013). "Becoming Latino: Mexican and Puerto Rican Community Formation in Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1926–1964". Michigan Historical Review. 39: 71–100. doi:10.5342/michhistrevi.39.1.0071.
  • Horowitz, Herschel S. (1989). "Grand Rapids: The Public Health Story". Journal of Public Health Dentistry. Wiley. 49 (1): 62–63. doi:10.1111/j.1752-7325.1989.tb02026.x. ISSN 0022-4006. PMID 2642968.
  • Jelks, Randal Maurice (2006). African Americans in the Furniture City: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Grand Rapids. University of Illinois Press.
  • Lewis, Norma, ed. (2008). Grand Rapids: Furniture City. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-5200-2. OCLC 228417444.
  • Lunn, Mike; Pasch, Nicole; Schiebold, John (January 1, 2017). "Collaborating for Success in Grand Rapids, Michigan". Proceedings of the Water Environment Federation. Water Environment Federation. 2017 (9): 3590–3596. doi:10.2175/193864717822157973. ISSN 1938-6478.
  • Olson, Gordon L. (1992). A Grand Rapids sampler. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Grand Rapids Historical Commission. ISBN 0-9617708-3-X. OCLC 26740168.
  • Robinson, Todd E. (2013). A City Within a City: The Black Freedom Struggle in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  • Scott, David B. (1989). "Evolution of the Grand Rapids Water Flouridation Project". Journal of Public Health Dentistry. Wiley. 49 (1): 59–61. doi:10.1111/j.1752-7325.1989.tb02025.x. ISSN 0022-4006. PMID 2642967.

External links

  • Official website
  • Grand Rapids/Kent County Convention & Visitors Bureau
  • Grand Rapids Area Chamber of Commerce
  • Grand Rapids Historical Commission Online Archive

grand, rapids, michigan, grand, rapids, redirects, here, other, uses, grand, rapids, disambiguation, confused, with, rapids, michigan, grand, rapids, city, county, seat, kent, county, state, michigan, 2020, census, city, population, which, ranks, second, most,. Grand Rapids redirects here For other uses see Grand Rapids disambiguation Not to be confused with Big Rapids Michigan Grand Rapids is a city and county seat of Kent County in the U S state of Michigan 4 At the 2020 census the city had a population of 198 917 5 which ranks it as the second most populated city in the state after Detroit Grand Rapids is the central city of the Grand Rapids metropolitan area which has a population of 1 087 592 and a combined statistical area population of 1 383 918 2 Grand RapidsCityCity of Grand RapidsImages from top to bottom left to right downtown cityscape Meyer May House Gerald R Ford Presidential Museum La Grande Vitesse pedestrian bridge over the Grand River Van Andel Arena Van Andel Institute on the Medical MileFlagSealLogoNicknames GR River City Beer City Furniture CityMotto s Motu Viget Latin English Strength in activity Location within Kent CountyGrand RapidsLocation within the state of MichiganShow map of MichiganGrand RapidsLocation within the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 42 57 40 N 85 39 20 W 42 96111 N 85 65556 W 42 96111 85 65556 Coordinates 42 57 40 N 85 39 20 W 42 96111 N 85 65556 W 42 96111 85 65556Country United StatesState MichiganCountyKentFounded1826Incorporated1838 village 1850 city Government TypeCity commission MayorRosalynn Bliss D ManagerMark Washington ClerkJoel Hondorp R Area 1 City45 63 sq mi 118 19 km2 Land44 78 sq mi 115 97 km2 Water0 86 sq mi 2 22 km2 1 92 Elevation640 ft 200 m Population 2023 City202 181 RankUS 115thMI 2nd Density4 442 49 sq mi 1 715 26 km2 Urban605 666 US 70th Urban density2 207 6 sq mi 852 3 km2 Metro1 077 370 2 US 52nd CSA1 412 470 2 US 42nd DemonymGrand RapidianTime zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP Codes49501 49508 49510 49514 49516 49518 49523 49525 49534 49546 49548 49555 49560 49588 49594Area code616FIPS code26 34000GNIS feature ID0627105 3 WebsiteGrandRapidsMI govSituated along the Grand River approximately 25 miles 40 km east of Lake Michigan it is the economic and cultural hub of West Michigan as well as one of the fastest growing cities in the Midwest 6 A historic furniture manufacturing center Grand Rapids is home to five of the world s leading office furniture companies and is nicknamed Furniture City Other nicknames include River City and more recently Beer City the latter given by USA Today 7 and adopted by the city as a brand 8 The city and surrounding communities are economically diverse based in the health care information technology automotive aviation and consumer goods manufacturing industries among others Grand Rapids was the childhood home of U S President Gerald Ford who is buried with his wife Betty on the grounds of the Gerald R Ford Presidential Museum in the city 9 The city s Gerald R Ford International Airport and Gerald R Ford Freeway are named after him Contents 1 History 1 1 Native American settlement 1 2 Nineteenth century European American settlement 1 2 1 Trading post 1 2 2 European settlement 1 2 3 Incorporation and cityhood 1 3 Twentieth century Furniture City 1 3 1 Strike of 1911 1 3 2 Move to retail and suburbanization 2 Geography 2 1 Neighborhoods 2 2 Topography 2 3 Climate 2 4 Cityscape 3 Demographics 3 1 2020 census 3 2 2010 census 3 3 2000 census 3 4 Ethnicity 3 5 Religion 4 Economy 5 Education 6 Culture 6 1 Tourism 6 2 Entertainment and performing arts 6 3 Sports 6 4 Media 7 Public safety 7 1 Law enforcement 7 2 Crime 8 Government and politics 8 1 Mayor 8 2 Politics 9 Transportation 9 1 Transportation history 9 1 1 Roadways 9 1 2 Railroad 9 1 3 Street railways 9 1 4 Air transportation 9 2 Major highways 9 3 Mass transit 9 3 1 Bus 9 3 2 Air 9 3 3 Rail 10 Sister cities 11 See also 12 Explanatory notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Grand Rapids Michigan Native American settlement Edit A 1772 engraving showing Odawa attire of the period For thousands of years succeeding cultures of indigenous peoples occupied the area Over 2000 years ago people associated with the Hopewell culture occupied the Grand River Valley 10 Later a tribe from the Ottawa River traveled to the Grand River valley fighting three battles with the Prairie Indians who were established in the area 11 The tribe later split with the Chippewas settling in the northern lower peninsula the Pottawatomies staying south of the Kalamazoo River and the Odawa staying in central Michigan 11 By the late 1600s the Odawa who occupied territory around the Great Lakes and spoke one of the numerous Algonquian languages moved into the Grand Rapids area and founded several villages along the Grand River 10 12 The Odawa established on the river which they called O wash ta nong or far away water due to the river s length where they raised corn melons pumpkins and beans to which they added game of the woods and the fish from the streams 11 In 1740 an Odawa man who would later be known as Chief Noonday or Nowaquakezick and become the future chief of the Odawa was born 13 14 Between 1761 and 1763 Chief Pontiac visited the area annually gathering over 3 000 natives and asking them to volunteer to lay siege to the British fort in Detroit which would culminate into Pontiac s War 11 By the end of the 1700s there were an estimated 1 000 Odawa in the Kent County area 11 Nineteenth century European American settlement Edit Trading post Edit After the French established territories in Michigan Jesuit missionaries and traders traveled down Lake Michigan and its tributaries 11 At the start of the 19th century European fur traders mostly French Canadian and Metis and missionaries established posts in the area among the Odawa They generally lived in peace trading European metal and textile goods for fur pelts In 1806 white trader Joseph La Framboise and his Metis wife Magdelaine La Framboise traveled by canoe from Mackinac and established the first trading post in West Michigan in present day Grand Rapids on the banks of the Grand River near what is now Ada Township the junction of the Grand and Thornapple Rivers They were French speaking and Roman Catholic They likely both spoke Odawa Magdelaine s maternal ancestral language In the fall of 1806 Joseph was fatally stabbed by a member of the Potawatomi tribe named Nequat Joseph had been with his family and an entourage of voyageurs traveling between Grand River and Grand Rapids The Indian had insisted that Joseph trade liquor with him When Joseph refused the Indian left only to return at dusk when Joseph who faithfully performed the ritual of Angelus every day at that time was in prayer The Indian stabbed the trader fatally wounding him leaving Magdelaine suddenly a widow at age twenty four 15 The next spring a delegation from the Potawatomi tribe brought the offending Indian Nequat before Magdelaine for her sentence upon him for the death of her husband It was their tradition for the victim s family to avenge deaths within that tribe Magdelaine refused to sentence him and in an act of forgiveness told the Potawatomi tribe members to let him go and that God would be his judge Though Magdelaine had forgiven Nequat the tribe had not Nequat s body was found stabbed with his own knife the next season 16 After the murder of her husband in 1806 while en route to Grand Rapids Magdelaine La Framboise carried on the trade business expanding fur trading posts to the west and north creating a good reputation among the American Fur Company La Framboise whose mother was Odawa and father French later merged her successful operations with the American Fur Company 11 By 1810 Chief Noonday established the village of Bock a tinck on the northwest side of present day Grand Rapids near Bridge Street with about 500 Odawa though the population would grow to over 1 000 on occasion 13 14 During the War of 1812 Noonday was allied with Tecumseh during the Battle of the Thames Tecumseh was killed in this battle and Noonday inherited his tomahawk and hat 17 A second village existed lower down the river with its center located at the intersection of what is now Watson Street and National Avenue with Chief Black Skin known by his native name as Muck i ta oska or Mukatasha and was son of Chief Noonday leading the village 14 European settlement Edit In 1820 General Lewis Cass who was on his way to negotiate the first Treaty of Chicago with a group of 42 men commissioned Charles Christopher Trowbridge to establish missions for Native Americans in the Grand River Valley to evangelize Native Americans 18 14 In 1821 the Council of Three Fires signed the first Treaty of Chicago ceding to the United States all lands in Michigan Territory south of the Grand River except for several small reservations and required a native to prepare land in the area to establish a mission 14 19 The treaty also included One hundred thousand dollars to satisfy sundry individuals in behalf of whom reservations were asked which the Commissioners refused to grant of which Joseph La Framboise received 1 000 dollars immediately and 200 dollars a year for life 19 Madeline La Framboise retired the trading post to Rix Robinson in 1821 and returned to Mackinac 11 That year Grand Rapids was described as being the home of an Odawa village of about 50 to 60 huts on the north side of the river near the 5th Ward with Kewkishkam being the village chief and Chief Noonday being the chief of the Odawa 18 The first permanent European American settler in the Grand Rapids area was Isaac McCoy a Baptist minister 18 In 1823 McCoy Paget a Frenchman who brought along a Native American pupil and a government worker traveled to Grand Rapids from Carey Mission near present day Niles Michigan to arrange a mission they called the Thomas Mission though negotiations fell through with the group returning to the Carey Mission for the Potawatomi on the St Joseph River 18 14 The government worker stayed into 1824 to establish a blacksmith shop though the shop was burned down by the Odawa 14 Later in May 1824 Baptist missionary Reverend Leonard Slater traveled with two settlers to Grand Rapids to perform missionary work though the group began to return to the Carey Mission after only three days due to threats 18 14 While the group was returning they encountered Chief Noonday who asked for the group to stay and establish a mission believing that the Odawa adapting to European customs was the only chance for them to stay in the area 14 The winter of 1824 was difficult with Slater s group having to resupply and return before the spring 14 18 Chief Noonday deciding to be an example for the Odawa chose to be baptized by Slater in the Grand River though some of his followers believed that this was a wrestling match between the two that Slater won 14 Slater then