City Guide 2009-10 - GRM

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Special annual issue - read and save all year! Celebrating City Life

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City Guide 2009-10 The Ultimate Sourcebook

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In The Four Minutes It Takes To Drive From Here To

W

elcome to the Villages at Tullymore, located 45 minutes north of Grand Rapids and far beyond your expectations. Imagine living at the 15th best golf course in America, according to Golf Digest. Imagine owning an awardwinning Ministrelli

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designed home, such as those found exclusively at resorts like the Artisian in Rancho Mirage and the Village at Indian Wells in Palm Springs area. You can own a custom home with gourmet kitchen, European baths, vaulted ceilings and 4 Ÿ inch hand-scraped wood flooring. There are still some select home sites available. Or, purchase one of our gracious duet condominiums with available custom lower levels. All of these ownership options –

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o

Your Home, All Your Work Day Worries Disappear.

custom homes, home sites, and condominiums – come with an associate membership at both Tullymore and St. Ives. Shared ownership opportunities exist as well with our Residence Club golf villas. The Villages at Tullymore offers more than a home – it’s a sanctuary from the everyday, where nature and luxury collaborate to create an environment that’s both inspiring and soothing…a place you’d be proud to call home.

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Experience Tullymore and all the resort living options we offer. Arrange for a private tour at your convenience. Play a round of golf, dine at Divine’s – and feel your work day worries melt away. Call 800-503-2630

11969 Tullymore Drive • Stanwood, MI 49346 800.503.2630 • www.tullymoregolf.com

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It’s true. Dining at our signature restaurant, six.one.six, at the JW Marriott Grand Rapids is an experience you “can’t just have one” of.

The JW “Potato Chip” Effect

In fact, those who dine with us once find themselves coming back for more. Good thing we’re open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, seven days a week. Now you can even dine outdoors. Experience “Jdek”—our stylish new patio. The JW. How will it affect you?

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ce

c o M p l I M E N Ta R y pa R k I N G f o R b R E a k fa s T, l u N c H , a N D D I N N E R 2 3 5 lo u I s sT R E E T N W G R a N D R a p I Ds M I c H I G a N

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8 7 7. 9 3 3 . 8 5 3 3

I l o v E T H E J W. c o M

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realize your dream www.bdrinc.com BUILD DESIGN RESTORE

Before we even think about breaking ground, we take BUILDING ALONG THE MICHIGAN SHORELINE

the time to get to know our clients and understand their vision. Each home we design and build is truly a reflection of each client’s personality and lifestyle.

5510 CASCADE RD SE SUITE 200 GRAND RAPIDS (616) 458-8505

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FURNISH YOUR NEW HOMES WITH THEIR OWN SALES FORCE. In a 2007 national study, real estate professionals recommended Viking four-to-one over the next leading brand. They noted that homes with Viking kitchens sell more quickly and for more money. On average, Viking kitchen appliances add more than 4% to a home’s value, compared to lesser brands. And with our builder packages, that makes a pretty great return for you.

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1.888.845.4641 vikingrange.com

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contents

city guide | 2009-10 Volume 46 Number 7

EDITOR’S NOTE................................................ 10

BACKSTAGE PASS DESTINATIONS AND EXPERIENCES

FEATURES THEY DID IT THEIR WAY

Pages and pages (and pages) of a comprehensive resource guide to Grand Rapids, from art galleries to theaters (with a dozen lengthy lists in between), including a handy downtown map..................................................47

Heritage guitars............................................... 15 Cascade wind turbines.................................... 16 Uncle Goose blocks.......................................... 17 X-Rite.................................................................. 18 The Political Winery....................................... 19 TerraTrike........................................................ 20 Pure bars............................................................ 21

BEST OF GR

Here are the results of the 2008-09 Grand Rapids Magazine “Best of GR” Readers Poll, in which you chose the city’s best people, places and things............................. 112

DINING LIST..................................................... 80

HOT IDEAS

From Pop-Tarts to steel wastebaskets to one-stop shopping, West Michigan has always supported pioneers............................22 SCHOOL RANKINGS

Statistics and more statistics allow you to evaluate area school districts...................... 26

ON THE COVER

Photography by Johnny Quirin

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A NEW DIRECTION IN QUALITY & STYLISH FURNITURE

637 Leonard NW Just West of US 131 Grand Rapids, MI 49504

616.454.4439 www.nwhomefurnishings.com GRM_07.09_CG_Sec2_PG02.13.indd 7

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Covering Grand rapids since 1964 www.grmag.com

info@grmag.com PUBLISHER

John H. Zwarensteyn: jzwarensteyn@geminipub.com EDITOR

Carole Valade: cvalade@geminipub.com MANAGING EDITOR

Marty Primeau: mprimeau@geminipub.com COPY EDITOR

Donna Ferraro: dferraro@geminipub.com CONTRIBUTING EDITORS

Joseph A. Becherer, A. Brian Cain, Ira Craaven, Mark F. Miller, Jon C. Koeze, Tricia van Zelst CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Julie Burch, Kimberly Monaghan EDITORIAL INTERNS

Matthew Baker, Rebecca Beard, Tamara Jackson DESIGN PANEL

Celeste Adams, Joseph A. Becherer, John Berry, Kevin Budelmann, Jim Caughman, Sam Cummings, Oliver Evans, James Ludwig, Ray Kennedy, Henry Matthews, Joe McCambridge, Wayne Norlin, Wayne Visbeen DESIGN & PRODUCTION MANAGER

Scott Sommerfeld: ssommerfeld@geminipub.com

Wine Cabinet

ASSISTANT DESIGN & PRODUCTION MANAGER

Chris Pastotnik: cpastotnik@geminipub.com ART COORDINATOR

Kelly J. Nugent: knugent@geminipub.com DESIGNERS/PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS

Harbour Bay Furniture Co.

Color

Melissa Brooks: mbrooks@geminipub.com Robin Vargo: rvargo@geminipub.com CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS

Stuart, FL and Holland, MI

Michael Buck, Jim Gebben, Jeff Hage, Jack Poeller, Johnny Quirin

Downtown Holland · 212 S. River Ave., Holland · (616) 395-5554

Randy D. Prichard: rprichard@geminipub.com

Open Mon.–Sat. 10:00–5:30

www.harbourbayfurniture.com

GENERAL SALES MANAGER

ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER

Lindy Hebel: lhebel@geminipub.com ADVERTISING SALES CONSULTANTS

General Inquiries: advertisingsales@grmag.com Kathie Manett: kmanett@geminipub.com John Olsa: jolsa@geminipub.com Jan Thomas: jthomas@geminipub.com Lesley Vander Wall: lvanderwall@geminipub.com

BE INSPIRED BY

ADVERTISING SALES ASSISTANT/COORDINATOR

Karla Warnock: kwarnock@geminipub.com CIRCULATION & MARKETING MANAGER

Scott T. Miller: smiller@geminipub.com

CIRCULATION & MARKETING COORDINATOR

Jocelyn Burkett: jburkett@geminipub.com CIRCULATION & MARKETING ASSISTANT

Shane Chapin: schapin@geminipub.com

FINANCE & ADMINISTRATION MANAGER

Pamela Brocato, CPA: pbrocato@geminipub.com ACCOUNTING & CREDIT ASSISTANT

Bev Horinga: bhoringa@geminipub.com ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

Tina Gillman: tgillman@geminipub.com RECEPTIONIST/CLERICAL ASSISTANT

General Inquiries: info@grmag.com Linda Wilson TO ORDER REPRINTS

Karla Warnock: kwarnock@geminipub.com (616) 459-4545 Grand Rapids Magazine (ISSN 1055-5145) is published monthly by Gemini Publications, a division of Gemini Corporation. Publishing offices: 549 Ottawa Ave. NW, Suite 201, Grand Rapids, MI 49503-1444. Telephone (616) 459-4545; fax (616) 459-4800. General e-mail: grminfo@grmag. com. General editorial inquiries: editorial@grmag.com. Periodical postage paid at Grand Rapids, MI. Copyright © 2009 by Gemini Publications. All rights reserved. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Grand Rapids Magazine, 549 Ottawa Ave. NW, Suite 201, Grand Rapids, MI 49503-1444. Subscription rates: one year $24, two years $34, three years $44, in continental U.S.; Alaska, Hawaii, Canada and U.S. possessions, one year $35. Subscriptions are not retroactive; single issue and newsstand $3.95 (by mail $6); back issue $6 (by mail $7.50), when available. Advertising rates and specifications at www.grmag.com or by request. Grand Rapids Magazine is not responsible for unsolicited contributions. LAKESHORE/COAST OFFICE

AMG Business Center 800 Ellis Road #519, Suite 173 Muskegon, MI 49441 Phone: (231) 799-4845 • Fax: (231) 799-4844

Interior painting and custom finishes specialist. Kosters & DeVries uses only the best products available to help achieve quality craftsmanship. 2756 Sanford SE, Grandville, MI

616-450-1984

audited by

KOSTERS & DeVRIES, INC. PAINTING CONTRACTORS

www.geminipub.com

Mediamark Research Inc. (MRI)

8 Grand rapids City Guide 2009-10

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editor’s note | By Carole Valade

Prize of the city ArtPrize also may offer opportunity for Grand Rapids to escape the “second city” moniker cloaked in a perception of “exclusionary conservatism.” This history and the ArtPrize endeavor headquartered by the 30-year-old Urban Institute for Contemporary Art shows otherwise. (DeVos has been an active member of the UICA board.) So, too, does the feature in this issue chronicling the highlights of the area’s entrepreneurial spirit. Success is not always measured by the number of patents or employees but by the creativity and sustainability of ideas. One of the local giants, Amway, volunteered in May to fund the city’s annual Fourth of July Fireworks show, in honor of the company’s 50th anniversary. In the next month, city residents will be invited to volunteer in a variety of ways (any Festival volunteer knows well the diversity of “jobs”), including the act of hosting artists coming to the city for the ArtPrize competition, which officially begins Sept. 23. The top 10 art works will be determined by Oct. 1, and voting will culminate with the Oct. 8 announcement of the winner. (A $100,000 second prize and $50,000 third prize also will be announced.) Hank Meijer is quoted in the story that begins on page 14: “We’re awfully lucky that we’ve had people in West Michigan who are willing to try things. The current thinking is that creative ideas will be fostered in larger cities. But there is something in the scale of Grand Rapids that makes it big enough to find the tools and talents, yet small enough to foster experimentation.” Illustration Courtesy Pomegranate Studios

Success is not always measured by the number of patents or employees but by the creativity and sustainability of ideas.

At month’s end any artist in the world who wants to claim a $250,000 top prize will be registered for a chance to do so. By the end of this month, all venues for these artists will be sponsored by local hosts. This is the beginning of ArtPrize, the brainstorm of entrepreneur Rick DeVos, using social media Internet sites to determine the winner by popular vote. Some artists are expected to begin work as soon as Aug. 1, if not before. DeVos’ idea is to engage an international collection of art and artists in every discipline and bring them to Grand Rapids. The city’s history in such endeavors is marked by national firsts, such as engaging Alexander Calder to create a sculpture installation for the city. “La Grande Vitesse” was the first artwork in the United States funded (in part) by the National Endowment for the Arts. Some may recall that at that time works of art were not generally available for viewing by the general public; art treasures were in private collections or art museums. It is fitting, for many reasons, that the ArtPrize logo developed by the local firm People Design incorporates an image of “the Calder,” set on its side, atop the “A” in ArtPrize. From creating a place for art, to making the entire city a gallery and engaging the world’s vote has been accomplished in a 40-year time span. The city has bragging rights to other firsts: Festival of the Arts, the city’s arts festival sponsored and created each year by volunteers, also is 40 years old this year and remains the nation’s largest all-volunteer arts festival, drawing more than half a million spectators. Another first: The Grand Rapids Art Museum is the world’s first gold LEED-certified art museum. In each case, naysayers insisted such things could not be accomplished. There were doubters, too, in regard to the creation of the Avenue for the Arts in Heartside, which now teems with artists in storefront galleries/loft apartments, creating an economic domino effect of new businesses and acclaimed new restaurants in the vicinity.

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No regrets They did it their way …

By Marty Primeau

P

erhaps G.A. Krause said it best: “There is some opportunity here.” The founder of the small shoe factory that would become Wolverine World Wide was talking about West Michigan. In 1903 he and his sons built a shoe factory in Rockford, making 300 pairs a day. Today Wolverine’s products, including leading casual brands, are sold globally in nearly 200 countries and territories. And Krause wasn’t alone. The West Michigan region has produced a myriad of innovative ideas and products, from Pop-Tarts to privatelabel pills. Entrepreneurs thrive here, and a high percentage of family-owned businesses have remained here for several generations. “We’re awfully lucky that we’ve had people in West Michigan who are willing to try things,” said Hank Meijer, whose father and grandfather founded a grocery store empire 75 years ago. “The current thinking is that creative ideas will be fostered in larger cities. But there is something in the scale of Grand Rapids that makes it big enough to find the tools and talents, yet small enough to foster experimentation.” Simply put, said Peter Secchia, former CEO and chairman of Universal Forest Products Inc. and U.S. ambassador to Italy, “People here are willing to take risks.” Consider Melville Bissell, who built a carpet sweeper machine to help his wife clean the sawdust particles in their small crockery shop. He patented the invention in 1876 and built the first Bissell manufacturing plant seven years later. It’s still in Grand Rapids, and Melville’s great grandson, Mark Bissell, runs the company. Or Dan and Dorothy Gerber, a young couple looking for an easier way to strain and mash their baby daughter’s peas

Photography by Michael Buck (page 15)

West Michigan entrepreneurs haven’t always listened to wise advice and statistical analysis, preferring to forge ahead on “a feeling, a hunch and a vision.”

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Heritage carries on the Gibson tradition One of the most renowned guitar companies started 100 years ago in Kalamazoo. Orville Gibson, a mandolin maker, incorporated the Gibson Mandolin-Guitar Manufacturing Company Ltd. in a factory on Parsons Street. Gibson grew and prospered in West Michigan until 1984, when production shifted to Nashville, Tenn. Closing the Kalamazoo plant was devastating to the luthiers left behind. So a core of former Gibson craftsmen, led by Marvin Lamb, Jim Deurloo and J.P. Moats, opened a new company, Heritage Guitar Inc., in the old factory. But while the owners knew how to make fine guitars, they weren’t experts on how to run a business. By 2007, Heritage was struggling and the owners decided to close the doors.

the company back on track. “Our guitars are different than Gibson, but they pay homage to the original way guitars were made,” Margol said. “Gibson went automated. We didn’t.” In its heyday, the old Gibson company employed more than 1,000 workers and cranked out as many as 350 guitars a day. Today, Heritage employs 18 and sells 1,200 or more guitars a year to customers around the world — including such celebrity musicians as Roy Clark and Eric Clapton. Huge icons of the music industry have visited the plant since the Gibson days and Margol wants to establish a history room — “a place to showcase the company’s heritage.” — Marty primeau

Enter Kalamazoo attorney Vince Margol, who had been playing guitars since he was 12. When Margol learned that Heritage was having financial problems, he made an offer. He negotiated a partnership agreement, giving all four principals a share of the business. Margol is helping get

City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 15

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“When you look at Grand Rapids, you see a wealth of knowledge passed down in family businesses through two, three and four generations.” — Jeanne Englehart

The answer, my friend, is blowin’ in the wind Cascade Engineering didn’t invent the Swift Rooftop Wind Turbine — the Grand Rapids-based company just made it better. The Swift is a small, silent turbine designed to be mounted on rooftops of homes or small businesses. The ecofriendly, energy-saving device was created by two Scottish engineers who formed a company, Renewable Devises, in 2002. Cascade took notice, and figured out that replacing the carbon fiber rotors with lighter-weight plastic would make the Swift harm neutral, producing more energy in its lifetime than is incorporated in the material and processes used in its manufacturing.

So two years ago, Cascade CEO Fred Keller made the connection with Renewable Devices to make blades and rotors for the turbines. The Grand Rapids plastic products manufacturer also assembles and distributes the turbines throughout the U.S. and Canada. The first West Michigan Swift was installed in 2008 at the Frauenthal Theater in Muskegon. This year six turbines were placed on the roof at Meijer headquarters in Walker. “We are doing several installations in July,” said Cascade spokesperson Lindsey Grates. “We have dealers throughout Michigan and we’re doing training sessions in Indiana, Ohio and Illinois — plus we’re already reviewing applications for dealers in New England and the Northeast.”

Photography by Michael Buck (page 16); johnny quirin (page 17)

— Marty primeau

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and carrots. Dorothy suggested Dan talk to his father about using the family’s Fremont Canning Co. to simplify the process. Gerber Baby Food was developed, eventually selling to Nestle, but the plant remains in West Michigan and is currently the site of a $75 million expansion related to infant/ toddler food research, Nestle’s key site internationally. Luther Perrigo was proprietor of a general store and apple-drying business in Allegan. In 1887 he had the notion to package and distribute patented medicines for country stores. His company developed the “private label” concept as a way to build company loyalty. Through the years, Perrigo has acquired several businesses throughout the world, but remains in West Michigan. Last year the company announced plans to invest $10.5 million to expand its Allegan headquarters and add 400 jobs over the next five years. “All of these people took huge gambles,” Meijer said. “It wasn’t always the result of a careful analysis — it was more of a feeling, a hunch and a vision.” In the mid-1800s, household furniture put Grand Rapids on the map. It was an industry that gradually evolved as craftsmen recognized a future in high-tech office systems. Today, Grand Rapids has gained a reputation as a leader in “green” furniture design. But even with the nickname “Furniture City,” the area never has been dominated by a single industry, said Gordon Olson, city historian. “As a result, there’s been more of an opportunity for mid-size corporations to emerge here and stay here.” Many are family-owned and passed from generation to generation, he said. “The owners continue to live here and support others. For instance, Win Irwin of Irwin Seating Co. will tell you about his grandfather and two brothers who started one furniture company after another.” Irwin Seating is the world’s leading manufacturer of public seating for movie theaters, auditoriums, arenas, performing arts centers and more, and is headquartered in Grand Rapids. Olson also cites Herman Miller, an icon of office furniture manufacturing, who taught his son, Howard, the fine art of clock making. Howard took over the company’s clock division in 1926 and renamed it; today Howard Miller Clock Co. still is located in Zeeland, across the street from Herman Miller Inc. Just as important as family values is the role of religion, Olson said, referring to R.H. Tawney’s book, “Religion and the Rise of Capitalism,” which makes the connection between spiritual salvation and economic success. “Basically, it says that strong values toward family and community are keys to success — and those things certainly exist in West Michigan,” Olson said. Jeanne Englehart, president of the Grand Rapids Area Chamber of Commerce and former business owner, agrees. “People here respect and reward hard work,” she said. “It’s part of your religious or family heritage. When you look at Grand Rapids, you see a wealth of knowledge passed down in family businesses through two, three and four generations,” she said. “And people here have such strong philanthropic expectations.” Just look at Amway. Rich DeVos and Jay Van Andel were best friends in high school when they decided to be business partners. They tried a number of ventures before starting Amway,

Pete Bultman inherited his father’s Uncle Goose business and is building a wooden block empire in West Michigan.

Building with blocks

I

n the early 1980s, William Bultman was churning out marketing campaigns for Amway’s international division. But as the Grand Rapids man grew tired of the corporate 9-to-5 drill, he yearned for something different. That something turned out to be wooden blocks. “What got him thinking about blocks was a marketing project at Amway that required a set of patterned blocks,” said his son, Pete Bultman. “While he was doing research, he realized that no one was making the big blocks he played with as a child.” So Bultman founded Uncle Goose, specializing in alphabet block sets. When he died in 1992, Pete and his brother, Scott, took over, changing the company name to Lindenwood Inc. and expanding their father’s vision. While the classic ABC blocks still are the most popular, the company also produces a variety of Uncle Goose specialty blocks, including sets in a dozen foreign languages or using American Sign Language symbols and Braille, nursery rhymes or math. Lindenwood also accepts custom orders: Customers can personalize a set or create a birth announcement block. “We’re going crazy as my mind perceives all the things we can do,” Bultman said. His new Museum Line includes U.S. Presidents, Egyptian hieroglyphics blocks, U.S. States — even bugs. All blocks are 1.75-inch cubes, handcrafted from Michigan basswood that was planted and harvested along the Great Lakes, Bultman said. Each is embossed and imprinted using child-safe ink. “I would say 99 percent of everything I use is local to West Michigan,” said Bultman, who oversees a small staff of less than a dozen workers. “We do all the production here in Grand Rapids.” But Uncle Goose blocks are sold around the world, he said. “When I sell a case of blocks to the Middle East, it makes me feel good that we’re bringing some of that money here to Michigan.” — Matt Baker City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 17

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Matchmaker, matchmaker, find me a match

In a world filled with many shades of color, Grand Rapids-based X-Rite Inc. sets the standards for matching color formulas for every type of product imaginable. “Color is essential to the human experience,” said Jon Kowalski, strategic marketing director for X-Rite. “You’re going to notice right off the bat if your can of Coke is not Coca-Cola red, and that might mislead you into thinking there is something wrong with the product. Our job is to make sure that doesn’t happen.” Founded in 1958, X-Rite originally invented a product designed for the medical industry. In response to a need

for a secure medical film identification system, X-Rite engineers produced a tape that permitted physicians to accurately track medical records by embossing a patient’s name directly onto the X-ray film. The similarities between this product development and the spectrum measurement technology process moved the group into the direction of defining color standards. X-Rite began manufacturing and refining hardware and software systems to precisely measure and match these color standards and formulas. Home and fashion retailers rely on X-Rite technology to ensure product color consistency. Hardware stores utilize X-Rite’s specially designed spectrophotometers to help consumers match paint color to a fabric swatch. X-Rite also provides the instruments to streamline global manufacturing and reduce waste in the printing, photography, graphic design, video, paints, plas-

tics, textiles, medical and automotive industries. “Your car hood may be manufactured in Brazil and the doors in China, but it’s assembled in the U.S.,” said Kowalski. “Our instruments help make sure the color matches are 100 percent accurate to reduce waste. The paint should be applied in the same fashion, and the pearlescent finish on the assembled car should be seamless.” X-Rite strengthened its market position by acquiring GretagMacbeth, a global technological color measurement company, and Pantone Inc., an expert in retail and design color. “When it comes to innovation and new product development, we are always looking for solutions to save customers money,” said Kowalski. “Having acquired these experts and merged the talent pools, we have emerged as the global leader in color science technology and standards.” — Kimberly Monaghan

Photography by Michael Buck

As 2009 dawned, so did the birth of Mimosa, a tint of optimism during times of economic uncertainty. Your wardrobe probably includes a bit of Crème Brule or Palace Blue. And a wall in your home may be painted with a splash from the Galaxy and Transformations palette.

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a direct-sales company, in the basements of their neighboring homes. Amway — short for American Way — developed into a multibillion-dollar global business. Not only has the company remained in Ada, the founders dedicate time and money to improve the quality of life in Grand Rapids, from funding museums, research, hospitals and arenas, to underwriting the July 4 Family Fireworks Event. “There’s a direct tie between the great philanthropic activity in West Michigan and our entrepreneurial spirit,” said Bob Roth, president of RoMan Manufacturing Inc., a leading manufacturer of water-cooled AC transformers and other stacked-core transformers, founded by his father and Robert Hoffman — and still owned by their families. “Having worked together in the industry since 1959, our fathers started RoMan as a means of working for themselves,” Roth said as he accepted the 2008 Jeffrey Butland Michigan Family-Owned Business Award by the U.S. Small Business Administration. “As a family business, their philosophy was humble: Grow the pie and expand everyone’s piece.”

Photography by Johnny Quirin

“People here are willing to take risks. They take pride in success. It’s part of our culture.” — Peter Secchia And that dynamic of being open and sharing is prevalent in West Michigan, he said. Roth serves on the board of Grand Valley State University’s Family Owned Business Institute, whose mission is to promote and support family businesses. Looking forward, Mark Bissell believes Grand Rapids will continue to be ripe for entrepreneurs. “Grand Rapids offers a competitive community with excellent schools, a growing presence in the arts and an abundance of leisure activities year round.” GR Marty Primeau is managing editor of Grand Rapids Magazine.

A mutual love of wine and politics led John Helmholdt and partner Chris Trebilcock to launch The Political Winery.

Putting the party back into politics

P

olitics could be a touchy topic for business partners John Helmholdt and Christopher Trebilcock. Helmholdt, communications director for Grand Rapids Public Schools and a staunch Republican, rarely agrees with Trebilcock, a Royal Oak attorney and Democratic Party activist. Unless they’re drinking wine. Their mutual love of vino prompted The Political Winery, a venture they launched in 2006 with the goal of “Putting the party back into politics.” With help from St. Julian Winery, the 30-somethings produced four wines with eye-catching labels and a clever marketing campaign. For GOP drinkers, there’s Red Trunk, drawing from “Lincoln’s responsibility, Teddy’s tenacity and Ford’s humility.” And Elle Blanc, the “First Mama of Republican wines.” Dems, meanwhile, can toast with Jack Blue, “a wine for the common man,” and Jackie O’Rouge, “bold but graceful.” Their “Partisan Cup” wines were served at three 2009 inaugural balls and other Washington, D.C., events. TPW’s first generation of wines was produced in June 2008, five years after Helmholdt and Trebilcock met as fellows in Michigan State University’s political leadership program. Both men cut their teeth in politics. At age 8, Helmholdt was stuffing envelopes and knocking on doors to help his father, Gerald R. Helmholdt, win the 1982 Grand Rapids mayoral election.