erected the first settler structures in Grand Rapids a log cabin for himself and a log schoolhouse 18 In 1825 McCoy returned and established a missionary station 20 He represented the settlers who began arriving from Ohio New York and New England the Yankee states of the Northern Tier A sketch of Grand Rapids in 1831 The collection of houses across the river on its west side is the Baptist mission The three buildings in the middle right are Louis Campau s trading post Shortly after Detroit born Louis Campau known as the official founder of Grand Rapids was convinced by fur trader William Brewster who was in a rivalry with the American Fur Company to travel to Grand Rapids and establish trade there 18 In 1826 Campau built his cabin trading post and blacksmith shop on the south bank of the Grand River near the rapids stating the Native Americans in the area were friendly and peaceable 18 Campau returned to Detroit then returned a year later with his wife and 5 000 of trade goods to trade with the Odawa and Ojibwa with the only currency being fur 18 Campau s younger brother Touissant would often assist him with trade and other tasks at hand 18 Lucius Lyon a Yankee Protestant who would later become a rival to Campau was contracted by the federal government to survey the Grand River Valley in the fall of 1830 and in the first quarter of 1831 the federal survey of the Northwest Territory reached the Grand River with Lyon using a surveyor s compass and chain to set the boundaries for Kent County named after prominent New York jurist James Kent 18 14 In 1833 a land office was established in White Pigeon Michigan with Campau and fellow settler Luther Lincoln seeking land in the Grand River valley 18 Lincoln purchased land in what is now known as Grandville while Campau became perhaps the most important settler when he bought 72 acres 291 000 m2 from the federal government for 90 and named his tract Grand Rapids Over time it developed as today s main downtown business district 10 In the spring of 1833 Campau sold to Joel Guild who traveled from New York a plot of land for 25 00 with Guild building the first frame structure in Grand Rapids which is now where McKay Tower stands 18 21 Guild later became the postmaster with mail at the time being delivered monthly from the Gull Lake Michigan to Grand Rapids 18 Grand Rapids in 1833 was only a few acres of land cleared on each side of the Grand River with oak trees planted in light sandy soil standing between what is now Lyon Street and Fulton Street 18 The large framed building constructed by Campau in 1834 seen in this image converted into part of the Rathbun House By 1834 the settlement had become more organized Rev Turner had established a school on the east side of the river with children on the west side of the river being brought to school every morning by a Native American on a canoe who would shuttle them across the river Multiple events happened at Guild s frame structure including the first marriage in the city one that involved his daughter Harriet Guild and Barney Burton as well as the first town meeting that had nine voters It was also this year Campau began constructing his own frame building the largest at the time near present day Rosa Parks Circle 18 In 1835 many settlers arrived in the area with the population growing to about 50 people including its first doctor Dr Wilson who was supplied with equipment from Campau 18 Lucius Lyon using his knowledge from surveying the area returned to Grand Rapids to purchase the rest of the prime land and called his plot the Village of Kent 18 14 When Lyon and his partner N O Sergeant returned after their purchase they arrived along with a posse of men carrying shovels and picks intending to build a mill race The group arrived to the music of a bugle which startled the settlement with Chief Noonday offering Campau assistance to drive back Lyon s posse believing they were invaders Also that year Rev Andrew Vizoisky a Hungarian native educated in Catholic institutions in Austria arrived presiding over the Catholic mission in the area until his death in 1852 18 That year Campau Rix Robinson Rev Slater and the husband of Chief Noonday s daughter Meccissininni traveled to Washington D C to speak about the purchase of Odawa land on the west side of the river with President Andrew Jackson 13 Jackson was originally unimpressed with Meccissininni though Meccissininni who often acquired white customs asked Jackson for a similar suit to the one the president was wearing While later wearing his suit that was made similar to Jackson s Meccissininni also unknowingly imitated Jackson s hat placing a piece of weed in it which impressed Jackson since it symbolized mourning the death of his wife 13 John Ball representing a group of New York land speculators bypassed Detroit for a better deal in Grand Rapids traveling to the settlement in 1836 Ball declared the Grand River valley the promised land or at least the most promising one for my operations 22 That year the first steamboat was constructed on the Grand River named the Gov Mason though the ship wrecked two years later in Muskegon 18 Yankee migrants primarily English speaking settlers and others began migrating from New York and New England through the 1830s Ancestors of these people included not only English colonists but people of mixed ethnic Dutch Mohawk French Canadian and French Huguenot descent from the colonial period in New York However after 1837 the area saw poor times with many of the French returning to their places of origin with poverty hitting the area for the next few years 18 The first Grand Rapids newspaper The Grand River Times was printed on April 18 1837 describing the village s attributes stating 18 Though young in its improvements the site of this village has long been known and esteemed for its natural advantages It was here that the Indian traders long since made their great depot The Grand River Times continued saying the village had grown quickly from a few French families to about 1 200 residents the Grand River was one of the most important and delightful to be found in the country and described the changing Native American culture in the area 18 Incorporation and cityhood Edit An 1868 pictorial map of Grand Rapids By 1838 the settlement incorporated as a village and encompassed approximately 75 square miles 1 9 km2 23 An outcropping of gypsum where Plaster Creek enters the Grand River was known to the Native American inhabitants of the area Pioneer geologist Douglass Houghton commented on this find in 1838 24 25 Settlers began to mine this outcrop in 1841 initially in open cast mines but later underground mines as well Gypsum was ground locally for use as a soil amendment known as land plaster The first formal census in 1845 recorded a population of 1 510 26 and an area of 4 square miles 10 km2 26 The city of Grand Rapids was incorporated April 2 1850 27 It was officially established on May 2 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 area totaled 10 5 square miles 27 km2 23 Through the 1850s the land containing forty six Indian mounds located on the west side between Bridge Street and the Grand River to the south were sold by the United States government with the mounds being destroyed to fill low lying land in the area while the Native American artifacts contained within were taken or sold to museums including the Grand Rapids Public Museum 28 In October 1870 Grand Rapids became a desired location for immigrants with about 120 Swedes arriving in the United States to travel and create a colony in the area in one week 29 During the second half of the nineteenth century the city became a major lumbering center processing timber harvested in the region Logs were floated down the Grand River to be milled in the city and shipped via the Great Lakes The city became a center of fine wood products as well By the end of the century it was established as the premier furniture manufacturing city of the United States 30 It was the Centennial Exposition of 1876 in Philadelphia that brought attention to Grand Rapids furniture on the national stage providing a new growing industry to help the city recover from the Panic of 1873 31 32 In 1880 the country s first hydro electric generator was put to use on the city s west side 33 Twentieth century Furniture City EditDue to its flourishing furniture industry Grand Rapids began being recognized as Furniture City Grand Rapids was also an early center for the automobile industry as the Austin Automobile Company operated there from 1901 until 1921 A 1915 panorama when the furniture industry peaked before the Great Depression Furniture companies included the William A Berkey Company and its successors Baker Furniture Company Williams Kimp and Widdicomb Furniture Company 34 The furniture industry began to grow significantly into the twentieth century in 1870 there were eight factories employing 280 workers and by 1911 Old National Bank wrote that about 8 500 were employed by forty seven factories 31 35 At least a third of the workers in Grand Rapids were employed by furniture companies 31 The Grand Rapids Furniture Record was the trade paper for the city s industry Its industries provided jobs for many new immigrants from Europe in the late 19th and early 20th century and a Polish neighborhood developed on the west side of the city Strike of 1911 Edit Main article 1911 Grand Rapids furniture workers strike The riot police who responded to the 1911 Grand Rapids furniture workers strike By the early twentieth century the quality of furniture produced in Grand Rapids was renowned throughout furniture industry mainly due to the skill of its workers 35 Government reports in 1907 revealed that while Grand Rapids lead the industry in product output though its furniture workers were paid lower wages than in other areas 35 After a minor dispute workers were inspired to form labor unions workers requested furniture companies to increase wages less working hours the creation of collective bargaining and the institution of a minimum wage to replace piece work 31 35 The furniture businesses refused to respond with unions as they believed that any meeting represented recognition of unions 31 35 Workers in Grand Rapids then began a four month long general strike on April 19 1911 31 36 Much of the public the mayor the press and the Catholic diocese supported the strike believing that the unwillingness of business leaders to negotiate was unjust Skilled and unskilled factory labor was mainly Dutch 60 percent and Polish 25 percent primarily immigrants According to the 1911 Immigration Commission report the Dutch had an average of 8 percent higher wages than the Poles even when they did the same work The pay difference was based on seniority and not ethnicity but given that the Dutch had arrived earlier seniority was linked to ethnicity 31 35 Ultimately the Christian Reformed Church where the majority of Dutch striking workers congregated and the Fountain Street Church led opposition to the strike which resulted in its end on August 19 1911 31 36 The strike resulted with substantial changes to the governmental and labor structure of the city 36 With businesses upset with Mayor Ellis for supporting the strike lobbied for the city to change from a twelve ward government which more accurately represented the city s ethnic groups to a smaller three ward system that placed more power into the demands of Dutch citizens the city s largest demographic 37 36 Some workers who participated in the strike were blacklisted by companies and thousands of dissatisfied furniture workers emigrated to higher paying regions 31 35 Move to retail and suburbanization Edit Monroe Center in January 1965 with Sears S S Kresge Company Steketee s and Wurzburg s visible Shifting from its furniture centric industry downtown Grand Rapids temporarily became a retail destination for the region hosting four department stores Herpolsheimer s Lazarus Jacobson s Steketee s founded in 1862 and Wurzburg s In 1945 Grand Rapids became the first city in the United States to add fluoride to its drinking water National home furnishing conferences were held in Grand Rapids for about seventy five years concluding in the 1960s By that time the furniture making industry had largely shifted to North Carolina 38 As with many older cities in the United States retail in the city suffered as the population moved to suburbs in the postwar era with federal subsidization of highway construction The Grand Rapids suburb Wyoming began to develop rapidly in the 1950s and 1960s following the opening of retail outlets such as Rogers Plaza and Wyoming Village Mall on 28th Street with developments built so quickly that they were finished without utilities 39 Consolidation of department stores occurred in Grand Rapids and nationally in the 1980s and 1990s Geography EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Neighborhoods Edit According to the city city government data Grand Rapids has 37 distinct neighborhoods Alger Heights Baxter Belknap Lookout Black Hills Creston Downtown East Hills Eastern Burton Eastgate Eastown Fulton Heights Garfield Park Grandville Heartside Heritage Hill Highland Park John Ball Park Ken O Sha Park Lake Eastbrook Leffingwell Twin Lakes Michigan Oaks Midtown Millbank North End North Park Northeast Ottawa Hills Richmond Oakleigh Ridgemoor Park Roosevelt Park Shangrai La Shawmut Hills Shawnee Park Southeast Community Southeast End Southwest West Grand 40 Topography Edit The Grand Rapids metropolitan area taken by the Sentinel 2 satellite in June 2022 Grand Rapids developed 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 Ships could navigate on the river up to this fall line stopping because of the rapids The river valley is flat and narrow surrounded by steep hills and bluffs The terrain becomes more rolling hills away from the river The countryside surrounding the metropolitan area consists of mixed forest and farmland with large areas of orchards to the northwest It is approximately 25 mi 40 km east of Lake Michigan The state capital of Lansing lies about 60 mi 97 km to the east by southeast and Kalamazoo is about 50 mi 80 km to the south Grand Rapids is divided into four quadrants which form a part of mailing addresses in Kent County The quadrants are NE northeast NW northwest SE southeast and SW southwest Fulton Street serves as the north south dividing line while Division Avenue serves as the east west dividing line separating these quadrants According to the United States Census Bureau the city has a total area of 45 27 square miles 117 25 km2 of which 44 40 square miles 115 00 km2 of it is land and 0 87 square miles 2 25 km2 is water 41 Climate Edit Grand RapidsClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 2 1 31 18 1 8 34 20 2 4 44 27 3 4 58 38 4 70 48 3 8 79 58 3 8 83 62 3 6 81 61 4 3 73 53 3 3 60 42 3 5 47 33 2 5 35 24Average max and min temperatures in FPrecipitation totals in inchesSource NOAA 42 Metric conversionJ F M A M J J A S O N D 53 1 8 45 1 7 60 7 3 85 15 3 101 21 9 96 26 14 96 28 17 91 27 16 109 23 12 83 16 5 89 9 1 64 2 5Average max and min temperatures in CPrecipitation totals in mmGrand Rapids has a humid continental climate Koppen Dfa 43 with very warm and humid summers cold and snowy winters and short and mild springs and autumns Even though it is in the middle of the continent the city experiences some maritime effects due to its location east of Lake Michigan including a high number of cloudy days during the late fall and winter delayed heating in the spring delayed cooling in fall somewhat moderated temperatures during winter and lake effect snow The city averages 75 6 in 192 cm of snow a year making it one of the snowiest major cities in the United States 44 The area often receives quick and sudden lake effect snowstorms producing significant amounts of snowfall The months of March April October and November are transitional months and the weather can vary March has experienced a record high of 87 F 31 C and record low of 13 F 25 C The average last frost date in spring is May 1 and the average first frost in fall is October 11 giving the area a growing season of 162 days 45 The city is in plant hardiness zone 6a while outlying areas are 5b Some far western suburbs closer to the insulating effect of Lake Michigan are in zone 6b 46 Summers are warm or hot and heat waves and severe weather outbreaks are common during a typical summer The average temperature of the area is 49 F 9 C The highest temperature in the area was recorded on July 13 1936 at 108 F 42 C and the lowest was recorded on February 13 14 1899 at 24 F 31 C 47 During an average year sunshine occurs in 46 of the daylight hours On 138 nights the temperature dips to below 32 F 0 C On average 9 2 days a year have temperatures that meet or exceed the 90 F 32 C mark and 5 6 days a year have lows that are 0 F 18 C or colder The coldest maximum temperature on record was 6 F 21 C in 1899 whereas the most recent subzero Fahrenheit daily maximum was 2 F 19 C in 1994 48 During the reference period of 1991 to 2020 the coldest daily maximum on average was 11 F 12 C 48 Summer nights influenced by the lake can be hot and muggy on occasion The warmest night on record was 82 F 28 C in 1902 and lows above 72 F 22 C have been measured in every month between April and October 48 On average the warmest low of the year stood at 74 F 23 C for the 1991 2020 normals 48 In April 1956 the western and northern portions of the city and its suburbs were hit by a violent tornado which locally produced F5 damage and killed 18 people 49 With the Grand River flowing through the center of Grand Rapids the city has been prone to floods From March 25 to 29 1904 more than one half of the entire populated portion of the city lying on the west side of the river was completely underwater over twenty five hundred houses affecting fourteen thousand persons being completely surrounded On March 28 the river registered at 19 6 feet 6 0 m more than two feet 0 61 m above its highest previous mark 50 More than one hundred years later the 2013 Grand Rapids flood occurred from April 12 to 25 2013 with the river cresting at 21 85 feet 6 66 m on the 21st causing thousands of residents to evacuate their homes and over 10 million in damage 51 Climate data for Grand Rapids Michigan Gerald Ford Int l 1991 2020 normals extremes 1892 present a Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 68 20 69 21 87 31 90 32 95 35 102 39 108 42 102 39 98 37 89 32 81 27 69 21 108 42 Mean maximum F C 51 11 52 11 68 20 79 26 86 30 92 33 92 33 91 33 88 31 79 26 65 18 54 12 94 34 Average high F C 31 0 0 6 33 7 0 9 44 5 6 9 57 8 14 3 69 8 21 0 79 4 26 3 83 1 28 4 80 9 27 2 73 9 23 3 60 7 15 9 47 2 8 4 36 1 2 3 58 2 14 6 Daily mean F C 24 8 4 0 26 6 3 0 35 7 2 1 47 6 8 7 59 2 15 1 68 9 20 5 72 8 22 7 71 1 21 7 63 5 17 5 51 5 10 8 40 0 4 4 30 4 0 9 49 3 9 6 Average low F C 18 6 7 4 19 5 6 9 26 9 2 8 37 3 2 9 48 6 9 2 58 3 14 6 62 5 16 9 61 2 16 2 53 1 11 7 42 2 5 7 32 8 0 4 24 7 4 1 40 5 4 7 Mean minimum F C 3 19 0 18 8 13 23 5 33 1 44 7 51 11 49 9 39 4 29 2 16 9 6 14 6 21 Record low F C 22 30 24 31 13 25 3 16 21 6 32 0 41 5 39 4 27 3 18 8 10 23 18 28 24 31 Average precipitation inches mm 2 52 64 2 12 54 2 39 61 3 99 101 4 00 102 3 94 100 3 86 98 3 55 90 3 43 87 4 02 102 3 10 79 2 48 63 39 40 1 001 Average snowfall inches cm 22 6 57 17 2 44 7 6 19 2 0 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 76 7 1 18 20 8 53 77 6 197 Average extreme snow depth inches cm 9 23 9 23 6 15 1 2 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 5 1 6 15 12 30 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 16 8 13 1 11 8 12 8 12 5 10 7 10 0 9 9 10 2 12 5 12 9 15 5 148 7Average snowy days 0 1 in 14 9 11 2 5 9 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 4 5 11 9 50 9Average relative humidity 77 2 74 2 71 1 66 8 65 4 68 1 69 6 73 3 76 1 74 6 76 9 79 5 72 7Mean monthly sunshine hours 88 3 116 0 168 2 210 2 255 9 286 8 296 5 264 2 206 0 152 4 82 0 62 1 2 188 6Percent possible sunshine 30 39 45 52 56 62 64 61 55 45 28 22 49Source NOAA relative humidity and sun 1961 1990 48 53 54 Cityscape Edit See also List of tallest buildings in Grand Rapids and List of nature centers in Michigan The city skyline shows the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel formerly the Pantlind which reopened in 1981 after extensive renovations by Marvin DeWinter amp Associates This work included the addition of a 29 story glass tower offering panoramic views of the city river and surrounding area The Pantlind Hotel s original architects Warren amp Wetmore were inspired by the work of the Scottish neoclassical architect Robert Adam In its prime the hotel was rated as one of the top ten hotels in the US The hotel features several restaurants well known in Grand Rapids The hotel is owned by Amway Hotel Collection a subsidiary of Amway s holding company Alticor 55 The skyline of Grand Rapids as seen in August 2021 Other prominent large buildings include the JW Marriott Grand Rapids the first JW Marriott Hotel in the Midwest It is themed from cityscapes of Grand Rapids sister cities Omihachiman Japan Bielsko Biala Poland Perugia Italy Ga District Ghana and Zapopan Mexico When the hotel opened Amway Hotel corporation hired photographer Dan Watts to travel to each of the sister cities and photograph them for the property Each floor of the hotel features photography from one of the cities which is unique to that floor Cityscapes of these five cities are alternated in order up the 23 floors The city s tallest building is the River House Condominiums a 34 story 123 8 m condominium tower completed in 2008 that stands as the tallest all residential building in the state of Michigan 56 A barn belonging to the Blandford School at the Blandford Nature Center in early springtime Grand Rapids is also home to two large urban nature centers The Calvin Ecosystem Preserve and Native Gardens operated by Calvin University on the city s southeast side is 104 acres 42 ha It is home to over 44 acres 18 ha of public access nature trails a 60 acre 24 ha restricted access wildlife preserve as well as the Bunker Interpretive Center which hosts university classes and educational programs for the wider community 57 The Blandford Nature Center located on the city s northwest side opened in 1968 and contains extensive nature trails an animal hospital and a heritage village made up of several well preserved 19th century buildings including a log cabin schoolhouse and barn 58 The nature center is also home to Blandford School a highly selective environmental education program for sixth graders from the metropolitan region which is run by Grand Rapids Public Schools and serves as a feeder school for City High Middle School At 264 acres 107 ha Blandford is one of the largest urban nature centers in the United States 59 Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 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 2010188 036 4 9 2020198 9175 8 U S Decennial Census 60 2010 61 2020 62 2020 census Edit Grand Rapids city Michigan Demographic Profile NH Non Hispanic Race Ethnicity Pop 2010 61 Pop 2020 62 2010 2020White alone NH 110 890 114 290 58 97 57 46 Black or African American alone NH 37 890 36 493 20 15 18 35 Native American or Alaska Native alone NH 788 659 0 42 0 33 Asian alone NH 3 445 4 483 1 83 2 25 Pacific Islander alone NH 58 70 0 03 0 04 Some Other Race alone NH 287 916 0 15 0 46 Mixed Race Multi Racial NH 5 421 9 209 2 88 4 63 Hispanic or Latino any race 29 261 32 797 15 56 16 49 Total 188 040 198 917 100 00 100 00 Note The US Census treats Hispanic Latino as an ethnic category This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category Hispanics Latinos can be of any race 2010 census Edit As of the 2010 census 63 there were 188 036 people 72 126 households and 41 015 families residing in the city The population density was 4 235 1 inhabitants per square mile 1 635 2 km2 There were 80 619 housing units at an average density of 1 815 7 per square mile 701 0 km2 The city s racial makeup was 64 6 White 59 0 Non Hispanic White 64 20 9 African American 0 7 Native American 1 9 Asian 0 1 Pacific Islander 7 7 from other races and 4 2 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino residents of any race were 15 6 of the population 65 Of the 72 126 households 31 1 had children under the age of 18 living with them 35 5 were married couples living together 16 4 had a female householder with no husband present 5 0 had a male householder with no wife present and 43 1 were non families 32 3 of all households were made up of individuals and 10 1 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 49 and the average family size was 3 20 The median age in the city was 30 8 years 24 7 of residents were under the age of 18 14 5 were between the ages of 18 and 24 28 6 were from 25 to 44 21 2 were from 45 to 64 and 11 1 were 65 years of age or older The city s gender makeup was 48 7 male and 51 3 female 2000 census Edit There were 73 217 households 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 age distribution shows 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 city s median household income was 37 224 and the median family income was 44 224 Males had