John went on to become a lobbyist and consultant for a variety of Republican candidates, advocacy organizations and political action committees. Trebilcock, raised in a newspaper family in the Upper Peninsula, has been an activist in the Democratic Party for 15 years. As the guys attended political shindigs around the state, they wondered, “Why aren’t we drinking Michigan wines at Michigan events?” Why indeed? And The Political Winery was born. They sold the concept to St. Julian Winery and came up with hybrid varietals — “house wines, not too dry, not too sweet” — and secured Kent Beverage as a distributor. The partners wrote the copy and hired an artist to draw clever caricatures for the labels. They also did some aggressive social networking to heighten awareness. Political wines, which sell for about $15 a bottle, are available at 50 locations in Michigan, and are available online for shipment to 26 states. The partners are adding multiple distributors, including Ward Distributing in Marquette, and Marchetti in Sault Ste. Marie. “Those are big ones for us because they cover Mackinaw Island, know for political and trade conferences.” They’re also tweaking the formulas of Red Trunk and Jackie Blue: “In response to feedback, we’re making them much drier with just a hint of Michigan.” — Marty Primeau City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 19

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“All of these people took huge gambles. It wasn’t always the result of a careful analysis — it was more of a feeling, a hunch and a vision.” — Hank Meijer

Kentwood tricycle biz goes global A new way to travel green: trikes for grown-ups. WizWheelz of Kentwood is the nation’s largest manufacturer of threewheel recumbent tricycles. Jack Wiswell and Wayne Oom first conceived of the idea while socializing at a 1995 Christmas party. Wiswell sketched a design idea for an adult tricycle on a cocktail napkin and showed it to Oom. “I said, ‘You’ve got a business here,’” Oom said. “We started making them that next year in his garage.” The partners initially tried to weld the tricycles themselves, but conceded it was best to hire professionals. Wiswell’s sketch became reality with the first TerraTrike, which the company has been manufacturing since 1996.

warehouse that includes an indoor track where customers can test ride a trike — or where employees can spend a little down time. Only 11 of the trikes were sold in the first year, but WizWheelz has grown rapidly since. TerraTrike has been featured on CNN and Nickelodeon’s “My Family’s Got GUTS.” “It’s a small, niche business,” Oom said. “But we’re one of the largest companies in the world in this niche market.” The company opened a custom shop this year for those who want special features on their trikes. — Matt Baker

Photography by Michael Buck

Originally an Internet-based company, WizWheelz operates out of an 8,000-square-foot

20 Grand Rapids City Guide 2009-10

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It’s all in the cards

Photography by Johnny Quirin (top); Michael Buck (bottom)

P

icture this: You marry an up-and-coming stockbroker and one month later he quits his job to make greeting cards. He has no experience in the stationery industry, but he loved those handmade cards you sent him in college. Do you leave him? No way. Twenty-two years later, you’re still married and living well in East Grand Rapids. That entrepreneurial young man is now president of Design Design Inc., a manufacturer and distributor of stationery, paper tableware and gift packaging. True story, said Don Kallil, who is thankful that his wife, Jennifer, was so understanding and supportive. He admits there were times when he questioned the sanity of starting the company. The first trade show he attended in 1987 was a disaster. “We’d packed our bags and headed to California,” Kallil said. “We wrote three orders during that whole show. “That first year we starved to death. The second year we lived on brown rice and vegetables. My wife had to get a fulltime job just to pay rent.” By the fourth year, however, things were improving as Kallil met new artists, hired a creative director and figured out which products worked. Murray’s Law, a line of humorous cards, was a hit. “Year after year we grew,” he said. Today, Design Design offers 15,000 products, operating from a 60,000-squarefoot building in downtown Grand Rapids with a distribution center in Wyoming. The company employs about 100 people and works with 75 sales reps around the country. The cards, paper tableware, gift packaging and other paper products are sold in independent shops as well as major chains such as Macy’s, Barnes & Noble and Bed, Bath & Beyond. “It’s exciting,” said Kallil. “The stationery business is always changing.” And if that’s not enough to keep him busy, he recently bought Mary Ann’s Chocolates and moved the candy shop to East Grand Rapids — just a few blocks from his home. — Marty Primeau

Don Kallil of Design Design Inc. quit his finance career 22 years ago to make greeting cards.

It was simply Pure inspiration Anna Bosgraaf was 6 when she discovered that chicken nuggets used to be a living, breathing animal. The Holland girl told her mom she wanted to be a vegetarian (a term she discovered while watching “Animal Planet”).

grocery chains, from Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s to Meijer and Spartan

Most parents might have panicked, but Veronica Bosgraaf accepted the challenge. Respecting her daughter’s choice, she did some research and learned as much as she could about meatless nutrition and natural foods.

“The exciting news is that we are partnering with a manufacturer in Michigan,” Bosgraaf said. Originally, she contracted with a California company to make the bars.

Preparing vegetarian meals wasn’t a problem for the mother of three — even her husband grudgingly accepted the new fare. But packing lunches and snacks was a headache. “I was dismayed at what I found,” Bosgraaf said. “Most bars were full of sugar and had very little protein or nutritional value.”

stores. Last year the Holland-based company sold more than 500,000 bars nationwide, and Bosgraaf expects to double that in 2009.

“Michigan and Meijer is where it all started, and we want to do more business right here,” she said. “All of our Web site design and packaging is done locally, and we are doing some warehousing here now also.”

— Marty primeau

So she experimented. While making a pie crust with organic almonds and dates, she realized the texture was similar to a bar. She threw in some brown rice protein, agave nectar and cocoa powder. The Pure Bar was born. With help from friends and family as she tackled the complex process of shelf-life testing, nutritional guidelines, designing wrappers and more, Bosgraaf launched her product in January 2006. Six varieties of Pure Bars are distributed in heath food stores and

City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 21

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Hot ideas From Pop-Tarts and steel wastebaskets to “one-stop shopping,� West Michigan has supported pioneers

Photography by Michael Buck

By Marty Primeau

22 Grand Rapids City Guide 2009-10

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In 1962, the Meijer family opened the first Thrifty Acres, the original supercenter combining food and general merchandise under one roof.

Courtesy Meijer (top); steelcase (bottom)

H

In 2004, the company developed the Think chair, an environmentally sustainable seating product that addressed the need for mid-priced ergonomic seating. Today Steelcase is an international company with approximately 13,000 employees worldwide and more than 600 dealer locations around the world. One of the quirkiest success stories belongs to Kellogg Co. of Battle Creek, credited with the 1960’s invention of the iconic Pop-Tarts. As the tale goes, the Post division of General Foods announced in 1964 that it was introducing Country Squares, a fruitfilled toaster pastry. But Kellogg wasn’t about to let its archrival bask in breakfast food glory. The company contacted Bill Post, plant manager of Keebler in Grand Rapids, and asked him to develop a similar product. Post (no relation to the cereal company) worked quickly and came up with a pastry that adult focus groups hated. But kids loved ’em, so Kellogg aimed its marketing at America’s youth, according to Carolyn Wyman, author of “Better Than Homemade: Amazing Foods That Changed the Way We Eat.” Kellogg named its squares Pop-Tarts for the way they popped out of the toaster, a name that echoed pop music and Andy Warhol’s pop art of the 1960s. Post was stuck with Country Squares, a name that was “backward and boring” and its sales lagged behind Pop-Tarts. With more than 30 varieties, PopTarts continue to be top sellers; Post abandoned the toaster-pastry business in 1972. GR Marty Primeau is managing editor of Grand Rapids Magazine.

ank Meijer is thankful his father time when straw wastebaskets were an and grandfather were willing to office fire hazard. A year later, the Grand Rapids-based company sold 200 fireproof take a risk. Twenty-eight years after Greenville steel desks for Boston’s first skyscraper, barber Henrik Meijer opened a grocery the Customs House Tower. The company, which changed its name store with his 14-year-old son, Fred, the Meijers decided to try a new concept: a to Steelcase in 1954, has an impressive list store that combined food and general mer- of achievements, including: A 1945 photo shows Gen. Douglas chandise under one roof. It was the birth of the supercenter, a MacArthur and Japanese officials signmodel that would forever change the way ing documents ending World War II on a Steelcase table aboard the USS Missouri. people shop. “They were betting the company at the In 1999, the company introduced the time — literally,” said Hank Meijer, CEO Leap chair, addressing the correlation and cochairman of Meijer. between back pain and productivity. In 1962 his family borrowed money In 2001, Steelcase built the first manand committed to three stores, the origi- ufacturing facility in the world to achieve nal Thrifty Acres on 28th Street and LEED certification. Kalamazoo Avenue, as well as stores in Muskegon and Holland. “It was a very risky move,” Meijer said. “Had that decision been the subject of careful analysis, they probably would have been advised not to do it. They were working on instincts.” Meijer now has nearly 200 supercenters across the Midwest. Similar innovation was going on at the Metal Office Furniture Co. In 1914, the company received a patent for “Victor,” a fireproof steel wastebasket. The invention From the invention of “Victor,” a fireproof wastebasket, to high-tech office systems such as the flexible was a major innovation at a c:scape with Leap seating, Steelcase has been a leader in the furniture industry since 1914.

City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 23

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The Great Lakes are trying to tell you something.

Swimming bans. Fish consumption advisories. Invasive species harming our economy. These are just some of the signs our planet’s largest freshwater resource is in trouble. Your small actions have large consequences; make them positive. Join Shedd Aquarium’s initiative to save the Great Lakes. Always pick up pet waste, use trash cans at the beach, and never pour chemicals down the drain. For a list of simple things you can do to help save the Great Lakes, visit ListenToYourLakes.org. cmyk values c = 82 PMS 3125

m=4 y = 20 k=0 cmyk values c = 93

PMS 294

m = 66 y = 16 k=5

GRM_07.09_CG_Sec4_PG24.32.indd 25

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Look beyond the

Wondering what to make of Grand Rapids Magazine’s annual school rankings? Here’s some advice: Ignore the results. Who finished first or last is not as important as the wealth of information presented in the chart. By analyzing each category, parents can discover a variety of

data, from student/teacher ratios to school board election turnouts. In presenting the chart, the magazine gives higher value to performance, including MEAP and ACT scores, instructional expenditures, student/teacher

ratios, as well as graduation and dropout rates. Less value is given to localsource revenue, tax on residential property, long-term debt per student, diversity, voter turnout, adults with high school and bachelor’s degrees, and such safety concerns as physical assaults by students and weapons possessions.

illustration courtesy ISTOCKPHOTO.COM/filo

rankings 26 Grand Rapids City Guide 2009-10

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When perusing the information, remember that the ranking is just a starting point — simply looking at numbers doesn’t tell the whole story.

Finally, three categories are unranked, including head-count enrollment, state-funded foundation allowance and economic disadvantage. When perusing the information, remember that the ranking is just a starting point — simply looking at numbers doesn’t tell the whole story. For instance, large urban districts such as Grand Rapids Public Schools tend to be near the bottom of the list because their statistics include alternative campuses and special programs. GRPS has one school for 60 pregnant teens; another campus is specifically for students new to the country who speak no English. At the other end of the spectrum is East Grand Rapids — ranked No. 1 — with one high school, one middle school and three elementary schools. Where you reside in the city also plays a key role. Families living in Heritage Hill send their children to City High School, selected by U.S. News and World Report as one of the top 300 high schools in the nation, boasting high graduation and low dropout rates. Speaking of those rates: In 2007, the Center for Educational Perfor-

mance and Information changed the method of calculating graduation and dropout rates “to provide a more accurate rate to assist schools and districts in targeting education policies to assist greater numbers of students to success in school and earn a diploma. In addition, this calculation aligns with the guidelines provided by the National Governors Association Graduation Counts Compact and complies with the requirements of No Child Left Behind Act of 2001.” For Godfrey-Lee Public Schools, that changes the dropout rate from 12.08 percent in 2006 to 35.47 percent in 2007 — a statistic that would startle parents if they’re comparing rankings from one year to the next. Grand Rapids Magazine provides readers with school information painstakingly researched over several months, published annually in the July City Guide to give parents the advantage of looking at the aspects most important to them in the education of the community’s children. GR Several Grand Rapids Magazine staff members contributed to this article.

City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 27

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report cards

Ranking

School District

1

East Grand Rapids Public Schools

2

Forest Hills Public Schools

ME Pro AP Hi 200 ficien gh Sc 7 3 cy ( hool per • cen Readi tag ng e), ME Pro AP Hi g f i h c 200 ien S 7 3 cy ( chool per • cen Math tag e),

7O • Ave 200 rage 7 + ACT Sco re,

NON-RANKED CATEGORIES

Dro (pe pout rce Rat nta e ge) , 20 0

7O Gra (pe duati rce on R nta ge) ate , 20 0

Eco (pe nomi rce c D nta isad ge) , 20 vanta 08 ge •

Sta Allo te-fun wan ded ce, F 200 ound 7 v ation •

Hea d-C oun

t En

roll

me nt,

200

8

for area school districts

PERFORMANCE

3,012

$7,770

6%

96.33%

2.86%

23.5

91.3%

85.6%

10,022

$8,383

7%

96.68%

2.12%

22.1

88.0%

84.7% 69.0%

3

Jenison Public Schools

4,703

$7,204

16%

93.67%

4.56%

20.9

66.7%

4

Caledonia Community Schools

4,010

$8,307

14%

89.87%

4.15%

20.3

74.3%

71.9%

4

Rockford Public Schools

8,030

$7,204

11%

92.95%

3.53%

21.1

85.3%

70.9%

6

Northview Public School District

3,496

$7,204

28%

76.86%

14.10%

20.3

84.0%

68.1%

7

Hudsonville Public School District

5,479

$7,204

15%

93.33%

4.64%

21.0

76.5%

75.7%

7

Byron Center Public Schools

3,251

$7,790

19%

90.05%

3.98%

20.5

79.6%

68.9%

Lowell Area Schools

3,934

$7,204

17%

90.00%

7.06%

21.2

82.2%

72.3%

10

Grandville Public Schools

6,040

$7,204

18%

83.52%

10.41%

21.1

79.3%

70.5%

7

11

Sparta Area Schools

2,964

$7,204

27%

87.67%

5.73%

19.4

71.6%

68.3%

12

Kentwood Public Schools

9,182

$7,453

43%

78.51%

12.97%

19.4

71.3%

59.2%

13

Kent City Community Schools

1,432

$7,204

30%

86.09%

6.96%

18.1

73.3%

64.7%

14

Thornapple-Kellogg School District

3,051

$7,204

22%

92.27%

4.29%

19.1

70.8%

56.9%

15

Kenowa Hills Public Schools

3,593

$7,518

34%

93.41%

5.49%

19.0

69.2%

61.8%

16

Cedar Springs Public Schools

3,462

$7,204

35%

81.25%

11.40%

18.8

73.0%

61.4%

17

Comstock Park Public Schools

2,534

$7,219

31%

74.24%

16.16%

20.0

73.3%

60.8%

18

Wyoming Public Schools

5,690

$7,231

56%

73.67%

12.77%

17.6

67.7%

50.2%

18

Lakewood Public Schools

2,366

$7,204

32%

92.13%

3.37%

18.2

55.5%

44.4%

20

Greenville Public Schools

3,986

$7,204

40%

82.89%

12.50%

18.8

77.1%

63.6%

21

Lakeview Community Schools

1,564

$7,204

49%

78.00%

15.33%

18.5

68.2%

50.0%

21

Grant Public School District

2,433

$7,204

38%

80.32%

8.51%

18.6

67.4%

53.9%

21

Wayland Union Schools

3,086

$7,204

34%

87.26%

9.65%

18.1

66.9%

52.9%

24

Kelloggsville Public Schools

2,317

$7,204

63%

51.10%

24.73%

17.1

68.9%

53.0%

25

Godwin Heights Public Schools

2,728

$8,155

61%

43.58%

34.03%

17.5

54.6%

43.5%

26

Grand Rapids Public Schools

20,300

$7,440

83%

51.76%

29.94%

17.8

47.5%

27.5%

27

Godfrey-Lee Public Schools

1,749

$7,366

77%

48.26%

35.47%

16.3

49.0%

28.2%

27

Tri-County Area Schools

2,499

$7,204

41%

84.88%

9.30%

17.8

58.9%

55.4%

29

Belding Area School District

2,371

$7,204

49%

71.86%

15.08%

18.3

57.6%

40.8%

State-funded Foundation Allowance | Source: House Fiscal Agency, Michigan House of Representatives. School Tax on Residential Property | Source: 2007 Kent County Certified Property Tax Rates and 2007 Ottawa County Apportionment Report. Graduation Rate/Dropout Rate | Source: Center for Educational Performance and Information. Average ACT Score 2007 | Source: The Detroit News’ interactive Michigan public high school ACT and MME scores, 2007 MEAP High School Math and Reading Proficiency | Michigan Department of Education MEAP Assessments, High School Class of 2007 District Totals Local Source Revenue and Taxable Property Value Per Student | Source: Michigan Department of Education Bulletin 1014. School Board Election Voter Turnout | Source: Kent County Elections Department and individual reporting precincts in Allegan, Barry, Ionia, Montcalm, Newaygo and Ottawa counties for the May 8, 2007, school board election.

v 7 O + 3 C F

illustration courtesy ISTOCKPHOTO.COM/filo

Source: Council of Chief State School Officers “State Education Data Center” Online Service (www.schooldatadirect.org), except where noted below.