a median income of 33 050 versus 26 382 for females The city s per capita income 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 Ethnicity Edit According to a 2007 American Community Survey the largest ancestry groups in Grand Rapids reported not including American were those of German 23 4 of the population Dutch 21 2 Irish 11 4 English 10 8 Polish 6 5 and French 4 1 heritage 66 After the Fall of Saigon Grand Rapids welcomed thousands of Vietnamese refugees Local nonprofits helped them settle throughout West Michigan Special attention was paid to Grand Rapids because of President Gerald R Ford s Grand Rapids roots 67 In recent decades Grand Rapids and its suburban areas have seen their Latino communities grow Between 2000 and 2010 the Latino population in Grand Rapids grew from 25 818 to 29 261 increasing over 13 in a decade 68 Into the 21st century the African American population of Grand Rapids continually declined 69 In 2015 Grand Rapids was rated as the second worst city for African Americans behind only Milwaukee to succeed economically based on disparities in employment income and home ownership levels 70 In 2022 The Grand Rapids Press reported that the population of African Americans in the city declined 4 over the decade with the newspaper writing that gentrification increasing rent urban sprawl into the neighboring cities of Kentwood and Wyoming which experienced increased African American population growth and New Great Migration trends contributed to the loss of black residents 69 71 The decline of African American residents occurred primarily in the northeast and southeast areas of the city 72 Religion Edit Cathedral of Saint Andrew Grand Rapids has a significant Dutch Reformed population The Christian Reformed Church in North America CRCNA has a large following in Grand Rapids its denominational offices are on the city s southeast side The CRCNA has over 230 congregations and almost 100 000 members in Michigan as of 2010 73 The denomination is concentrated in the western part of the state where a substantial number of immigrants from the Netherlands settled most were followers of the Reformed faith who took part in the Secession of 1834 74 As of 2012 the Christian Reformed Church in North America has nearly 1 100 congregations and over 250 000 members nationwide 75 The Grand Rapids Wyoming Metropolitan Area has 149 Christian Reformed Churches with 77 389 members 76 Temple Emanuel in 2019 The Reform Judaism congregation of Temple Emanuel was founded in 1857 and the fifth oldest Reform congregation in the United States 77 The congregation built its first synagogue in 1882 on the corner of Fountain and Ransom Streets The current location was constructed in 1952 78 Grand Rapids is home to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids which was created on May 19 1882 by Pope Leo XIII The Diocese comprises 176 098 Catholics in West Michigan 102 parishes and five high schools Catholic Central High School Grand Rapids Muskegon Catholic Central High School Muskegon St Patrick High School Portland Sacred Heart Academy Grand Rapids and West Catholic High School Grand Rapids 79 David John Walkowiak is the Bishop of Grand Rapids The Reformed Church in America RCA has about 154 congregations and 76 000 members mainly in Western Michigan 80 heavily concentrated in the cities in Grand Rapids Holland and Zeeland The denomination s main office is also in Grand Rapids 81 The Grand Rapids Wyoming metropolitan area has 86 congregations with almost 49 000 members The Protestant Reformed Churches in America PRCA traces its roots to the First Protestant Reformed Church Grand Rapids Michigan whose pastor was Herman Hoeksema the founder of the church 82 A majority of the PRCA s Classis East churches about 13 congregations are around Grand Rapids 76 83 84 Grand Rapids aerial view in the 1930s The United Reformed Churches in North America has 12 congregations in Grand Rapids area these congregations form the Classis of Michigan 85 The Heritage Reformed Congregations flagship and largest church is in Grand Rapids The Netherlands Reformed Congregations in North America has 2 churches 86 The PC USA had 12 congregations and 7 000 members in the Grand Rapids Wyoming Metropolitan statistical area the United Church of Christ had also 14 congregations and 5 400 members 76 The offices of the West Michigan Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church are in the East Hills Neighborhood of Grand Rapids The West Michigan Annual Conference represents more than 400 local United Methodist churches in the western half of the lower peninsula with approximately 65 000 members in total 87 Grand Rapids is also home to the United Methodist Community House whose mission is to increase the ability of children youth adults and families to succeed in a diverse community 88 In 2010 The United Methodist Church had 61 congregations and 21 450 members in the Grand Rapids Metropolitan area 76 Economy EditFurther information List of Michigan companies Top Employers in Grand Rapids Metro 2019 Source The Right PlaceRank Company Organization 1 Spectrum Health 25 0002 Meijer 10 3403 Mercy Health 8 5004 Gentex 5 8005 Gordon Food Service 5 0006 Amway Corporation 3 7917 Herman Miller 3 6218 Perrigo Company 3 5009 Steelcase Inc 3 50010 Farmers Insurance Group 3 50011 Grand Valley State University 3 30612 Lacks Enterprises 3 00013 Grand Rapids Public Schools 2 80014 Arconic 2 35015 Hope Network 2 16216 Metro Health Hospital 2 10017 Roskam Baking Co 2 09018 Fifth Third Bank 2 28019 Haworth 2 00020 SpartanNash 2 000 A collection of Spectrum Health facilities and affiliates on the Medical Mile Grand Rapids Michigan products treemap 2020 Headquartered in Grand Rapids Spectrum Health is West Michigan s largest employer with 25 600 staff and 1 700 physicians in 2017 89 Spectrum Health s Meijer Heart Center Lemmen Holton Cancer Pavilion and Butterworth Hospital a level I trauma center are on the Grand Rapids Medical Mile which has world class facilities that focus on the health sciences They include the Van Andel Research Institute Grand Valley State University s Cook DeVos Center for Health Sciences and the Michigan State University College of Human Medicine medical school s Secchia Center along with Ferris State University s College of Pharmacy Nearly a billion dollars has been invested in the Spectrum Health Cancer Pavilion the Spectrum Health Helen DeVos Children s Hospital and the expansion to the Van Andel Institute These facilities have attracted many health science businesses to the area Grand Rapids has long been a center for manufacturing dating back to its original roots in furniture manufacturing Office furniture manufacturers such as American Seating Steelcase and its subsidiaries Coalesse and Turnstone Haworth and Herman Miller are based in and around the Grand Rapids area 90 91 92 93 94 95 In 1881 the Furniture Manufacturers Association FMA was organized in Grand Rapids making it the country s first furniture manufacturing advocacy group 96 The Kindel Furniture Company 97 and the Hekman Furniture Company 98 have been designing and manufacturing furniture in Grand Rapids since 1912 and 1922 respectively The Grand Rapids area is also known for its automobile and aviation manufacturing industries with GE Aviation Systems having a location in the city 99 The Grand Rapids area is home to a number of well known companies including Alticor Amway a multi level marketing company Bissell a privately owned vacuum cleaner and floor care product manufacturer SpartanNash a food distributor and grocery store chain Foremost Insurance Company a specialty lines insurance company Meijer a regional supercenter chain GE Aviation formerly Smiths Industries an aerospace products company Wolverine World Wide a designer and manufacturer of shoes boots and clothing Universal Forest Products a building materials company and Schuler Books amp Music one of the country s largest independent bookstores citation needed The city is known as a center of Christian publishing home to Zondervan Kregel Publications Eerdmans Publishing and Our Daily Bread Ministries The city and its surrounding region house a successful food processing and agribusiness industry which has experienced a 10 year job growth rate of 45 from 2009 2019 With Michigan being the second most agriculturally diverse state in the nation the Greater Grand Rapids region is well known for its fruit production Due to its proximity to Lake Michigan the climate is considered especially prime for apple peach and blueberry farming Greater Grand Rapids produces 1 3 of Michigan s total agricultural sales In 2010 Grand Rapids was named the most sustainable midsize city in the U S by the U S Chamber of Commerce Civic Leadership Center and Siemens Corp Grand Rapids was chosen over finalist cities Davenport Iowa and Hoover Alabama 100 The city has also been named in several other notable rankings since including No 1 Cities with the Most Manufacturing Jobs Grand Rapids Kentwood Smartest Dollar 2020 101 No 1 Mid Sized Metro for Economic Growth Potential Grand Rapids Business Facilities 2019 102 No 1 Top Metro for Sustainable Development Grand Rapids Site Selection Magazine 2019 103 Top 20 Cities for 7 Year Job Growth Grand Rapids Reuters 2019 104 Education Edit The Main Branch of the Grand Rapids Public Library the Ryerson Building its oldest wing opened in 1904 K 12 public education is provided by the Grand Rapids Public Schools GRPS as well as a number of charter schools City High Middle School a magnet school for academically talented students in the metropolitan region operated by GRPS is habitually ranked among the nation s top high schools 105 Grand Rapids is also home to the oldest co educational Catholic high school in the United States Catholic Central High School 106 National Heritage Academies which operates charter schools across several states has its headquarters in Grand Rapids 107 Grand Rapids is home to several colleges and universities The private religious schools Aquinas College Calvin University Cornerstone University Grace Christian University and Kuyper College each have a campus within the city The seminaries Calvin Theological Seminary Grand Rapids Theological Seminary and Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary are in Grand Rapids Thomas M Cooley Law School a private institution also has a campus in Grand Rapids Northwood University a private university with its main campus in Midland Michigan has a satellite campus downtown near the medical mile Davenport University a private non profit multi location university with 14 campuses statewide has its main campus just outside Grand Rapids As for public tertiary institutions Grand Rapids Community College GRCC maintains a campus downtown and facilities in other parts of the city and surrounding region The Cook DeVos Center for Health Sciences on Grand Rapids Medical Mile is part of Grand Valley State University s Pew Grand Rapids campus 108 Grand Valley State University with its main campus in nearby Allendale continues to develop its presence downtown by expanding its Pew Campus begun in the 1980s on the west bank of the Grand River 108 This downtown campus comprises 67 acres 27 ha in two locations and is home to 12 buildings and three leased spaces 109 Into the 2000s Grand Valley State University expanded its medical education programs into Medical Mile constructing various facilities such as the Cook DeVos Center for Health Sciences in 2003 110 The university expanded across I 196 from the Medical Mile into the Belknap Lookout neighborhood in the 2010s constructing the Raleigh Finkelstein Hall to assist with medical and nursing studies 111 Ferris State University has a growing campus downtown including the Applied Technology Center operated with GRCC and the Kendall College of Art and Design a formerly private institution that now is part of Ferris Ferris State also has a branch of the College of Pharmacy downtown on the medical mile Western Michigan University has a long standing graduate program in the city with facilities downtown and in the southeast The Van Andel Institute a cancer research institute established in 1996 also resides on the medical mile the institute established a graduate school in 2005 to train Ph D students in cellular genetic and molecular biology citation needed Calvin University a Christian private university Grand Rapids is home to the Secchia Center medical education building a 90 million seven story 180 000 square foot 17 000 m2 facility at Michigan Street and Division Avenue part of the Grand Rapids Medical Mile The building is home to the