28 Grand Rapids City Guide 2009-10

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• “Hi (pe ghly Q rce nta ualifie ge) d T 200 each 6 • ers ” Stu den ts p er T eac her , 20 07 Phy 200 sical 7 (p Assa er 1 ults 00 We stu by Stu a den de 200 pons ts) nts, 7 (p Pos er 1 ses 00 sion stu den by St Adu ts) ude l nts t Dip s w , i lom th a a (p Hig erc h S ent cho age ol ), 2 008 Adu l Deg ts w ree ith a (pe t lea rce nta st a B ge) ach , 20 elo Sch 08 r’s Vot ool B (pe er Tu oard E rce rno l nta ut ectio n ge) , 20 07 F

eP er

, $5,257

$147,686.00

$24,462.82

8.1%

94.9%

18.30

n/a

n/a

99.1%

73.7%

25.75%

30.24%

$665.00

$8,780

$5,670

$178,899.00

$18,760.23

12.0%

100.0%

17.50

n/a

0.02

95.8%

54.7%

19.88%

008 ers ity, 2 Div

Lon ($ p g-Ter er s m D tud ebt ent ), 2

006

$8,535

Tax Stu able P den rop t, 2 e 006 rty V C alu

Sch Pro ool T Tax perty ax on R ab l ( e V per $ eside alu e), 50,00 ntial 200 0 77 Op e r a 200 tio 6 (p nal E er s xpe tud ndit ent ure ) s, $789.41

Ins 200tructio 6 (p nal er s Exp tud end ent itur ) es

Loc 200 al-So 6 (p urce erc Rev ent age enue, )C 15.35%

FUNDING

SCHOOL ENVIRONMENT

COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT

11.22%

$660.00

$8,664

$5,709

$119,649.00

$11,957.69

11.8%

98.3%

18.80

n/a

n/a

93.6%

27.8%

29.13%

37.61%

$650.00

$9,073

$5,599

$152,674.00

$23,961.35

4.6%

95.6%

19.30

0.03

0.05

93.9%

33.3%

18.27%

21.02%

$774.09

$7,804

$4,909

$135,192.00

$13,122.67

5.1%

100.0%

18.70

n/a

0.01

94.6%

35.9%

8.66%

25.35%

$610.28

$7,765

$5,109

$108,026.00

$6,586.10

15.2%

100.0%

18.90

0.09

n/a

93.1%

32.2%

17.47%

11.22%

$698.97

$7,665

$5,053

$156,438.00

$22,561.41

8.3%

96.4%

17.90

n/a

n/a

93.7%

28.3%

9.95%

25.57%

$699.18

$8,343

$5,114

$159,170.00

$39,975.70

10.1%

100.0%

17.20

N/A

0.03

89.2%

27.7%

10.34%

19.14%

$650.00

$7,551

$4,724

$120,125.00

$12,476.87

4.0%

93.1%

18.70

n/a

0.03

91.6%

27.6%

7.75%

29.65%

$602.50

$7,647

$4,982

$125,445.00

$6,779.80

14.1%

90.1%

19.70

n/a

n/a

92.1%

23.9%

12.22% 13.04%

17.70%

$642.76

$7,751

$5,224

$97,286.00

$12,371.46

13.7%

95.4%

20.00

n/a

N/A

88.3%

19.0%

33.56%

$600.00

$8,066

$5,245

$94,597.00

$11,542.37

50.2%

92.3%

17.80

n/a

n/a

90.9%

33.2%

12.26%

12.05%

$762.50

$7,770

$4,887

$92,207.00

$17,925.98

12.5%

98.4%

19.90

n/a

0.07

88.6%

14.1%

19.49%

15.58%

$650.00

$7,238

$4,438

$115,275.00

$16,175.02

7.5%

100.0%

21.00

0.03

N/A

90.2%

14.9%

17.42%

44.84%

$468.00

$7,644

$4,638

$113,126.00

$9,567.21

16.4%

73.3%

18.90

0.03

n/a

91.7%

25.1%

17.85%

14.52%

$650.00

$8,299

$4,972

$102,062.00

$19,654.25

5.6%

99.3%

18.30

0.03

0.03

88.7%

18.3%

8.82%

20.88%

$757.89

$7,720

$4,888

$88,615.00

$12,541.44

22.0%

82.0%

18.40

0.04

0.04

90.6%

25.1%

8.86%

25.01%

$530.00

$8,385

$5,507

$84,447.00

$3,540.25

46.6%

100.0%

18.00

N/A

N/A

88.3%

23.2%

10.11%

10.97%

$650.00

$7,531

$4,539

$109,620.00

$7,179.63

7.3%

86.0%

20.00

n/a

n/a

88.3%

12.7%

39.38%

16.44%

$650.00

$7,366

$4,523

$94,517.00

$12,046.16

5.8%

94.6%

20.20

0.08

n/a

83.8%

14.7%

5.83%

13.60%

$630.00

$8,040

$4,819

$101,339.00

$12,054.99

4.7%

98.9%

19.30

n/a

n/a

82.3%

11.3%

9.44%

6.73%

$673.00

$7,525

$4,910

$57,421.00

$5,312.37

25.2%

97.2%

17.20

0.04

n/a

80.8%

10.5%

6.31%

16.15%

$650.00

$7,699

$4,378

$108,369.00

$9,621.52

6.8%

88.1%

18.00

N/A

N/A

90.1%

16.6%

16.25% 9.37%

31.57%

$575.00

$7,945

$5,045

$66,647.00

$11,718.17

51.1%

100.0%

17.70

0.04

n/a

86.1%

18.9%

33.08%

$460.00

$8,955

$5,655

$55,853.00

$4,167.89

61.0%

96.4%

18.40

n/a

0.08

82.9%

14.1%

7.21%

21.47%

$435.00

$10,902

$6,542

$94,912.00

$4,702.46

78.6%

89.4%

15.40

0.09

0.13

83.4%

28.5%

14.12%

14.92%

$872.38

$8,117

$5,280

$42,263.00

$10,646.08

79.7%

77.1%

15.20

n/a

n/a

81.0%

16.8%

6.77%

12.65%

$448.69

$7,258

$4,734

$88,617.00

$4,280.11

3.3%

79.8%

18.90

0.28

n/a

82.4%

11.3%

7.86%

14.67%

$650.00

$7,694

$4,856

$79,125.00

$11,597.22

7.5%

73.3%

17.50

0.04

N/A

81.9%

13.4%

2.25%

• Definitions

Diversity refers to the percentage of non-white students. Economic Disadvantage refers to the percentage of students on free or reduced lunch. Graduation Rate and Dropout Rate do not add up to 100 percent because some students stay in school for more than four years. High School Math and Reading Proficiency refers to the percentage of high school students scoring proficient or above on the Michigan Educational Assessment Program (MEAP). Highly Qualified Teachers refers to the percentage of teachers in a given district who meet the requirements of being “highly qualified” as defined by the state and federal government under No Child Left Behind. Highly Qualified Teachers must have a bachelor’s degree, full state certification and licensure, and demonstrated competency in each core academic subject taught. State-funded Foundation Allowance is the per pupil amount provided by the state for basic operating expenses.

City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 29

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6/1/09 3:28:14 PM


MODEL

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6/1/09 3:28:16 PM


ur e,

Exceptional Summer Dining and Entertainment The Plaza at Woodland Mall provides the perfect meeting place to enjoy patio dining with friends on a beautiful summer day. Choose from: On the Border Red Robin Restaurant Bar Louie If you prefer an indoor setting, visit the Cafés in the Woods Food Court for a quick bite; or, full service dining at Olga’s Kitchen. And, take in the best value movie offerings of the season at Celebration! Cinema, just a leisurely stroll away! Visit www.shopwoodlandmall.com for a complete list of mall stores and the most current sales and events.

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Shop 100 stores including Macy’s, JCPenney, Sears and The Cafés in the Woods Food Court. Monday-Saturday 10am to 9pm, Sunday 11am to 6pm 28th Street and the East Beltline, West of I-96 www.shopwoodlandmall.com

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A Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust Property

6/1/09 3:28:17 PM


Your home is your masterpiece. Why not make every element a work of art? From clean lines to sculpted curves to classic beauty, there’s something for every lover of fine things at Infusion by Etna. For tubs and toilets, faucets and sinks, showers and pedestals, find your home design muse today at any of our six locations.

Traverse City 231-947-1300 Grand Rapids 616-245-0808 Kalamazoo 269-349-8388 Wixom 248-624-5000 Lansing 517-622-8696 Holland 616-396-1717

Etna GRMag Ad KL.7.indd 1

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3/27/07 4:12:29 PM

6/1/09 3:28:25 PM


Special Advertising SEction

Grand Rapids | Home

2009 Design Home Fixtures, Hardware & Technology

Outdoor Comfort With and without walls

GR Home Showcases Celadon New Town Rivertown Landscapes

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SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

GRAND RAPIDS MAGAZINE

2009 DESIGN HOME

T

CAREFULLY CHOSEN FIXTURES AND HARDWARE ALONG WITH STATE-OF-THE-ART SECURITY AND TECHNOLOGY PROVIDE BEAUTY AND PEACE OF MIND.

“This is an absolutely beautiful home with breathtaking views,” observes Dawn Lubben, security sales consultant at Engineered Protection Systems, Inc. (EPS). “It’s a very special place along the lakeshore.” And to keep this exceptional place safe and secure, EPS of Grand Rapids contributed custom-designed security and fire systems. EPS presented the homeowners with a range of choices for the security systems; the result is state of the art protection from intruders and fire that delivers peace of mind and is easy to manage. With a showroom conveniently located in Standale and a longstanding relationship with homebuilder BDR, Progressive Hardware was the ideal supplier for all of the home’s hardware needs. Each room was considered separately in terms of function, color scheme, and ambiance to arrive at the

custom hardware selections. “The beauty of the hardware selected complements the nautical and cottage flavor shown throughout, truly adding to the feeling of fun and relaxation of being on the lake,” says Nancy Reame of Progressive Hardware. Dave Schuitema, president of Integrity Systems Group, credits a parallel focus with BDR for his company’s successful contribution to the project. “We are both committed to maintaining a good working relationship, not only with each other, but also with the homeowners and fellow sub-contactors,” he remarks. Along with technology partner Audio Video Interiors, this Hudsonville-based company helped design and install everything related to wiring in the home, from outlets to lighting controls to audio and automation.

FEATURED NEXT MONTH: Weathering the elements and long-lasting beauty … no problem in the hands of experts.

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

Designing the dream

Construction materials

Behind the walls

Surfaces & cabinetry

Kitchen & bath

Interior finishes

Hardware & technology

Exterior finishes

Shoreline details

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SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

Who did the work? Light fixtures that tie in with the cottage feel and the lakeshore theme are one of the many details the design team mastered in finishing this year’s Design Home.

With the wiring component complete, light fixture selection and installation commenced. “The fixtures we chose complement the airy, cottage atmosphere of the home,” says Chele Brew of The Lighting Corner, who collaborated with BDR designer Mary Buikema to select lighting fixtures. “Chrome and polished nickel finishes produce a nice clean feel and highlight the home’s nautical theme.” “We make sure the quality of the product we supply to our customers is something we can be proud of,” says Scott Agers, The Lighting Corner’s general manager. From behind-thescenes yet all-important matters like security to striking hardware and lighting choices, the contributions of every business and individual working on this home will certainly produce a residence that will be the homeowners’ pride and joy.

A monthly highlight on a few of our 2009 Design Home partners. “CUSTOM DESIGN always offers a fun experience, since it calls for working closely with the builder and homeowner,” says EPS security sales consultant Dawn Lubben. Engineered Protection Systems, Inc., EpsSecurity.com “WE KNEW THEY COULD provide us with the unique blend of quality hardware that we install in our custom homes,” said BDR project manager, Mark Homans. Progressive Hardware, pro-hardware.com ACCORDING TO BDR designer Mary Buikema, the skilled lighting consultants at The Lighting Corner worked closely with the team from the lighting layout to fixture selection. The Lighting Corner, thelightingcorner.com “EVERY TIME I WORK on homes on Lake Michigan, I find myself saying, ‘Boy! Wouldn’t it be great to wake up to this every day!’” reflects Integrity Systems Group’s president Dave Schuitema. Integrity Systems Group, (616) 875-6090

2009 DESIGN HOME PARTNERS BDR Custom Homes • Belden Brick & Supply • Bel-Aire Heating & Air Conditioning • Century FloorSpace • Engineered Protection Systems • Gerrit’s Appliance, Inc. • Godwin Plumbing & Heating • Infusion by Etna • Integrity Electrical Services • Israels Designs For Living • Kappes Landscapes • Kosters & DeVries Inc. • Lighting Corner • Overhead Door • Pazzel Custom Cabinets • Progressive Hardware • Rivershores • Standard Lumber • The Window Center • Top of the World Granite • Whitson Insulation

IN ASSOCIATION WITH: GALA EVENT PROCEEDS TO BENEFIT: BUILD » DESIGN » RESTORE

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Special Advertising Section

Celadon New Town

Grand Rapids | Home

GR Home Showcase:

Photography by Michael Buck

A new approach to small town living

Less than half a mile west on Knapp Street off the East Beltline, a burgeoning garden of West Michigan’s most innovative real estate opportunities — urban cottages, live-work condominiums, commercial offices and retail shops — has taken root. Grand Rapids-based Mosaic Properties calls its new, 22-acre mixed-use community Celadon New Town, underscoring its commitment to green building concepts and green space preservation. But what’s most prevalent is this seasoned development firm’s fresh — and timeless — approach to neighborhood.

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Special advertiSing Section

From on-site retail shops, including a tasting room, to a diversity of housing options, Celadon offers broad appeal.

Inspirations: Natural beauty — stucco, brick, wood, vibrant color palates; superior architecture; the happy marriage of yesterday’s villages to today’s innovations; neighborhoods that enhance and preserve the environment. Professional High Point: “We’ve crafted seven colorful, cohesive places to live that cultivate community and inspire creativity,” said Brad Rottschafer, president of Mosaic Properties. Personal High Point: After a dozen years of community development, research and dreaming, bringing Celadon New Town to fruition.

CELADON — NEW TOWN, MOSAIC PROPERTIES Brad Rottschafer, President 2050 Celadon Dr. NE, Suite B, Grand Rapids (616) 235-0711 Ext. 202 brad@mosaicproperties.com www.celadonnewtown.com

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“We’re merging old town style with principles of New Urbanism and sustainable design,” explained Brad Rottschafer, president of Mosaic Properties. The inviting variety of residential, work and retail buildings emerging at Celadon is a keenly studied reflection of proven New Urbanism principles at work in similar communities across the nation, including the sustainable settlement of Serenbe south of Atlanta and New Town at St. Charles in St. Louis. “The primary key to their success,” Rottschafer noted of the latter, “is that they offer a wide variety of housing options

at various price points. They’ve created a sense of community by having Friday night outdoor movies, subsidizing a small grocery store and café, and have adhered to New Urbanist tenets that foster architectural interest and walkability.” Celadon’s design also integrates the Americana appeal and practicality of small rural towns. “It’s about creating more than sidewalks,” the developer said. “We’re giving people a reason to walk — places they can shop and meet and relax, just outside their door. Our goal is for Celadon to attract anyone — young families, singles with or without kids, empty nesters — who desires contemporary living, stylish amenities and connecting with others in a casual, convenient, creative environment.”

Photography by Michael Buck (top); Courtesy Mosaic Properties (left)

Grand rapids | Home

Credentials: Celadon New Town is the latest of seven communities crafted by Mosaic Properties, including Flowers Crossing, Darby Farms, Flowers Mill, Blackberry at Shear’s, Spring House, and Balsam Hill.

6/1/09 11:31:36 AM


Special advertiSing Section

Celadon New Town

Photography courtesy Mosaic Properties

Photography by Michael Buck (top); Courtesy Mosaic Properties (left)

Grand rapids | Home

GR Home Showcase:

Avid interest in the community and flourishing closings indicate Mosaic Properties’ adherence to four proven community tenets (below) is achieving this sense of place: Authentic and Fresh Architecture. “We define ‘authentic architecture’ as a mix of both traditional and modern elements common to Americana,” Rottschafer said. “If buildings and homes are detailed and proportioned correctly, they will anchor a community with their timelessness for generations.” New Urban Principles. Garden plots, an outdoor amphitheater, a community pool, parks and places to work and dine that are within walking distance from home all help define unique character. Affordability. “This doesn’t mean cheap,” said Rottschafer, whose firm specializes in high-end custom homes. “It means making that effort to select efficient

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materials and design simple dwellings. We are constantly researching and evaluating energy usage and how to use reclaimed materials in creative ways.” Green Living Concepts. “What does it mean to be real about being green?” Rottschafer asked. “By keeping our buildings tight and well-ventilated, energy costs are less: In January, the heating bill for a 1,750-square-foot townhome was only $60, which can be a third of the cost for heating a same size typical home.” Unlike other areas around Grand Rapids, the city’s northeast corridor never developed this kind of unified urban core with integrated shops, offices and housing, Rottschafer noted. “The six neighborhoods we’ve previously developed, including Balsam Hill in Ada, have progressed us toward this New Urban plan for Celadon. “It’s an exciting project today. But we’re building it to last generations.”

Celadon New Town’s mix of residential, work-live, retail and commercial spaces — all being certified to Michigan Green Built Standards — is attracting fast attention: As of early May, Mosaic Properties closed on 10 out of 13 Town Lofts, seven out of 10 Modern Row Homes, and four out of five office spaces.

6/1/09 11:31:38 AM


Grand rapids | Home

Special advertiSing Section

Outdoor Comfort BY LISA M. JENSEN

FROM A DARKENING western horizon, burgeoning winds breathe life into the walls of Pat and Audrey Chambers’ enclosed gazebo.

Warm and dry inside, watching waves churn below the 12-by-12-foot structure Pat built on the edge of his Lake Michigan-based, Muskegon property, the couple feels as though they’re in a lighthouse. “Because of how it’s positioned,” Pat said, “all you see through the windows is water.”

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Complete with electricity and heat, this fully finished outdoor retreat — designed by Grand Haven architect Mary Whittaker Duncan and built through Pat’s own company, Chamber Homes LLC — connects the Chambers to the outdoors year round.

Better yet, the inviting enclosure makes every visit feel like an occasion. Aesthetic and practical — sometimes even magical — walls in outdoor spaces can provide privacy as well as protection, seating as well as storage. They can help define outdoor rooms, make the most of steep slopes and extend interior living spaces, whether they’re solid-sided, topped or left open to the sky. And they can serve as a perfect backdrop, support or surface for

Photography by W. Patrick Chambers

r

Putting Up Walls: Creating

6/1/09 11:31:40 AM


Special advertiSing Section

“Twenty inches is a good height for walls used to separate different outdoor living spaces,” noted David Susalski, a territory manager for Unilock who supplies product to Grand Rapidsbased Beldon Brick. “Walls this height — which can easily be curved to create interest — also provide additional seating when you’re entertaining larger groups of people.” To enhance comfort at outdoor gatherings, Susalski added, specialty lamps and infrared heaters can be incorporated into pillars or higher walls designed to ward off wind. Wind can also be

warded off with retractable screens and walls. “The more convenient the connection between indoor and outdoor living areas, the more value is added to both spaces,” is the philosophy behind NanaWall Systems. In a residential setting, these weather-proof glass door panels open and close at the touch of

“The flexibility these products offer people creates a whole new dimension to their home and how they feel about it,” noted Matt Reinsma, operations director for Scott Christopher Homes. “Suddenly having a new area even just to eat in lets you live differently.” Homeowners who relish inviting the sunshine in year-round have yet another option: Since the 17th century, elegant and versatile conservatories have offered an almost ethereal connection to nature. “One of the great things about today’s conservatories is the amount of creative freedom you enjoy when planning,” shared Erica Hanna, who represents Holland-based K2 USA/Canterbury Conservatories.

Grand rapids | Home

a button. Motorized and manual retractable Phantom Screens also easily expand living areas indoors and out while offering protection.

water features, climbing plants or artwork.

From varying architectural styles and decorative glass detailing to a range of faux-wood finishes, this four-season space with energy-efficient windows serves a variety of purposes. But nothing overshadows being able to savor the sun year round.

Photography by Michael Buck (bottom); courtesy K2 USA (top)

Photography by W. Patrick Chambers

“Never before,” reflected Jane Osmon, a Holland-based customer, “have we been ‘outside’ more.”

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Top: Conservatory designs range from Gothic and Victorian to Prairie-style, and serve a variety of purposes. Left: Designed by Grand Rapids-based architect Wayne Visbeen, this outdoor room affords homeowners a flexible connection to outdoor enjoyment through NanaWalls.

6/1/09 11:31:42 AM


Flooring • Cabinetry • Countertops • Designer sHoWrooM Servicing Interior Designers and Builders

Thank you BDR for partnering with us on the 2009 Design Home. EC O-F RI ENDLY PRODUC T S

616.988.4524 | 719 Century SW, Grand Rapids, MI 49503 | Open M-F 9 am to 5 pm or by appointment | www.centuryfloorspace.com

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Special Advertising Section

Rivertown Landscapes

Grand Rapids | Home

GR Home Showcase:

Photography courtesy Rivertown Landscapes

Extraordinary design – it’s in their nature

If you’ve ever visited Frederik Meijer Gardens, you’ve seen a sampling of Paul Burd’s work. One half of the design team that makes up Rockford-based Rivertown Landscapes, Burd sums up his life’s profession quite succinctly: “It’s my passion.” Burd and his landscaping partner, Mike Mlnarik, both hold landscape horticulture degrees from Michigan State University, have over thirty years experience in the business and are both recipients of several prestigious landscape awards. What they have goes beyond passion — it’s solid expertise.

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Sharing more than 30 years of professional experience between them, landscape designers Mike Mlnarik (left) and Paul Burd offer clients customized service that combines personal passion with solid expertise. “We’re committed to … providing only spectacular results that reflect each client’s personal style,” Mlnarik notes.

A full-service firm, Rivertown specializes in customized landscape plans, installation and maintenance programs for a diversity of residential and commercial clients, in addition to a lighting design division called Artistree Lightscapes. With all of these aspects in play, their projects become a symphony of

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details, great and small. “Landscape is a living, breathing declaration of personal style,” Mlnarik notes. “Each design is a product of close communication and flawless coordination.” Understanding each client’s unique lifestyle and vision is the first step. Do the homeowners entertain often, or do they prefer relaxing in privacy? “More people are looking for something

Photography by Michael Buck

Grand Rapids | Home

Special Advertising Section

6/1/09 11:31:54 AM


Special advertiSing Section

GR Home Showcase:

Rivertown Landscapes

Grand rapids | Home

BURD AND MLNARIK DraW from eaCh home’s DESIGN CUES TO ComBine CoLors anD teXtures THAT COMPLEMENT ITS ARCHITECTURE.

Knowledge: Co-owners Mike Mlnarik & Paul Burd hold landscape horticulture degrees from Michigan State University, have 60-plus years of combined experience and only employ educated, career-focused construction crews. Recognition: Recipients of numerous prestigious state and local landscape design awards, their work is featured in such places as Frederik Meijer Gardens and various gated communities throughout greater Grand Rapids, such as The Sanctuary, Manchester Hills, Skyvale and Darby Farms. Assurance: All materials — from trees to lawn, boulder retaining to patios — are warranted for a full two years, twice the industry standard.

Photography courtesy Rivertown Landscapes

Photography by Michael Buck

RIVERTOWN LANDSCAPES beyond a nice walk to the front door — they want to expand and make real use of their outdoor living space,” shares Burd. “We examine every site for opportunities and challenges.” Burd and Mlnarik draw from each home’s design cues to combine colors and textures that complement its architecture. They then present clients with handdrawn color renderings that spell out every

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variable and budget consideration. “Once the design is approved, we individually hand-inspect and select all plants and building materials to make certain our product won’t fall short of expectations,” explains Mlnarik. “We are committed to avoiding overruns and surprises — providing only spectacular results that reflect each client’s personal style.”

11950 Northland Dr., Rockford (616) 866-1700 info@rivertownlandscapes.com www.rivertownlandscapes.com

6/1/09 11:31:56 AM


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49 area attractions

59 entertainment venues

72 Kent County Parks

49 Museums

63 Bars & Clubs

74 higher education

51 art Galleries

68 Professional sports

76 Fairs & Festivals

55 theater

68 sporting events

78 downtown Map

56 dance

69 sports Clubs

80 restaurants

57 Music

70 Grand rapids City Parks

112 Best of Gr

City Guide 2009-10 Grand rapids 47

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backstagepass | Destinations & experiences

Subject to interpretation Calvin College’s Heartside art gallery serves a very different audience than its on-campus gallery.

Gallery 106 assistant natalie Good and Joel Zwart, director of exhibitions for Calvin, discuss some of the artwork on display.