Grand Rapids Campus of the Michigan State University College of Human Medicine This campus trains medical students through all four years of their medical education The state of the art facility includes clinical examination rooms simulation suites classrooms offices and student areas 112 Culture Edit 2016 Independence Day celebration on the Grand River In 1969 Alexander Calder s abstract sculpture La Grande Vitesse which translates from French as the great swiftness or more loosely as grand rapids was installed downtown on Vandenberg Plaza the redesigned setting of Grand Rapids City Hall 113 It was the first work of public art in the United States funded by the National Endowment for the Arts 114 The sculpture is informally known as the Calder and since its installation the city has hosted an annual Festival of the Arts in the area surrounding the sculpture now known informally as Calder Plaza 113 115 During the first weekend in June several blocks of downtown surrounding the Calder stabile in Vandenberg Plaza are closed to traffic The 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 Vandenberg Plaza also hosts various ethnic festivals throughout the summer season Each October the city celebrates Polish culture historically based on the West side of town with Pulaski Days The Grand Rapids Public Museum stretches along the Grand River In 1973 Grand Rapids hosted Sculpture off the Pedestal an outdoor exhibition of public sculpture which assembled works by 13 world renowned artists including Mark di Suvero John Henry Kenneth Snelson Robert Morris John Mason Lyman Kipp and Stephen Antonakos in a single citywide celebration Sculpture off the Pedestal was a public private partnership including 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 From 1980 to 2015 Celebration on the Grand was held the weekend after Labor Day featuring free concerts fireworks display and food booths Celebration on the Grand is an event that celebrates life in the Grand River valley On November 10 2004 the grand premiere of the film The Polar Express was held in Grand Rapids It was adapted from the children s book by author and illustrator Chris Van Allsburg who lives in the city His main character in the book and movie also lives in Grand Rapids and the movie was set in the city The Meijer Gardens created a Polar Express display as part of their larger Christmas Around the World exhibit In mid 2004 the Grand Rapids Art Museum GRAM began construction of a new larger building for its collection it opened in October 2007 at 101 Monroe Center NW The new building site faces the sculpture Ecliptic by Maya Lin at Rosa Parks Circle The museum was completed in 2007 It was the first new art museum to achieve gold level LEED certification by the U S Green Building Council ArtPrize the world s largest annual art competition determined by public voting first took place in Grand Rapids from September 23 through October 10 2009 This event was founded by Rick DeVos grandson of Amway Corp co founder Richard DeVos who offered 449 000 in cash prizes A total of 1 262 artists exhibited their work for two weeks and a total of 334 219 votes were cast First prize including a 250 000 cash prize went to Brooklyn painter Ran Ortner 116 ArtPrize 2010 was held September 22 through October 10 2010 with work by 1 713 artists on display The first prize was awarded to Grand Rapids artist Chris LaPorte 117 The twelfth annual ArtPrize will be held from September 16 to October 3 2021 Founders Brewing Company In 2012 Grand Rapids tied with Asheville North Carolina for Beer City USA The competition was held by casting votes online for cities around the United States Prominent breweries in the area such as B O B s Brewery Brewery Vivant Founders Brewing Company Grand Rapids Brewing Co Harmony Brewing HopCat and Schmohz have created the culture necessary to win the award 118 In 2013 Grand Rapids was the sole winner of Beer City USA taking the prize with more votes than those combined for the second place Kalamazoo Michigan and the third place Asheville North Carolina 119 Tourism Edit The Gerald R Ford Museum dedicated in 1981 is located downtown on the west bank of the Grand River President Ford and First Lady Betty Ford are buried on the museum s grounds Grand Rapids is the home of John Ball Zoological Garden Belknap Hill and the Gerald R Ford Museum He and former First Lady Betty Ford were buried on the site Significant buildings in the downtown include the DeVos Place Convention Center Van Andel Arena the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel and the JW Marriott Hotel The Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts is downtown and houses art exhibits a movie theater and the urban clay studio 120 Along the Grand River are reconstructed earthwork burial mounds which were constructed by the prehistoric Hopewell tribe a fish ladder and a riverwalk Grand Rapids is 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 include its main building 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 The latter held the museum and planetarium before 1994 Since the late 20th century the museum has hosted notable exhibitions including one on the Dead Sea Scrolls and The Quest for Immortality the Treasures of Ancient Egypt A non profit institution it is owned and managed by the Public Museum of Grand Rapids Foundation An example of Chateauesque architecture in the Heritage Hill Historic District a neighborhood immediately east of downtown Heritage Hill a neighborhood directly east of downtown is one of the largest urban historic districts in the country The first neighborhood of Grand Rapids its 1 300 homes date from 1848 and represent more than 60 architectural styles Of particular significance is the Meyer May House a Prairie style home Frank Lloyd Wright designed in 1908 121 It was commissioned by local merchant Meyer May who operated a men s clothing store May s of Michigan The house is now owned and operated by Steelcase Corporation Steelcase manufactured the furniture for the Johnson Wax Building in Racine Wisconsin which was also designed by Wright and is recognized as a landmark building Because of those ties Steelcase purchased and restored the property in the 1980s The restoration has been heralded as one of the most accurate and complete of any Wright restoration The home is used by Steelcase for special events and is open to the public for tours Space Statue at the Gerald R Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids Michigan Grand Rapids is home to many theaters and stages including the newly reconstructed Civic Theatre also known as the Meijer Majestic the city s largest theater DeVos Hall and the convertible Van Andel Arena Further east of downtown is the historic Wealthy Theatre Studio 28 the first megaplex in the United States is in Grand Rapids it reopened in 1988 with a seating capacity of 6 000 122 The megaplex ceased operations on November 23 2008 123 124 The Grand Rapids company also owns many theaters around West Michigan 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 American sculptors as Mark di Suvero and Alexander Calder and French artists Edgar Degas and Auguste Rodin The Gardens amphitheater plays host to numerous concerts each summer featuring such acts as Jonny Lang The Pointer Sisters Lyle Lovett Cowboy Junkies and B B King The Gardens were mentioned in Patricia Schultz s book 1 000 Places to See Before You Die 125 In 2014 Grand Rapids was named the No 1 U S travel destination by Lonely Planet 126 In 2016 The New York Times ranked Grand Rapids 20th on the 52 Places to Go in 2016 list 127 Grand Rapids prominent craft beer culture has continued to garner the city national and international recognition in recent years making it a destination for increasing numbers of tourists In 2019 CNN Travel named Grand Rapids one of the world s 15 Best Beer Cities The article made special mention of Founders Brewing Company Brewery Vivant and The Mitten Brewing Company on the city s West Side 128 Entertainment and performing arts Edit Wealthy Theatre Grand Rapids has several popular concert venues in which numerous bands have performed including 20 Monroe Live the DAAC the Intersection DeVos Performance Hall Van Andel Arena Royce Auditorium in St Cecilia Music Center Forest Hills Fine Arts Center The Pyramid Scheme and the Deltaplex The Schubert Male Chorus of Grand Rapids was founded by Henry C Post on November 19 1883 the chorus continues to perform a variety of music The Grand Rapids Symphony founded in 1930 is the largest performing arts organization in Grand Rapids with a roster of about 50 full time and 30 part time musicians In addition to its own concert series the orchestra under music director Marcelo Lehninger accompanies productions by Grand Rapids Ballet and Opera Grand Rapids presenting more than 400 performances a year 129 Grand Rapids Symphony The Grand Rapids Barbershop Chapter Great Lakes Chorus is an all male a cappella barbershop harmony chorus including quartets It is one of the oldest chapters in the Barbershop Harmony Society formally known as the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America or SPEBSQSA The Grand Rapids chapter organized on November 1 1939 for quartet singers it is credited for holding the first society sanctioned quartet contest in the Michigan District now Pioneer District in March 1941 In 1944 the Grand Rapids Chapter is credited with having the first International Quartet champions The Harmony Halls In 1947 the Great Lakes Chorus then called the Grand Rapids Chorus was founded In 1953 the first International Chorus Competition was held and the Great Lakes Chorus took First Place the first International Convention Championship Chorus under the direction of Robert Weaver 130 The chorus is still very active as a non profit singing for community competition and contracted performances Grand Rapids Ballet Company was founded in 1971 and is one of Michigan s few professional ballet companies 131 The ballet company is on Ellsworth Avenue in the Heartside neighborhood where it moved in 2000 In 2007 it expanded its facility by adding the LEED certified Peter Wege Theater 131 Opera Grand Rapids founded in 1966 is the state s longest running professional company 132 In February 2010 the opera moved into a new facility in the Fulton Heights neighborhood 133 A January 21 2011 Newsweek article listed Grand Rapids as a dying city because of its drop in population from 2000 to 2009 134 Director Rob Bliss and producer Scott Seven filmed a vigorous 5 000 person community response titled The Grand Rapids LipDub released May 26 which was the first ever citywide lip dub video film critic Roger Ebert described it as the greatest music video ever made 135 The video held the world record for largest lip dub for two years and has amassed over 5 million views on YouTube PRNewswire awarded its producers the Earnie Award for Best Use of Video in Social Media 136 Grand Rapids is also home to Art Prize the largest art exposition in the U S Art Prize began in 2009 with the over 200 000 visitors and has since doubled the number of visitors it receives each year Artprize receives many international visitors each year and is still growing with over 1 500 entries from 48 countries across 200 venues in 2015 137 138 Sports Edit Van Andel Arena a popular sports venue in Grand Rapids Grand Rapids is home to several professional and semi professional sports teams The West Michigan Whitecaps of the Midwest League play at LMCU Ballpark and won the Championship Series six times 1996 1998 2004 2006 2007 2015 and had the best regular season record six times 1997 1998 2000 2006 2007 2017 The Whitecaps are the Class High A affiliate of the Detroit Tigers The Grand Rapids Griffins an ice hockey team of the American Hockey League play at the Van Andel Arena and won the IHL Fred A Huber Trophy in 2001 and were AHL Calder Cup Champions in the 2012 2013 and 2016 2017 seasons The Griffins are the AHL affiliate of the Detroit Red Wings Grand Rapids Gold is an NBA G League basketball team that plays at the Van Andel Arena with the team being an affiliate of the Denver Nuggets Midwest United FC is a United Women s Soccer soccer club that plays at Aquinas College and won a national championship in the 2017 season LMCU Ballpark home of the West Michigan Whitecaps Former professional sports teams include the Grand Rapids Danger Grand Rapids Dragonfish Grand Rapids Cyclones Grand Rapids Rampage Grand Rapids Hoops Grand Rapids Mackers Grand Rapids Flight Grand Rapids Owls 1977 80 Grand Rapids Rockets and Grand Rapids Chicks Grand Rapids Blazers and the Grand Rapids