ITH ITS MOVEABLE walls, wood floors and large windows, (106) is a happening place. The gallery at 106 S. Division Ave. is operated by Calvin College’s department of art and art history, with studios for faculty members and exhibition space for artists from the community and around the country. The (106) Gallery is part of the Avenue of the Arts initiative led by Dwelling Place, which renovated a run-down building at the corner of Oakes and Division to provide studio spaces for local artists. “They needed a major tenant, so in fall 2005 we moved in,” said Joel Swart, Calvin College’s director of exhibitions. “At (106) we have four studios for our art faculty — right now we have sculpture, photography, painting and mixed media.” The Heartside neighborhood gallery is Calvin’s second. Center Art Gallery is located on the lower level of the Spoelhof College Center on the school’s campus at Burton Street and East Beltline Avenue. “Having a second gallery downtown is great because it’s another venue to show work from students,” Swart said. “And it’s a totally different audience.” Normal gallery hours at (106) are 1 to 9 p.m. Wednesday and 1 to 6 p.m. Thursday and Friday. — Tamara Jackson

PhotoGraPhy By Johnny Quirin

W

48 Grand rapids City Guide 2009-10

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backstagepass | Destinations & Experiences

AREA ATTRACTIONS Amway Grand Plaza Hotel Amway co-founders Rich DeVos and Jay Van Andel renovated the historic Pantlind Hotel in 1981 and opened the glass tower in 1983. “The Amway” has long been the hotel of choice for visiting celebrities and dignitaries (a list in the hotel lobby attests to this). It also is home to Michigan’s only AAA Five Diamond restaurant, The 1913 Room. The hotel also offers cultural packages that include admission to select museums in Grand Rapids in addition to overnight accommodations. 187 Monroe Ave. NW; (616) 774-2000, (800) 253-3590 reservations; www.amwaygrand.com Blandford Nature Center/Mixed Greens Situ­ ated on more than 143 acres of woods, fields, ponds and streams, this is an ideal place to take in nature, whether you walk or cross-country ski along the 4.5 miles of trails. Now in partnership with Mixed Greens, the new entity shares a mission to invite children and the community to connect to the land, to ecology and to growing food through hands-on experiences. Blandford/ Mixed Greens offers historical and naturebased programs and tours to individuals and school groups. The grounds include restored 19th century buildings, the Wildlife Care Center and a farm run and cultivated by teenagers. Each spring, Blandford’s Sugarbush event is a unique opportunity to learn about the process of making maple syrup. 1715 Hillburn Ave. NW; (616) 735-6240; www.mixedgreens.org The Fish Ladder Sculpture Created by artist Joseph Kinnebrew, the structure aids salmon as they head upriver each autumn to spawn. The fish are most active mid-September to mid-October. The Grand River at 560 Front Ave. NW, south of Sixth Street Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park This 125-acre attraction features Michigan’s largest tropical conservatory, a carnivorous plant house and arid garden, nature trails and boardwalk, sculpture galleries and a 30-acre sculpture park that include works by more than 30 internationally renowned artists. Annual exhibits include a celebration of butterflies in the spring and Christmas trees from around the globe in the winter. The 1,600-seat outdoor amphitheater houses summer concerts. Young families especially enjoy the five-acre Lena Meijer Children’s Garden, which includes tree houses, a log cabin, a butterfly maze and more. 1000 East Beltline Ave. NE; (888) 957-1580; www.meijergardens.org Heritage Hill Historic Homes A national historic neighborhood — and one of Grand Rapid’s first! With more than 1,300 houses in 60 architectural styles, a walk through these neighborhoods will take you back to 1844 and let you stroll right through the roaring ’20s. Self-guided walking tour brochures are available at the Web site, and an annual home tour is put on in October. Private tours can be arranged for groups of 20 or more. 126 College Ave. SE; (616) 459-8950; www.heritagehillweb.org/tours.htm James C. Veen Observatory Get a closer view

of the night sky through one of the observatory’s two telescopes. Audio-visual presentations and tours of the facility are offered during visitor nights the second and last Saturday of the month, April-October. The observatory is owned and operated by the Grand Rapids Amateur Astronomical Association. 3308 Kissing Rock Road, Lowell Township; 897-7065; www.graaa.org John Ball Zoo More than 200 species — 1,500 animals in all — live at John Ball Zoo, including endangered chimpanzees in the Mokomboso Valley Chimpanzee exhibit. The Lions of Lake Manyara, one of the largest lion exhibits in the country, entertains crowds with the lions’ tree-climbing antics. New this summer is the construction of “Monkey Island” and a lemur exhibit. Also during the summer, visitors can touch stingrays and sharks in the Sting Ray Lagoon exhibit, ride a camel or paddle a swan boat. The zoo also houses a children’s petting zoo, the Van Andel Living Shores Aquarium, the Australia Trail and Budgie Aviary, a “penguinarium” and a Komodo dragon. 1300 W. Fulton St.; 336-4301; www.johnballzoosociety.org JW Marriott Hotel The newest addition to Grand Rapids’ luxury hotel list presents a striking skyline figure. The glass-plated, ovalshaped building rises 24 stories and occupies a prominent piece of the riverfront near the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel. The JW Mariott is owned by Alticor and looks to be a top choice for convention-goers and visiting VIPs. 235 Louis St. NW; (888) 844-5947; www.jwgrandrap ids.com “La Grande Vitesse” “La Grande Vitesse” (“The Great Swiftness”) is a 40-foot-high, bright red stabile designed by renowned artist Alexander Calder in 1969 specifically for the downtown site commonly known as Calder Plaza, which is the site for a variety of ethnic festivals in warm weather months. Ottawa Avenue between Lyon and Michigan streets Rosa Parks Circle/”Ecliptic” Maya Lin designed “Ecliptic” for this public park in the heart of downtown to embody Grand Rapids’ ties to water. The site features water in its liquid, solid and vapor forms. The 13,000-square-foot sculpture includes an ice-skating rink from December to March, and an amphitheater where concerts are held in the summer. Lights patterned after the Michigan sky at midnight on Jan. 1, 2000, are embedded in the bottom of the ice rink, creating a lighted skating experience. Monroe Center and Monroe Avenue

MUSEUMS Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum Interactive exhibits explore ’70s pop culture, the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal, including the burglary tools used in the break-in. Special exhibits include A Child in the White House: Caroline Kennedy’s Dolls, which showcases more than 70 dolls from 30 countries that were given to young Caroline during her stay at the White House. This exhibit is on loan from the

John F. Kennedy Library until Aug. 31. Also on display until Aug. 31 is the Musings collection of art quilts created by the Studio Arts Quilt Association, displaying 29 crafted quilts from across the United States. President Ford, who died in December 2006, is interred on the grounds of the museum. 303 Pearl St. NW; 2540400; www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov Grand Rapids Art Museum Since 1911, GRAM has grown to include more than 5,000 works of art and hosts exhibitions of national and regional distinction. The GRAM’s new 125,000-squarefoot facility, adjacent to Maya Lin’s “Ecliptic” sculpture and Rosa Parks Circle in the heart of downtown, is the first newly built art museum in the world to receive LEED certification. The exhibit Gift of Art: The Legacy of Mabel Perkins includes 60 pieces of various artists ranging from Francisco Goya to Pablo Picasso from the private collection of Mabel Perkins. The exhibit runs through October. The upcoming exhibit Tissot’s London 1871-1882: The Art and Culture of City Life showcases the works of James Tissot, painted during a decade of living in London and capturing the essence of urban life. It will run from October to January 2010. Museum programs include Friday Nights at GRAM with live music, food and gallery talks, and All Day with the Arts, a Saturday program for families that features arts and crafts and a chance to explore the galleries. GRAM also offers week-long summer art camps for kids focusing on a variety of media and visual arts. 101 Monroe Center St. NW; 831-1000; www.art museumgr.org Grand Rapids Children’s Museum GRCM celebrates childhood and the joy of learning with hands-on permanent and traveling exhibits especially for children ages 2-10. Permanent exhibits are Buzzy Beehive; Bubbles, Bubbles, Bubbles; Funstruction; Mirror Magic; Mercantile Wee Bank; Mom and Pop Store; Rainbow Fun; Spin Table; and Wee Discovery. This summer, collaboration between the GRCM and the Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts is creating a hands-on agricultural experience for kids to see what it’s like to live and work on a farm. The exhibit runs throughout the summer. Admission to special exhibits is free with museum admission. 22 Sheldon Ave. NE; 235-4726; www.grcm.org Meyer May House Steelcase Inc. restored the prairie-style, Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Meyer May House in 1987. The Heritage Hill residence, completed in 1909, includes original furnishings as well as reproductions of originals and compatible Arts and Crafts-style items from the area. The restoration has recreated the unique design just as Wright envisioned in 1908. Free guided tours and a film reviewing the restoration process are available Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. 450 Madison Ave. SE; 246-4821; www.steelcase.com/na/meyer_may_ house_ourcompany.aspx?f=18708 Public Museum Stroll the streets and peek into the shops of Old Grand Rapids. Learn about Native Americans, like the Anishinabek, who City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 49

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once roamed West Michigan. Listen to the Mighty Wurlitzer theater organ or ride the restored 1928 Spillman carousel with a closeup view of the Grand River. Learn about the 45 ethnic groups who now make this area home, in the newest permanent exhibit, Newcomers: The People of This Place, which follows the migratory path of families making their historic journey to West Michigan. Watch a star show at the Roger B. Chaffee Planetarium, a stateof-the-art, 145-seat sky theater that offers sky shows, children’s programs, laser light shows and night sky simulations. With digital sound, laser projectors and a Digistar simulation system, the planetarium brings the beauty and mystery of outer space to Grand Rapids. The Public Museum offers 71 days of summer fun through August, with reduced admission prices and daily themes, such as Wacky Wednesdays and Science Saturdays. The upcoming exhibit “Leonardo da Vinci: Machines in Motion” showcases 40 fully functional designs and inventions of da Vinci that were created after his death by a group of skilled scientists and craftsman. The exhibit will run from September to January 2010. Van Andel Museum Center, 272 Pearl St. NW; 456-3977; www.grmuseum.org VOIGT HOuSE VICTORIAN muSEum Perfectly preserved, this historic Heritage Hill home was built in 1895 by Prussian immigrant Carl Voigt (co-founder of bygone Grand Rapids department store Voigt, Herpolsheimer and Co.). Three stories of this beautiful house are filled with the Voigt family’s original furniture and personal possessions. This example of Victorian life and style is open Tuesday afternoons and the second and fourth Sunday of the month and also is available for private showings and small social gatherings. The museum also hosts seasonal teas and special exhibits that highlight various aspects of the Victorian culture, such as weddings, holidays, fashion and travel. This summer, stop by for a lesson in Victorian etiquette with the program Silence is Golden: The Unspoken Language of Fans and Calling Cards. 115 College Ave. SE; 456-4600; www.grmuseum. org/voigt_house

ART GAllERIES 106 Serving as a work space for Calvin College faculty, this gallery hosts work in all mediums by Calvin students and faculty, among other artists. The gallery is open each Wednesday from 1-9 p.m., Thursday and Friday 1-6 p.m. 106 S. Division Ave.; 526-6271; www.calvin.edu/ centerartgallery ACCENTS GAllERy ANd SuPPlIES Twenty-five local artists exhibit works in various media. Also, art and photo supplies, printer ink, photo enlargements and laser engraver. 1054 W. Fulton St.; 233-8320.

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AQuINAS AmC GAllERy The Aquinas College Art & Music Center Gallery exhibits works in all media by regional, national and sometimes international artists, in addition to works by students and faculty. Exhibits change monthly from September-May (closed during school City Guide 2009-10 Grand rapids 51

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holidays). 1607 Robinson Road SE; 632-2408; www.aquinas.edu/art/gallery.html THE BAYARD ART CONSULTING AND FRAME SHOP Known for expertise in Black memorabilia, this small gallery displays work by established and emerging African-American and other ethnic artists. After moving to a smaller space, George Bayard said he is concentrating on framing and appraisals. 1213 Kalamazoo Ave. SE; 2465900 BYRNEBOEHM GALLERY This progressive urban gallery, which shares space with Perimeter Frames, is self-described as “uptown without being snobby.” It includes original eclectic works of varied styles. Special events, shows and receptions are held year round. 959 Lake Drive SE; 336-0209; www.byrneboehmgallery. com

The return of Rothbruy Rothbury 2008, a green music festival with an eclectic mix of artists and more than 30,000 attendees, was considered — for the most part — a success. But it could have been an anomaly. With the fate of the Double JJ Ranch — where last year’s event was held — uncertain, most folks wondered if Rothbury 2009 would happen. Luckily, it’s back, with such headliners as Bob Dylan, The Dead, The Black Crowes and Willie Nelson & Family. Jeremy Stein of Madison House Inc. is enthusiastic about “raising the bar” at this year’s event, scheduled for July 2-5, while maintaining the triumphs of last summer. “Everyone that we’ve gone after to be a part of the show is a band or individual who has real street cred across genres,” he said. “You’ll respect the lineup even if you haven’t heard of someone, and that’s part of the fun — discovering new things.” This year, guests can expect a lineup that crosses all avenues of music — from electronica to rock to Americana to hip-hop — from huge artists to new artists to the underground. In addition to the headliners, acts include Man Man, Ani DiFranco, The Cold War Kids, Chromeo, Flogging Molly, Les Claypool, Broken Social Scene and many, many more. There’s more to Rothbury, of course, than just the music. Guests camp there for four days, making Rothbury their home for an extended weekend. In consideration of good eating, this year’s festival includes a farmers market and healthy meal options. This emphasis on local produce and health goes hand-in-hand with the festival’s mission to be not only a large green event, but a catalyst for greening other events. “What we create at Rothbury is kind of a giant research and development lab,” Stein said. “We’re at the forefront of a new age here and there’s very little precedence set to make a large-scale event sustainable. It’s more than just recycling.” Greening techniques will include using only B99 biodiesel to run the generators and using standardized, compostable materials in food and drink service. And while the nature-conscientious tactics help Rothbury have as little impact on the environment as possible, the impact on the local economy is huge. For more information, visit www.rothburyfestival.com. — J. Bennett Rylah

CAPSULE LIVING STUDIO Cameron Van Dyke’s studio features his modern furniture and changing exhibits along with two-dimensional art of other modern and contemporary artists. Hours are Saturday noon-5 p.m. and by appointment. 446 Grandville Ave.; 454-1102; www.cameronvan dyke.com CAROL ROEDA STUDIO This gallery contains colorful sculpture pieces, including hand-painted metal garden accessories and flat mini-statues of people, animals, words, trees and more. All work is hand-painted by Carol Roeda. Breton Village, 1882 Breton Road; 285-0924; www.carol roedastudio.com CASCADE ART GALLERY The gallery includes prints, original paintings in a variety of media, hand-blown glass, fiber art, jewelry, sculpture and pottery from local, national and international artists. Custom framing is also available. 2840 Thornapple River Drive SE; 949-4056; http://cascadegallery.blogspot.com/ DIVISION AVENUE ARTS COOPERATIVE Located in Heartside, the cooperative offers local artists and musicians space for exhibitions and performances. 115 S. Division Ave.; www.thedaac.org EYEKONS GALLERY Eyekons features artists that are part of an online marketplace of original art with a religious worldview. Exhibitions change periodically. Fine art Giclée prints, greeting cards and church resources are also available. 210 E. Fulton St.; 235-2929; www.eyekons.com FOREST HILLS FINE ARTS CENTER The artist-inresidence program during the school year offers month-long exhibits by local and regional artists, along with presentations and demonstrations by the artist. Celebrating its five-year anniversary, the gallery will offer a retrospective exhibit in the fall. 600 Forest Hills

Photography courtesy dave vann

Rothbury 2008 attracted more than 30,000 music fans.

CALVIN CENTER ART GALLERY In addition to work by Calvin students, faculty and alumni, the gallery also shows works by secular and religious artists of note. Calvin College Spoelhof Center, Lower Level, 3201 Burton St. SE; 526-6271; www. calvin.edu/centerartgallery

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Ave. SE; 493-8965; www.fhfineartscenter.com THE GAINEy GAllERy Located in the lobby of the Van Singel Fine Arts Center, this gallery features exhibits by well-known area artists that change monthly September through May. 8500 Burlingame Ave. SE, Byron Center; 878-6800; www.vsfac.com GAllERy 154 Celebrating its 32nd year in September, this Eastown gallery features a broad selection of hand-made art, including prints, pottery, etchings, jewelry and more from local artists and beyond. The gallery displays hundreds of unique ornaments during the Christmas season. 1456 Lake Drive SE; 454-2154; www.gallery154.com GRANd GAllERy Leading Michigan artists are represented through works in oil, watercolor and pastel, sculptural and functional ceramics and jewelry. 596 Ada Drive, Ada, 676-4604; www.grandgallery.com GRANd VAllEy ARTISTS INC. As a non-profit gallery organization, GVA serves nearly 300 member artists who take part in oil, pastel acrylic, mixed media, color pencil, charcoal, sculpture and photography. Hours vary according to scheduled programs, sketch sessions and other GVA activities. 1120 Monroe Ave. NE, Suite 100; 458-0315; www.gvami.com/gallery.htm GRCC COllINS ART GAllERy Work by international, national and regional artists, as well as student and faculty work, is shown in Grand Rapids Community College’s art gallery. The gallery has both daytime and evening hours but is closed during school holidays. 143 Bostwick Ave. NE (Main Building, 4th floor); 234-3544; www.grcc.edu GVSu ART GAllERy Grand Valley State University manages and oversees an extensive collection of more than 7,000 works by nationally and internationally recognized artists, as well as exhibits by GVSU students. Works can also be seen in various buildings of the school’s five campuses. 1121 Performing Art Center, Allendale campus; 331-3638; www.gvsu.edu/artgallery

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ImAGERIE GAllERy ANd ARTIST CO-OP Specializing mostly in work by local artists, this gallery offers a varied mix of media. Four artists take turns teaching classes in painting, drawing — even tango lessons — among other gallery work. An outdoor sculpture garden opens this summer. 910 Cherry St. SE; 458-4226; www. imageriegallery.com jONATHAN SHuff PHOTOGRAPHy This gallery features work from local nature photographer Jonathan Shuff. Framed prints, matted prints and boxed note cards are available at the gallery or from the Web site. Hours are by appointment. 1638 Leonard St. NW; 550-3277; www.jonathanshuff.com kENdAll GAllERy On exhibit is contemporary work by national and international artists and by the faculty and students of Kendall College

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of Art and Design of Ferris State University. Closed during school holidays. 17 Fountain St. NW; 451-2787; www.kcad.edu LAFONTSEE GALLERIES/UNDERGROUND STUDIO This award-winning gallery, located in a renovated warehouse, features fine art by leading and emerging artists and an eclectic gift shop. The gallery also hosts changing exhibits. 820 Monroe Ave. NW; 451-9820; www.lafontsee. us MARYWOOD GALLERY This gallery at the Dominican Center at Marywood features both secular and religious work by West Michigan artists in a variety of media. 2025 E. Fulton St.; 458-3017; www.dominicancenter.com MERCURYHEAD GALLERY Mercuryhead hosts multiple local artists who specialize in fine art, jewelry, contemporary furnishings and custom framing. 962 E. Fulton St.; 456-6022; www.grga. org METAL ART STUDIO This gallery specializes in custom-made and one-of-a-kind fine jewelry that portrays a clean, contemporary, balanced and comfortable style. 820 Monroe Ave NW; 459-5075; www.metalartstudioinc.com NANCY DeYOUNG STUDIO This studio offers a variety of hand-painted ceramic tiles and home accessories. Tiles can be personalized. The studio also features a small retail gallery with work from other artists, both local and national. 4090 29th St. SE (lower level); 285-1906; www. nancydeyoung.com NOIR GALLERIE Inside Bar Divani, the gallery features contemporary art from prominent artists around the county. Retrofitted with audio-visual equipment to facilitate talks and lectures in an intimate setting. 15 Ionia Ave. SW; 856-0366; www.noirgallerie.com PAUL COLLINS FINE ART Figurative work by internationally known local artist Paul Collins explores the cultures of Israel, Japan, Africa and Native Americans. Located in the Amway Grand Plaza hotel, the gallery features pottery, jewelry and home accessories. 220 Lyon St. NW; 742-2000; www.collinsart.com PERCEPTION Specializing in the work of Mathias Alten and other 19th- and early 20th-century American and European paintings and sculptures, this downtown gallery also offers art restoration and appraisals. 7 Ionia Ave. SW; 451-2393 THE PHOTOGRAPHY ROOM This gallery is devoted to photographic art from local, national and international contemporary photographers. Photography classes, an artist speaker series, and gallery rental are also available. 15 Ionia Ave. SW, Suite 150; 224-2700; www.thephotogr aphyroom.com [PIN’ TURA] STUDIO Works by the late Jose Narezo, a world-renowned artist recognized for his paintings, murals and mosaics, are

exhibited in this gallery. 1140 Monroe Ave. NW; 443-8596; www.josenarezo.com RIVERTOWN ARTISTS GUILD Formed in 1990, the guild is comprised of about 60 area artists exhibits in various locations around town including the Wyoming and Grandville KDL branch libraries. The guild’s artists represent an extensive variety of media. rivertownartists. blogspot.com SANCTUARY FOLK ART Heartside gallery features the work of contemporary folk artists from the Midwest, as well as contemporary, pop and outside art by local and regional artists. 140 S. Division Ave.; 454-0401; www.media-rare.com/ clients/sfa/ TERRYBERRY GALLERY Monthly exhibits feature local artists in the lower level of the historic St. Cecilia Music Center building. 24 Ransom Ave. NE; 459-2224; www.scmc-online.org URBAN INSTITUTE FOR CONTEMPORARY ARTS Music, dance, film, literature, and performance and visual arts are represented in the 25,000-square-foot space. Innovative art exhibits and installations in five galleries change regularly. Also shows independent and foreign films. 41 Sheldon Blvd. SE; 454-7000; www.uica. org

THEATER ACTORS’ THEATRE The 2009-2010 season will be the 29th for Actors’ Theatre, which continues to stage talked-about (and sometimes protested) performances. Actors’ performs five plays from September-May. Upcoming plays will include: “Top Dog/Underdog,” “Frozen,” “Mr. Marmalade,” and “Brooklyn Boy.” Performs at Spectrum Theater, 160 Fountain St. NE; 2343946; www.actorstheatregrandrapids.com AQUINAS COLLEGE THEATRE The academic theater program at Aquinas College will perform “Sun, Stand Thou Still” (October), “Rising Sun, Rising Moon” (November), “A Room With A View” (December), “Ruthless! The Musical” (February) and “Any Other Name” (April). Performs at Aquinas Performing Arts Center, 1703 Robinson Road SE; 632-2413; www.aquinas. edu/theatre BROADWAY THEATRE GUILD This communitybased, nonprofit organization brings professional Broadway to downtown GR. Performances scheduled for this fall are “High School Musical” and “Ethel Merman’s Broadway.” “Cirque Dreams Illumination” is scheduled for January, and an encore performance of “Rain: A Tribute to the Beatles” will hit the stage in March, along with “Oprah Winfrey Presents The Color Purple.” Performs at DeVos Performance Hall, 303 Monroe Ave. NW; 2356285; www.bwaygr.org CALVIN THEATRE COMPANY Calvin College theater majors and other students perform a wide range of challenging plays. “The No Frills Revue” will be performed in November,” “The

Cries of Wolves” is scheduled for February, and “Casting” will be the spring performance in April. Performs at Calvin College’s Gezon Auditorium and at Lab Theatre, 3201 Burton St. SE; 526-6282 for tickets; www.calvin.edu/ academic/cas/ctc COMMUNITY CIRCLE THEATRE Circle has earned the title of Grand Rapids’ “premier summer theater” after more than 50 years of staging quality musicals, dramas and comedies. Community Circle Theatre includes Circle in the Summer, Magic Circle, Circle Presents and the Cabaret Series. This summer, Circle’s main stage productions include “Guys and Dolls,” “Noises Off,” “Altar Boyz,” “On Golden Pond,” and “Smokey Joe’s Café.” Performs at Aquinas Performing Arts Center, 1607 Robinson Road SE; 632-1980; www.circletheatre.org GRAND RAPIDS CIVIC THEATRE Michigan’s largest community theater annually brings audiences six main-stage plays, two children’s productions and a number of special events. This fall, Civic brings the plays “Chicago” and “Captain Louie” to the stage, with performances of “Cinderella” and “Moon over Buffalo” following in the winter. “West Side Story” and “Sarah Plain and Tall” will take the spotlight in the spring. Civic’s School of Theatre Arts provides theater education via workshops, classes, volunteer opportunities, an open audition policy, a teen traveling troupe and high school summer stock troupe. The school offers classes in acting, dance and singing for ages 4 through adult, and technical theater workshops for teens and adults. Grand Rapids Civic Theatre, 30 N. Division Ave.; 222-6650; www.grct.org GRAND VALLEY STATE UNIVERSITY Grand Valley’s theater program includes four productions annually, as well as a month-long Shakespeare Festival in the fall, which this year will feature “Romeo and Juliet” in honor of the festival’s 16th year. Its Bard-To-Go program brings an appreciation for Shakespeare to area middle and high schools. Performs at Louis Armstrong Theatre, GVSU Allendale campus; 331-2300; www.gvsu.edu/theatre GRCC PLAYERS Grand Rapids Community College students act, light, design, costume and direct performances as part of their theater studies. Theater faculty members direct fall and winter main-stage productions, and students typically direct an evening of one-acts in winter. Performs at Spectrum Theater, 160 Fountain St. NE; 234-3946; www.grcc.edu/grccplayers HERITAGE THEATRE GROUP Focused on the classical playwrights, this group is in its 16th year. Heritage’s season runs July and August, and this summer includes “A Life in the Theatre,” “Woodie Guthrie’s American Song,” “Laundry and Bourbon and Lone Star,” and “The Taming of the Shrew.” Performs at Spectrum Theater, 160 Fountain St. NE; 234-3358; www.htgonline. citymax.com JEWISH THEATRE GRAND RAPIDS Founded in 1992, this group’s mission is, in part, to “offer quality City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 55

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Extraordinary design is in our nature.

plays and programs dealing with Jewish themes and questions that can enrich the Jewish experience in Grand Rapids and other communities.” The group performs three plays annually, beginning in January. Performs at Spectrum Theater, 160 Fountain St. NE; 234-3946; www. jtgr.org mASTER ARTS THEATRE This Christian theater group seeks to “develop artists and to engage audiences in theater that is enriching, encouraging and enlightening.” It offers four mainstage shows per season, two Arts Day Camps, touring troupes and Youth Summer Stock for ages 12 to high school, which is performing “The Reluctant Dragon” July 17-25. The 20092010 season includes: “I Remember Mama,” Sept. 17-Oct. 3; “Little Princess,” Nov. 19-Dec. 5; “Death by Chocolate,” Feb. 11-27, 2010; Winter Youth Producation: Disney productions “Aristocats Kids” and “101 Dalmations,” March 18-27, 2010; “Joyful Noise,” April 22-May 8, 2010. Performs at 75 77th St. SW; 455-1001 or (800) 455-5003; www.masterarts.org

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wEST mICHIGAN SAVOyARdS Named for the Savoy Theatre in London, this group is dedicated to bringing the works of Gilbert and Sullivan to West Michigan audiences. The Savoyards perform one G&S work per year, in the spring. Performs at Wealthy Theatre, 1130 Wealthy St. SE; 742-0866; www.westmichigansavoyards.org