Shamrocks The Grand Rapids Blazers won the United Football League Championship in 1961 Each year the Amway River Bank Run is held in downtown Grand Rapids It draws participants from around the world in 2010 there were over 22 000 participants The Grand Rapids Marathon is held in downtown Grand Rapids in mid October usually on the same weekend as the Detroit Marathon Special Olympics Michigan launched a campaign in 2021 to build a publicly funded 20 million facility called the Unified Sports and Inclusion Center that is destined to be the largest Special Olympics facility in the world 139 Amateur sporting organizations in the area include Grand Raggidy Roller Derby WFTDA league Grand Rapids Rowing Association 140 Grand Rapids Rugby Club 141 and the West Michigan Wheelchair Sports Association 142 The West Michigan Sports Commission was the host organizing committee for the inaugural State Games of Michigan held in Grand Rapids from June 25 to 27 2010 143 144 Media Edit Main article Media in Grand Rapids Michigan The Grand Rapids Press is a daily newspaper while Advance Newspapers publishes a group of weekly papers that provide community based news Gemini Media 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 Two free monthly entertainment guides are distributed REVUE 145 which covers music and the arts and RECOIL which covers music and offers Onion style satire The Rapidian is an online based citizen journalism project funded by grants from the Knight Foundation and local community foundations 146 It is reprinted or cited by other local media outlets 147 Grand Rapids combined with nearby Kalamazoo and Battle Creek was ranked in 2019 as the 45th largest television market in the U S by Nielsen Media Research 148 The market is served by stations affiliated with major American networks including WLLA channel 64 Independent WOOD TV channel 8 NBC WOTV channel 41 ABC WZZM TV channel 13 ABC WXMI channel 17 Fox WXSP CD channel 15 MyNetworkTV and Kalamazoo based WWMT channel 3 CBS along with surrounding stations based from Muskegon and Battle Creek WGVU TV is the area s PBS member station The Grand Rapids area is served by 16 AM radio stations and 28 FM stations 149 Public safety EditLaw enforcement Edit The Grand Rapids Police Department is tasked with law enforcement in Grand Rapids and has been serving the city since 1871 150 Since 2001 the police department has been located at a renovated Herpolsheimer s department store at 1 Monroe Center NW 151 152 In 2011 the Kent County Dispatch Authority consolidated the dispatch operations of the Grand Rapids Police Department and the Wyoming Police Department the public safety department of Grand Rapids suburb Wyoming 153 On April 4 2022 Officer Christopher Schurr of the Grand Rapids Police Department killed a 26 year old black man Patrick Lyoya during a traffic stop in self defense Lyoya was heavily intoxicated resisting arrest and had fought for control of the officers taser 154 The department later released footage of the killing on April 13 spawning a demonstration with hundreds of protestors demonstrating throughout the city 155 Lyoya was a refugee from the Democratic Republic of the Congo who had arrived in Michigan with his family in 2014 and had accumulated a substantial record of criminal activity 156 Crime Edit The homicide rate in Grand Rapids was at its highest in the early 1990s with the highest number of homicides being 34 in 1993 157 158 The average annual number of homicides in Grand Rapids between 2010 and 2020 was 12 4 159 In 2014 Grand Rapids experienced the lowest homicide rate in fifty years with six murders occurring that year 160 By the end of the 2010s the number of homicides began to increase with a total of 17 occurring in 2019 159 In 2020 Grand Rapids had 38 homicides This is the highest number ever recorded in Grand Rapids 161 In recent years Grand Rapids has seen an increase in auto thefts in both 2020 and 2021 there were over 800 cars stolen in Grand Rapids 162 Government and politics EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Calder Plaza where the Grand Rapids City Hall is located Under Michigan law Grand Rapids is a home rule city and adopted a city charter in 1916 providing for the council manager form of municipal government 163 164 Under this system the political responsibilities are divided between an elected City Commission an elected City Comptroller 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 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 The elected City Comptroller verifies financial policies and budgets are followed and prepares the annual financial report 163 The city levies an income tax of 1 5 percent on residents and 0 75 percent on nonresidents 165 Mayor Edit See also List of mayors of Grand Rapids Michigan 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 a commissioner 163 The mayor although a weak mayor per the system of government spends approximately 20 hours per week on mayoral activities from serving on various oversight boards and attending conferences 164 Three term 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 he would not run for re election 166 The voters kept the position part time and George Heartwell succeeded him in January 2004 167 In 2014 a narrowly approved ballot initiative imposed a limit of two terms on the mayor and city commissioners preventing Heartwell from seeking a fourth term 168 Commissioner Rosalynn Bliss also unable to run for another term in that position was then elected mayor receiving a clear majority in the August 2015 primary Politics Edit The city proper and inner suburbs favor the Democratic Party while outer suburbs of Grand Rapids tend to support the Republican Party 169 170 Traditionally Grand Rapids supported the Republican Party 169 170 The city is the center of the 3rd Congressional District represented by Democrat Hillary Scholten 171 Former President Gerald Ford represented the district then numbered as the 5th from 1949 to 1973 and is buried on the grounds of his Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids The city and its suburbs are home to several major donors to the national Republican Party including the DeVos family and Peter Secchia former Ambassador to Italy citation needed Both representatives in the Michigan State House of Representatives are Democrats and the city s State Senate seat was taken by a Democrat in 2018 In the eight most recent presidential elections Democratic candidates Bill Clinton Al Gore John Kerry Barack Obama Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden won a majority or plurality of votes in the city of Grand Rapids The last Republican candidate for president to carry the city was George H W Bush in 1988 172 Transportation EditTransportation history Edit Roadways Edit The first improved road into the city was completed in 1855 This road was a private toll plank road built from Kalamazoo through Wayland It was a primary route for freight and passengers until about 1868 This road connected to other regions via the Michigan Central Railroad at Kalamazoo Railroad Edit The Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad which began service in 1858 was the first railroad into the city In 1869 the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway 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 Until the mid 1950s Grand Rapids Union Station was a hub for passenger trains from different directions in Michigan and beyond Street railways Edit Map of Grand Rapids street car and railway lines in 1921 Early railway transportation in Grand Rapids began in 1865 to connect with the Detroit Milwaukee train station Over time several independent lines were opened and operated as well The railways were combined into one company Street and Railway Company in 1883 Competition within the city soon sprang up In February 1885 the Valley City Street and Cable Company was formalized and became operational in 1888 Valley City Street and Cable Company brought the first cable cars to Grand Rapids in order to bring transportation service to Michigan and Lyon street hills The lack of a connection between the two companies caused confusion among riders This led to the unifying of the two companies in 1890 under the name Consolidated Street Railway Company Under the Consolidated Street Railway Company new electric lines were introduced After struggling for ten years Consolidated Street Railway Company was bought out in 1900 by E W Clark Company of Philadelphia and was renamed the Grand Rapids Railway Company The change brought many improvements to the railway service including heavier tracks double cars and expanded service which bolstered a healthy ridership that would last for many years In 1925 the Grand Rapids Railway Company suffered a serious setback when a fire destroyed 57 streetcars The process of rebuilding brought to light a lack of streetcar improvements within the industry With Grand Rapids at the forefront industry wide improvements were made to streetcar design and the new modern streetcars were introduced into the city in 1927 The onset of the Great Depression in 1929 crippled the streetcar industry in Grand Rapids Streetcars were phased out in favor of buses The process was hastened by a city wide street widening which would have required a resetting of the tracks By 1934 buses had taken over all of the systems and in 1935 the last streetcar in Grand Rapids made its final run The Grand Rapids Railway Company sold its assets and re consolidated as Grand Rapids Motor Coach Company in 1937 after declaring bankruptcy It retained some interest in Ramona Park until their closure in 1950 173 174 175 176 177 Air transportation Edit Grand Rapids was home to one of the first regularly scheduled passenger airlines in the United States when Stout Air Services began flights from the old Grand Rapids airport to Detroit Ford Airport in Dearborn Michigan on July 31 1926 178 Major highways Edit A view looking north of Grand Rapids US 131 runs vertically through the center of the image while interchanges are visible with I 196 in the center and I 96 near the top I 96 runs along the northern and northeastern sides of the city linking with Muskegon to the west and Lansing and Detroit Michigan to the east I 196 also named the Gerald R Ford Freeway runs east west through the city connecting to I 96 just east of Grand Rapids and I 94 in Benton Township I 296 an unsigned route running concurrently with US 131 between I 96 and I 196 US 131 runs north south through the city linking with Kalamazoo to the south and Cadillac to the north M 6 is the Paul B Henry Freeway running along the south side connecting I 96 and I 196 M 11 runs along Ironwood Remembrance Road Wilson Avenue and 28th Street M 21 is Fulton Street to the east M 37 follows Alpine Avenue to the north I 96 East Beltline Avenue and Broadmoor Avenue to the south M 44 is East Beltline north of I 96 Conn M 44 runs along Plainfield Avenue M 45 follows Lake Michigan Drive west toward Allendale and Lake Michigan A 45 is Old US 131 south of 28th Street Mass transit Edit Bus Edit A Rapid SilverLine BRT bus at the Rapid Central Station The Interurban Transit Partnership which brands itself as The Rapid provides public bus transportation Transportation is also provided by the DASH buses the Downtown Area Shuttle DASH bus rides are free 179 These provide transportation to and from the parking lots in the city of Grand Rapids to designated loading and unloading spots around the city The area s Greyhound Bus terminal is integrated into the Central Station of the Rapid simplifying transfers between Greyhound and local buses Indian Trails provides daily intercity bus service of varying frequencies between Grand Rapids and Petoskey Michigan 180 between Grand Rapids and Benton Harbor Michigan 181 and between Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo Michigan 182 with intermediate stops In August 2014 the SilverLine opened Michigan s first bus rapid transit line an express bus line designed to function like a light rail system 183 There are plans in the works to add more express routes secondary stations a streetcar and dedicated exclusive highway lanes 184 Air Edit Commercial air service to Grand Rapids is provided by Gerald R Ford International Airport GRR Eight passenger airlines and two cargo airlines operate over 150 daily flights to 34 nonstop destinations across the United States International service was formerly operated to Toronto Canada by Air Canada Express The airport was formerly named Kent County International Airport before gaining its present name in 1999 citation needed The first regularly scheduled air service in the United States was between Grand Rapids and Detroit actually Dearborn s Ford Airport on a Ford Stout monoplane named Miss Grand Rapids which began on July 26 1926 Delta Air Lines continues to operate this route today to their hub at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport DTW citation needed Rail Edit Amtrak train at Grand Rapids station Amtrak provides direct train service to Chicago from the passenger station via the Pere Marquette line 185 186 Freight service is provided by CSX the Grand Elk Railroad Marquette Rail and the Grand Rapids Eastern Railroad Sister cities EditGrand Rapids sister cities are 187 Bielsko Biala Poland Ga East District Ghana Ga West District Ghana Gangnam Seoul South Korea Ōmihachiman Japan Perugia Italy Zapopan MexicoSee also Edit Michigan portalGeography of Michigan Haskelite Manufacturing Corporation List of Michigan related topics List of people from Grand Rapids Michigan Michigan census statistical areasExplanatory notes Edit Official records for Grand Rapids kept June 1892 to December 1940 at downtown at the first Grand Rapids Airport some 4 mi 6 4 km south of downtown from January 1941 to November 23 1963 and at Gerald Ford Int l since its opening on November 24 1963 For more information see Threadex 52 References Edit 2020 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 21 2022 a b c Population and Housing Unit Estimates United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 21 2020 U S Board on Geographic Names United States Geological Survey October 25 2001 Retrieved January 31 2009 Find a County National Association of Counties Archived from the original on June 26 2008 Retrieved January 31 2009 Grand Rapids city Michigan United States Census Bureau Retrieved April 15 2022 Grand Rapids is one of America s fastest growing cities MLive October 2 2018 Retrieved October 18 2020 Best Beer Town Winners 2014 10Best Readers Choice Travel Awards 10Best Retrieved May 18 2019 Beer City USA Experience Grand Rapids Convention amp Visitors Bureau Retrieved May 18 2019 Gerald R Ford Presidential Library and Museum Gerald R Ford Presidential Library and Museum Archived from the original on September 21 2013 Retrieved September 24 2013 a b c Grand Rapids Historical Perspective City of Grand Rapids 2008 Archived from the original on June 6 2014 Retrieved August 20 2017 a b c d e f g h A Brief History of Lowell Kent County Michigan GenWeb Project County of Kent Archived from the original on October 2 2016 Retrieved October 2 2016 Richmond Rebecca L 1906 The Fur Traders of the Grand River Valley Publications of the Historical Society of Grand Rapids 1 36 OCLC 13895154 via Google Books a b c d History of Kent County Michigan Chicago Illinois Chas C Chapman amp Co December 1881 Retrieved October 2 2016 via University of Michigan Libraries a b c d e f g h i j k l m Simon Tibbe Dorothy Branz Bill White Kelly 2009 Wilderness to Wyoming 1 ed Wyoming Michigan Franklin Press Inc ISBN 9780578028583 Timmerman Janet 2009 Joseph LaFramboise A factor of treaties trade and culture a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Timmerman Janet 2009 Joseph LaFramboise A factor of treaties trade and culture a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Chief Nawehquageezhik Noonday MSU Retrieved July 17 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x History and Directory of Kent County Michigan Containing a History of Each Township and the City of Grand Rapids the Name Location and Postoffice Address of All Residents Outside of the City A List of Postoffices in the County a Schedule of Population and Other Valuable Statistics Grand Rapids MI Daily Eagle Steam Printing House November 21 1870 pp 114 136 a b September 26 1833 Treaty of Chicago Forest County Potawatomi Retrieved August 8 2020 Goss Dwight 1906 The Indians of the Grand River Valley Michigan Historical Collections 30 178 80 via Google Books Ellison Garret September 18 2012 McKay Tower in Grand Rapids Quietly Sold to Borisch Family for 10 5 Million MLive Retrieved August 20 2017 Baxyer Albert January 1 1891 History of the City of Grand Rapids Michigan via Google Books a b Facts and History www grandrapidsmi gov Retrieved September 15 2021 Gypsum Michigan State University Retrieved August 20 2017 Lane Alfred Church 1980 Report of the State Board of Geological Survey Michigan State Board of Geological Survey p 3 via Internet Archive a b Fisher Ernest B 1918 Grand Rapids and Kent County Michigan historical account of their progress from first settlement to the present time p 163 Historical Info A Brief History of Grand Rapids Grand Rapids Historical Society Archived from the original on May 21 2013 Retrieved September 24 2013 www grcmc org Grand Rapids Community Media Center Indian Mounds Grand Rapids Historical Commission Retrieved October 26 2022 Immigration The New York Times October 16 1870 The Furniture City Grand Rapids Public Museum Archived from the original on March 5 2010 Retrieved March 6 2010 a b c d e f g h i Erdmans Mary Patrice Autumn 2005 The Poles the Dutch and the Grand Rapids Furniture Strike of 1911 Polish American Studies 62 2 5 22 doi 10 2307 20148725 JSTOR 20148725 S2CID 254436229 via JSTOR Bray Nicole amp DuShane Robert 2013 Ghosts of Grand Rapids The History Press pp 13 14 ISBN 9781626192058 via Google Books Wind and Hydropower Technologies Program History of Hydropower United States Department of Energy September 9 2005 Archived from the original on January 26 2010 Retrieved January 14 2010 Furniture Detective Not All Antique Grand Rapids Furniture Is Grand The Antique Trader a b c d e f g Flaherty Viva October 1911 History of the Grand Rapids Furniture Strike With Facts Hitherto Unpublished pp 1 29 a b c d Martinez Shandra April 3 2011 Labor strife in Wisconsin reminiscent of great furniture strike of 1911 in Grand Rapids MLive Retrieved August 7 2021 Erdmans Mary Patrice Autumn 2005 The Poles the Dutch and the Grand Rapids Furniture Strike of 1911 Polish American Studies 62 2 5 22 doi 10 2307 20148725 JSTOR 20148725 S2CID 254436229 North Carolina the Furniture Capital of the World Visit NC Vaughn Charles Simon Dorothy 1984 The City of Wyoming A History Franklin Michigan Four Corners Press pp 77 112 Neighborhood Classifications Open Performance US Gazetteer files 2010 United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 20 2011 Retrieved November 25 2012 National Weather Office Forecast Office Grand Rapids MI select NOWData then daily monthly normals Retrieved April 13 2020 Kottek Markus Grieser Jurgen Beck Christoph Rudolf Bruno amp Rubel Franz June 2006 World Map of the Koppen Geiger Climate Classification Updated PDF Meteorologische Zeitschrift 15 3 259 263 Bibcode 2006MetZe 15 259K doi 10 1127 0941 2948 2006 0130 Erdman Jon America s 20 Snowiest Major Cities The Weather Channel Retrieved August 21 2017 National Weather Service Climate National Weather Service Corporate Image Web Team Retrieved August 21 2017 USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map United States Department of Agriculture Archived from the original on February 27 2014 Retrieved August 21 2017 THE GRAND RAPIDS MI ASOS CLIMATE SUMMARY FOR THE YEAR OF 2019 National Weather Service Retrieved January 24 2020 a b c d e NowData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 8 2021 National Weather Service 1956 Tornado Outbreak Retrieved August 21 2017 New Perspectives on the 1904 Flood in Grand Rapids Michigan Grand Valley State University March 2004 Retrieved August 20 2017 Tunison John May 16 2013 Flood Damage Report 10 6 Million to Kent County Properties MLive Retrieved February 28 2015 Threadex Station Grand Rapids MI National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Archived from the original on May 8 2021 Retrieved May 8 2021 WMO Climate Normals for Grand Rapids Kent Co Int l Ar MI 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved March 10 2014 Johnson Richard L October 5 2004 Alticor Which Owns and Operates the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel Planning a 300 400 Room Marriott in Downtown Grand Rapids Michigan October 2004 Hotel online com Retrieved August 21 2017 Grand Rapids High rise Buildings Service Professor Grand Rapids Retrieved November 20 2017 About Us Calvin Ecosystem Preserve and Native Gardens Calvin University Retrieved September 9 2019 About Blandford Blandford Nature Center Retrieved September 9 2019 Smith Sydney September 8 2019 Blandford Nature Center Begins Demolition as Part of 6 6M Highlands Restoration Project MiBiz Retrieved September 9 2019 Decennial Census of Population and Housing by Decades US Census Bureau a b P2 Hispanic or Latino and not Hispanic or Latino by Race 2010 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Grand Rapids city Michigan United States Census Bureau a b P2 Hispanic or Latino and not Hispanic or Latino by Race 2020 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Grand Rapids city Michigan United States Census Bureau U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved November 25 2012 Grand Rapids city Michigan State amp County QuickFacts United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on April 30 2012 Retrieved April 21 2012 Fernandez Delia Spring 2013 Becoming Latino Mexican and Puerto Rican Community Formation in Grand Rapids Michigan 1926 1964 Michigan Historical Review 39 71 100 doi 10 5342 michhistrevi 39 1 0071 West Michigan Race Ethnicity Foreign Born Ancestry PDF The Right Place Advancing the West Michigan Economy The Right Place Inc Archived from the original PDF on December 28 2012 Retrieved September 9 2012 Collection West Michigan Vietnamese History Project collection Grand Rapids History Center Roelofs Ted March 27 2001 Census shows Hispanics fuel much of the growth in Wyoming and other West Michigan cities MLive Retrieved August 21 2017 a b McVicar Brian May 22 2022 Black population shrinks The Grand Rapids Press pp A1 A2 The Cities Where African Americans Are Doing The Best Economically Forbes Retrieved October 23 2020 Gentrification in Grand Rapids neighborhood is hurting diversity Black resident says MLive May 16 2022 Retrieved May 23 2022 Levin Scott 2022 2010 20 Grand Rapids black population by census tract Map Carto Retrieved May 23 2022 Christian Reformed Church in North America Religious Groups Association of Religion Data Archives Retrieved August 20 2017 An Introduction Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved August 13 2011 http www crcna org sites default files membershipstats doc bare URL DOX DOCX file a b c d Maps amp Reports The Association of Religion Data Archives Retrieved August 21 2017 Temple Emanuel A Brief History September 15 2008 Archived from the original on September 15 2008 Retrieved September 8 2018 Michigan State University Museum MSU Museum Museum msu edu April 10 2018 Retrieved September 8 2018 Facts Roman Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids Archived from the original on June 22 2009 Reformed Church in America Religious Groups The Association of Religion Data Archives Retrieved August 20 2017 Church Website Links Great Lakes RCA Archived from the original on August 28 2013 Retrieved September 24 2013 A Brief Introduction to the PRCA Prca org Retrieved August 21 2017 Downloads Prca org 2016 Retrieved August 20 2017 Listing of PRC Churches Prca org Retrieved August 21 2017 Directory Archived from the original on January 1 2014 Retrieved May 15 2014 Netherlands Reformed Congregations Religious Groups The Association of Religion Data Archives Retrieved August 21 2017 About Us West Michigan Conference of the United Methodist Church Archived from the original on April 12 2014 Retrieved August 21 2017 About Us United Methodist Community House Archived from the original on December 7 2013 About Us Spectrum Health System Retrieved December 19 2017 The History of American Seating American Seating Retrieved August 20 2017 Corporate Locations Steelcase Retrieved August 20 2017 Talking to Coalesse New Design Director John Hamilton Design Applause June 7 2014 Retrieved August 20 2017 Scanlon Jessie January 2 2016 The Mini Cooper of Office Furniture Bloomberg Retrieved August 20 2017 Knape Chris September 13 2011 Haworth Will Open Furniture Showroom in Downtown Grand Rapids MLive Retrieved August 20 2017 Keith Kelsey July 22 2016 Company Town Curbed Retrieved August 21 2017 History of FMA Furniture Manufacturers Association Archived from the original on July 25 2008 Retrieved August 20 2007 Kindel History Kindel Furniture 2009 Archived from the original on July 13 2011 Retrieved January 14 2010 Hekman History Hekman Woodmark Furniture Company 2007 Archived from the original on December 10 2007 Retrieved December 10 2007 Grand Rapids Lands New Boeing Contract Fox 17 West Michigan Grand Rapids WXMI TV January 31 2013 Retrieved August 21 2017 Beeke Candace May 13 2010 Grand Rapids named most sustainable city in nation Business Review West Michigan Retrieved August 21 2017 Cities with the Most Manufacturing Jobs November 6 2020 Business Facilities 2019 Metro Rankings Report July 24 2019 Sustainability Rankings Top Locations for Sustainable Development Site Selection Magazine As U S superstar cities thrive weaker ones get left behind Reuters July 19 2019 Rankings Best High Schools U S News amp World Report Retrieved July 30 2019 Catholic Central High School Private School Review Retrieved August 21 2017 Home page National Heritage Academies Retrieved on November 27 2011 Find Us 3850 Broadmoor Ave SE Suite 201 Grand Rapids MI 49512 a b GVSU Campuses Grand Valley State University Archived from the original on October 6 2010 Retrieved October 2 2010 About Grand Valley The Campuses Grand Valley State University Retrieved August 21 2017 Martinez Shandra January 4 2016 Billionaire Rich DeVos is GVSU s largest donor at 36M MLive Retrieved May 1 2021 Grand Valley plans affordable housing project in Belknap Lookout MLive July 16 2018 Retrieved May 1 2021 Kelley Geri amp Cody Jason September 10 2010 College of Human Medicine Trnasforms Medical Education with New Secchia Center Michigan State University Retrieved August 21 2017 a b West Michigan Sculptures Alexander Calder La Grande Vitesse 1969 SculpturesitesGR org June 14 1969 Archived from the original on December 25 2008 Retrieved December 3 2009 40th Anniversary Highlights 1967 Initial Public Art Project Becomes a Landmark National Endowment for the Arts Archived from the original on October 15 2009 Retrieved December 3 2009 About Festival of the Arts Festival of the Arts Grand Rapids Michigan Archived from the original on May 24 2010 Retrieved August 21 2017 History Artprize Retrieved August 21 2017 About ArtPrize Artprize Retrieved August 21 2017 Ellison Garret May 14 2012 Beer City USA The Grand Rapids Press Retrieved August 21 2017 Beer City USA 2013 Grand Rapids Wins Again Walker MI WZZM TV May 14 2013 Archived from the original on August 14 2013 Retrieved September 24 2013 UICA Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts Retrieved August 20 2017 Grass Michael September 23 2015 Unsolicited Advice Forget Beer Grand Rapids It s Time to Trumpet Architecture Too Route Fifty Washington DC Atlantic Media Retrieved August 21 2017 Jack Loeks Studio 28 Cinema Treasures 2009 Retrieved August 21 2017 Studio 28 Theatre CinemaTour November 27 2009 Retrieved August 21 2017 Brenzing Bob amp Ross Peter November 14 2008 Studio 29 closing November 23rd Walker MI WZZM TV Archived from the original on April 19 2013 Retrieved January 14 2010 Kaczmarczyk Jeffrey May 15 2009 Frederik Meijer Gardens Gets Accolades in Delta Airlines Sky Magazine The Grand Rapids Press Retrieved February 16 2010 Hetter Katia December 10 2013 Top Ten U S Travel Destinations for 2014 CNN Retrieved August 21 2017 52 Places to Go in 2016 The New York Times January 7 2016 Retrieved August 21 2017 Barber Casey August 2 2019 Say Cheers to the 15 Best Beer Cities around the World CNN Travel Retrieved August 23 2019 About the GRS The Grand Rapids Symphony Retrieved August 20 2017 About History Great Lakes Chorus Archived from the original on December 18 2010 Retrieved December 15 2010 a b Crafted in Michigan The Grand Rapids Ballet is en pointe MLive Retrieved August 24 2020 History Opera Grand Rapids September 10 2010 Archived from the original on October 16 2010 Retrieved December 15 2010 Kaczmarczyk Jeffrey February 16 2010 Opera Grand Rapids Begins Move in at its 2 5 Million First Permanent Home MLive Retrieved August 20 2017 America s Dying Cities Newsweek January 21 2011 Retrieved April 13 2020 Kaczmarczyk Jeffrey May 27 2011 Rob Bliss American Pie Lip Dub Video Sparks Newsweek s Source to Explain Its Dying City Designation for Grand Rapids The Grand Rapids Press Retrieved August 21 2017 Status Creative s Grand Rapids Lip Dub Wins 2011 Earnie Award Press release Status Creative February 21 2012 Retrieved September 24 2013 via PR Newswire The ArtPrize Story Artprize Retrieved April 10 2017 ArtPrize 2015 Has a Little More Art and a Lot More International Artists MLive Retrieved August 21 2017 Watson Rachel June 25 2021 Special Olympics Michigan launches 20M public capital campaign Grand Rapids Business Journal Retrieved September 1 2021 Grand Rapids Rowing Association Grand Rapids Rowing Association Retrieved June 8 2010 Grand Rapids Rugby Club Grand Rapids Rugby Club Retrieved August 21 2017 Grand Rapids Wheelchair Sports Association Grand Rapids Wheelchair Sports Association Retrieved August 20 2017 State Games of Michigan State Games of Michigan Retrieved August 20 2017 Kaminski Steve May 21 2010 Kentwood s Mike Knuble Among Olympians to Be Honored at State Games of Michigan The Grand Rapids Press Archived from the original on May 22 2011 Retrieved June 8 2010 Revuewm com Revuewm com Retrieved August 21 2017 About The Rapidian Retrieved October 1 2010 The Rapidian Dev Blog GR Press First Citizen Journalist Chronicle Archived from the original on July 28 2011 Retrieved October 1 2010 Local Television Market Universe Estimates PDF Nielsen Media Research 2019 Retrieved January 24 2020 Michigan Radio Broadcasting Stations RadioStationWorld 2008 Retrieved August 21 2017 Police Department grcity us Retrieved July 12 2019 www grcmc org Grand Rapids Community Media Center January 28 2008 Booked and Fingerprinted at the Grand Rapids Jail History Grand Rapids Retrieved January 23 2018 Before DeVos Place Downtown Grand Rapids riverfront site has diverse complex history MLive Retrieved March 17 2018 Calling all cities Consolidating services may not work but cash strapped local governments will try it MLive January 2 2011 Retrieved July 29 2020 Grand Rapids police release video of officer fatally shooting Patrick Lyoya Detroit Free Press Retrieved April 14 2022 Kransz Michael April 12 2022 Protesters march on Grand Rapids city meeting demanding justice for Patrick Lyoya MLive Retrieved April 14 2022 Barker Kim Eder Steve Tate Julie April 27 2022 The Driver the Officer and the Deadly Traffic Stop in Grand Rapids New York Times Archived from the original on April 27 2022 Retrieved April 27 2022 Grand Rapids 19 homicides so far in 2020 Where when and how they happened MLive July 18 2020 Retrieved July 29 2020 Shooting death of Grand Rapids girl 8 unforgotten and unsolved 15 years later The Grand Rapids Press April 22 2008 Retrieved July 29 2020 a b Homicides increase in 2019 for Grand Rapids Kent County MLive January 2 2020 Retrieved July 29 2020 Six homicides in 2014 brings Grand Rapids to lowest figure in decades MLive January 14 2015 Retrieved July 29 2020 Mourning most violent year West Michigan seeks answers WOODTV com March 12 2021 Retrieved September 30 2021 Surge in auto thefts hits Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo where nearly 2 cars stolen per day MLive January 27 2022 Retrieved January 28 2022 a b c Government Information City of Grand Rapids Archived from the original on August 21 2017 Retrieved August 20 2017 a b Biolchini Amy October 3 2017 Grand Rapids mayor leaves full time job in search of work life balance Grand Rapids Press Retrieved October 3 2017 Gibbons Lauren August 16 2017 Michigan State University city of East Lansing at odds over proposed income tax MLive Lansing Retrieved August 21 2017 Bond Emrich Anne July 12 2002 Logie not Running but Will Campaign Grand Rapids Business Journal Retrieved August 21 2017 Mayor George Heartwell City of Grand Rapids Michigan Archived from the original on October 26 2010 Retrieved March 5 2010 Vande Bunte Matt November 4 2014 Term Limits Pass in Grand Rapids Mayor 4 Commissioners Suddenly Lame Ducks MLive Retrieved August 21 2017 a b Tavernise Sabrina Gebeloff Robert Lee Christopher October 25 2019 Are the Suburbs Turning Democratic The New York Times Retrieved January 23 2020 a b Burnett Sara Eggert David March 28 2019 Trump s return to west Michigan comes amid Democratic gains Associated Press Retrieved January 23 2020 Welch Matt April 29 2020 Justin Amash Becomes the First Libertarian Member of Congress Reason com Retrieved April 30 2020 Sullivan Robert David How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century America Magazine in The National Catholic Review June 29 2016 Grand Rapids Railway Company Grand Rapids Public Museum Retrieved October 31 2021 Grand Rapids History and Special Collections Department July 22 2015 Grand Rapids Railway Company Reorganization Collection PDF Grand Rapids Public Library Retrieved October 31 2021 To Cancel Common Stock Grand Rapids Railway Company Adopts Reorganization Plan The New York Times April 13 1927 p 36 Retrieved October 31 2021 Knopf Michael May 10 2008 Grand Rapids Streetcars Grand Rapids Historical Commission Retrieved October 31 2021 Bajema Carl Maas Tom 2017 The Street Railways of Grand Rapids Horsecars Cable Cars Steam Dummies Electric Streetcars Chicago Central Electric Railfans Association ISBN 9780915348497 Retrieved October 31 2021 via University of Missouri St Louis Libraries History Gerald R Ford International Airport Archived from the original on November 30 2009 Retrieved March 6 2010 https www ridetherapid org additional services DASH Grand Rapids Cadillac Traverse City Petoskey Mota Online January 15 2013 Archived from the original on August 21 2017 Retrieved March 9 2013 Grand Rapids Benton Harbor Chicago PDF Indian Trails November 11 2012 Archived from the original PDF on July 17 2014 Retrieved March 9 2013 Grand Rapids Kalamazoo PDF Indian Trails November 11 2012 Retrieved March 9 2013 dead link Dovey Rachel October 31 2014 6 Reasons Grand Rapids Earned a Place on the Great Transit Map nextcity com Retrieved November 15 2014 Transit Master Plan Final Report Archived October 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine Chapter 6 Development of Future 2030 Planning Scenarios p 30 32 Pere Marquette Grand Valley Metropolitan Council Archived from the original on July 12 2017 Retrieved August 21 2017 Who or What Are All Those Pere Marquettes Pere Marquette Historical Society Retrieved August 20 2017 Grand Rapids Sister Cities International City of Grand Rapids Retrieved April 11 2022 Further reading EditBratt Peter A 2010 Renewing a Grand Center Postwar Planning in Grand Rapids Michigan 1949 to 1959 Michigan Historical Review 36 2 126 158 doi 10 1353 mhr 2010 0034 ISSN 2327 9672 Retrieved via Project Muse Carron Christian G 1998 Grand Rapids Furniture The Story of America s Furniture City Grand Rapids MI Grand Rapids Public Museum Fernandez Delia Spring 2013 Becoming Latino Mexican and Puerto Rican Community Formation in Grand Rapids Michigan 1926 1964 Michigan Historical Review 39 71 100 doi 10 5342 michhistrevi 39 1 0071 Horowitz Herschel S 1989 Grand Rapids The Public Health Story Journal of Public Health Dentistry Wiley 49 1 62 63 doi 10 1111 j 1752 7325 1989 tb02026 x ISSN 0022 4006 PMID 2642968 Jelks Randal Maurice 2006 African Americans in the Furniture City The Struggle for Civil Rights in Grand Rapids University of Illinois Press Lewis Norma ed 2008 Grand Rapids Furniture City Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 5200 2 OCLC 228417444 Lunn Mike Pasch Nicole Schiebold John January 1 2017 Collaborating for Success in Grand Rapids Michigan Proceedings of the Water Environment Federation Water Environment Federation 2017 9 3590 3596 doi 10 2175 193864717822157973 ISSN 1938 6478 Olson Gordon L 1992 A Grand Rapids sampler Grand Rapids Mich Grand Rapids Historical Commission ISBN 0 9617708 3 X OCLC 26740168 Robinson Todd E 2013 A City Within a City The Black Freedom Struggle in Grand Rapids Michigan Philadelphia Temple University Press Scott David B 1989 Evolution of the Grand Rapids Water Flouridation Project Journal of Public Health Dentistry Wiley 49 1 59 61 doi 10 1111 j 1752 7325 1989 tb02025 x ISSN 0022 4006 PMID 2642967 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grand Rapids Michigan Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Grand Rapids Official website Grand Rapids Kent County Convention amp Visitors Bureau Grand Rapids Area Chamber of Commerce Grand Rapids Historical Commission Online Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grand Rapids Michigan amp oldid 1134022678, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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