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RIVER CITy ImPROV Calvin alumni/comedians get together to share a few laughs with material that is clean enough for the kids and funny l aaudience n d s rolling c a p ine the s enough to have the aisles. The troupe’s interactive show includes skits, games, songs and unpredictable laughs. Performs at Ladies Literary Club, 61 Sheldon Blvd. SE, and Calvin College’s Gezon Auditorium, 3201 Burton St. SE; 752-8570; www.rivercity improv.com

GRANd RAPIdS BAllET COmPANy Michigan’s only professional ballet company will perform two main-stage productions in 2009-2010: “Jack ‘The Ripper’” in October, and perennial favorite “The Nutcracker” in December. In addition, the more intimate Dancers Theatre Series takes place in the company’s 300-seat Peter Martin Wege Theatre, and will include “The Prodigal Son” (September/October), “Flickers” (January/February) and “Shakes.peare $ 3Celebration” # ! 0 %(May), 3 among others. In March 2010, The GRBC asks you, the audience, to decide which innovative dances in its repertoire to perform at the “GRBC Interactive” ballet performance at Forest Hills Fine Arts Center. The company’s state-of-the-art facility, the Meijer-Royce Center for Dance at 341 Ellsworth Ave. SW, houses a school of dance for ballet training, including a professional trainee program and a Summer Intensive Program for students of all ages. Performs at DeVos Performance Hall and Peter Martin Wege Theatre; 454-4771; www.grballet. com

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muSIC CHAmBER CHOIR Of GRANd RAPIdS The Chamber Choir, beginning its 30th season this year, presents a three- or four-concert season and an educational outreach program called Music to the Ears, which introduces classical music to local schools. The group has performed overseas and with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in Salt Lake City. Performs various locations. 452-4647; www.chamberchoir gr.org

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EmBEllISH Founded in 1995, Embellish is a community handbell choir of 14 performers. The group performs three community concerts in its regular season and appears at Festival of the Arts. Ringlets is the group’s outreach program, which introduces children to handbells. Auditions are held each May. Performs various locations. 915-0134; www.embellish.ws GRANd RAPIdS & dISTRICT PIPE BANd This Greater Grand Rapids nonprofit group formed in 1968 to maintain and promote the music and history of the Great Highland Bagpipes and Highlandstyle drumming. It performs in various parades and at festivals throughout the year, with a ceilidh (social dance) every October. 1002 Northwood St. NE; 451-3316; www.gr-districtpb. org GRANd RAPIdS CHORuS Of SwEET AdElINES INTERNATIONAl This award-winning group of more than 80 women delivers four-part harmonies with flair (sequined costumes and all). Performances are in the fall and winter with a judged competition each spring. Performs various locations. 452-4542; www.grsa.net GRANd RAPIdS SymPHONIC BANd The GR Symphonic Band was formed in 1978 to fulfill a need for an adult concert band. Today, it performs throughout West Michigan about six times annually, and often collaborates with students, including sponsoring a Youth Soloist Competition. Performs various locations. 3361554; www.grsymphonicband.org GRANd RAPIdS SymPHONy Formed in the late 1920s, the GR Symphony is led by Music Director David Lockington and Associate Conductor John Varineau. Its eight concert series — including Classical, Pops, Rising Stars, SymphonicBoom, Coffee Classics and Family and Lollipops Concerts, along with Picnic Pops in the summer — are varied in their influences and approaches. Picnic Pops this year is scheduled for Thursdays and Fridays, July 9-31. Performs at DeVos Performance Hall, 303 Monroe Ave. NW; Picnic Pops at Cannonsburg Ski Area, 6800 Cannonsburg Road, Belmont; Rising Stars at St. Cecilia Music Center’s Royce Auditorium, 24 Ransom Ave. NE; 454-9451; www. grsymphony.org GRANd RAPIdS wOmEN’S CHORuS Now in its 13th season, the Grand Rapids Women’s Chorus hosts workshops and commissions and performs cultural and folk pieces from all over the world as well as works by female composers.

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backstagepass | Destinations & Experiences

Performs at various locations. 459-2655; www. grwc.org Grand River Winds This three-year-old concert band performs several free concerts throughout the year. The group operates through Grand Rapids Community College, which provides funding for the conductor, manager and concertmaster. Performs at St. Cecilia Music Center’s Royce Auditorium, 24 Ransom Ave. NE; 234-3940 Great Lakes Chorus These harmonizing crooners know how to make audiences swoon. A number of barbershop quartets, available for private appearances, stem from this 50-plus member barbershop ensemble. The group performs a Christmas show with the GR Chorus of Sweet Adelines and competes in various contests. Performs at various locations. 447-8338; www.greatlakeschorus.org Kent Philharmonia Orchestra The volunteer classical musicians in this group perform several free concerts throughout the year. The orchestra operates through Grand Rapids Community College, which provides funding for the conductor, manager and concertmaster. Performs at St. Cecilia Music Center’s Royce Auditorium, 24 Ransom Ave. NE, and Fountain Street Church, 24 Fountain St. NE; 234-3940; www.grcc.edu/music/kentphilharmo niaorchestra

older. Stemming from the chorus is The Good Libations, a “quartet of five” that sings a cappella hits from the ’50s and ’60s. Performs at various locations. 752-7470; www.schubertma lechorus.org VocalArt Singers Formerly know as the Grand Rapids Cantata Choir, this volunteer, audition choir sings all sorts of choral pieces, from Renaissance to modern day. Of its approx-

imately 15 members, some are professional vocalists while others are less trained. Performs various locations. 575-SING; www.vocalartsing ers.org

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North American Choral Company Touring the world, the young singers in this company (ranging in age from 5 to 18) want to “make the world a more beautiful place.” The company is grouped into three professional choirs and a series of training ensembles. Performs at various locations. 774-9268; www.thechoralcom pany.com Opera Grand Rapids The only professional opera company in West Michigan has a three-show season that taps national and international artists for principal roles, with local talent in supporting roles. The 2009-2010 season will feature “Così Fan Tutte” Oct. 23-24, “Pagliacci” Feb. 12-13, and “Porgy & Bess” Apr. 30, May 1. Performs at DeVos Performance Hall, 303 Monroe Ave. NW; 451-2741; www.operagr.com

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St. Cecilia Music Center As Grand Rapids’ oldest arts group, St. Cecilia boasts numerous ensembles, including youth choirs and orchestras for a range of ages and abilities, an ensemble of musicians 50 and older called New Horizons Band, and the professional Bach Chorale. The Jazz and Classical Concert Series features national acts in a variety of musical styles. St. Cecilia’s Great Artist concerts raise funds for the organization. St. Cecilia Music Center’s Royce Auditorium, 24 Ransom Ave. NE; 459-2224; www.scmc-online.org Schubert Male Chorus The Schubert Male Chorus considers itself the longest continuously running male chorus in the United States; this year marks the chorus’ 126th season. Membership is open to males 18 and

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in this 400-plus seat theater, which opened in 2003 and sits on a wooded site on the Aquinas campus. 1703 Robinson Road SE; 456-6656; www. aquinas.edu/theatre DeltaPlex Entertainment & Expo Center The DeltaPlex hosts music spectacles, live sports action, shows (dogs, guns, cars), expos, seminars, poker tournaments and even high school graduations. 2500 Turner Ave. NW; 364-9000; www.deltaplex.com

Peter Martin Wege Theatre Opened in 2007, the 300-seat space was built to accommodate the growing Grand Rapids Ballet Company. In addition to ballet performances, the space also accommodates occasional concerts. 341 Ellsworth SW; 454-4771; www.grballet.com Richard and Helen DeVos Center for Arts and Worship The 1,200-seat state-of-the-art auditorium serves the Grand Rapids Christian

Schools and the community at large. It is a smoke- and alcohol-free facility. 2300 Plymouth Road SE; 574-5608; www.dcaw.org Royce Auditorium Located in St. Cecilia Music Center, the beautifully restored Royce seats 650 and hosts concerts ranging from St. Cecilia choir and orchestra performances to nationally known acts. 24 Ransom Ave. NE; 459-2224; www.scmconline.org

DeVos Performance Hall This 2,404-seat performance auditorium hosts concerts and special events, as well as being home to Grand Rapids Ballet Company, Grand Rapids Symphony, Opera Grand Rapids and Broadway Grand Rapids. 303 Monroe Ave. NW; 742-6500; www. devoshall.com DeVos Place Located on the Grand River, DeVos Place is a multi-level convention center providing one million square feet of space for conventions, meetings, trade shows and touring events. Besides the large exhibition space, smaller meeting rooms and a ballroom are also available. 303 Monroe Ave. NW; 742-6500; www. devosplace.org Dog Story Theater For audiences in search of something a little different, this black box theater provides a place for artists of all types to showcase their works. Plays, music, comedy shows, films — you name it, Dog Story has it. 1115 Taylor Ave. NW; 821-8955; www.dogstory theater.com Forest Hills Fine Arts Center Owned and operated by Forest Hills Public Schools, the 1,200seat auditorium hosts plays, concerts and speakers in a 62,000-square-foot facility that opened in 2004 and has won awards for design and material use. Its Season Series brings world-class performances of theater, dance and music to the stage. 600 Forest Hill Ave. SE; 493-8965; www.fhfineartscenter.com Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park Amphitheater This outdoor venue seats 1,600 in a terraced lawn setting and hosts both local and national musical acts throughout the summer. 1000 East Beltline Ave. NE; 957-1580; www. meijergardens.org The Intersection The Intersection’s roomy location offers live music of all kinds. The concert lineup includes local talent as well as regional and national bands. The acts coming through are many and varied, including DJs, rock, metal, hip-hop, folk, country, indie, tribute bands and more. 133 Grandville Ave. SW; 451-8232; www.section live.com The Orbit Room Contemporary regional and national talents perform here. An open floor and seated balcony allow concertgoers to choose how “up close and personal” they want to get to the stage. 2525 Lake Eastbrook Blvd. SE; 942-1328; www.orbitroom.com City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 61

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GR’s local music scene is alive and well You can hear a cover band in any town, but Grand Rapids has a thriving — and eclectic — music scene. Here’s a sampling of clubs, pubs and bars where you can hear jazz, hip-hop, indie, blues and more. BILLY’S 1437 Wealthy St. SE www.billyslounge.com

THE WHISKEY LOUNGE 1044 Godfrey Ave. SW www.myspace.com/whiskeyloungegr This sleek bar’s spacious dance floor and a great sound system prove The Whiskey Lounge was made for shows. It books everything from indie to death metal to acoustic duos Thursdays and Fridays while local musician Nathan Kalish hosts an open mic on Wednesdays frequented by popular local singer/songwriters. MIXTAPE CAFÉ 133 S. Division Ave. www.mixtapecafe.com Part of the Avenue for the Arts, this all-ages coffeehouse might inhabit the same space as teen hipster haven The Euclid/Skelletones, but new owners JR Renusson and Jessie Brady are making it their own. A smaller stage in the café is perfect for acoustic folk/indie acts, while the full venue downstairs books a number of local and national bands (offering a

wide range of genre with emphasis on pop punk, punk and ska). DOG STORY THEATER 1115 Taylor Ave. NW www.dogstorytheater.com Sunday nights at Dog Story Theater feature Spectacular Fantastic, a series of performances by bands of every genre, (some you’ve never heard of). Described by curator Corey Ruffin as “a gallery show for a band,” Dog Story is a successful fusion of the club and the house show. Each show taking place in the black box theater is BYOB (like a house show) but features ample seating, room for dancing, lights and good sound (like a club). All shows begin at 8 p.m. JUKES BAR 506 Leonard St. NW www.jukesbar.com This “glorified basement” and West Side staple is a long and narrow space, its walls covered in classic album covers. On Thursdays, Jukes features acoustic performers on a small stage for Ladies’

Night. Friday and Saturday nights is a full show — could be rock, country, indie, rockabilly, shoegaze, but it’s always original music and there’s rarely a cover. — Juliet Bennett Rylah

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MULLIGAN’S PUB 419 Norwood Ave. SE www.myspace.com/mulliganspub Billy’s and Mulligan’s are Eastown fixtures. Billy’s is a hometown bar, featuring a wide array of local talent. Open mic is on Mondays, while Wednesdays and Thursdays offer jazz, hip-hop, indie and more. Friday and Saturday nights are for the blues or an occasional rockabilly night, with a retro DJ on Sundays. Mulligan’s (the Other Side) is smaller and smokier, with free, high-energy indie, punk and metal. Tuesdays are an alternative dance night helmed by DJ Colin Clive and Statick. An industrial/synthpop/electro night with DJ Jason Ash and the Devil Dolls happens the third Friday every month.

the Whiskey Lounge

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Spectrum Theater Spectrum Theater hosts productions by the GRCC Players, Actors’ Theatre, Jewish Theatre Grand Rapids and Heritage Theatre Group. Besides the auditorium space, which seats 255 in its proscenium configuration, 235 in its thrust configuration, the building also has classrooms, rehearsal spaces, a dance studio, costume and scene shops, and a recording studio. 160 Fountain St. NE; 234-3946

BIRCH LODGE With its pleasant staff, great bar food, and taco bar and Bloody Mary fixings every Sunday from noon-5 (otherwise known as the Birch Church), the Birch Lodge is the place to be for Sundays, happy hours, lunch and weekends. And with new HD plasma TVs, it’s the place to be for game day, too. 732 Michigan St. NE; 458-1918 BLACK ROSE IRISH PUB An extensive whiskey

and draught selection (including hard cider, Guinness and Smithwick’s Irish Ale), and live traditional Celtic and Irish-influenced folk musicians on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, there’s enough pub atmosphere to make it feel like St. Patrick’s Day all year. 100 Ionia Ave. SW; 456-7673; www.blackrosegr.com THE BOB The gem in the crown of the Gilmore Collection of bars/restaurants, the “Big Old

Van Andel Arena The Van Andel is the place to catch big-name national musical acts of all genres. Rock, pop, country, Christian, R&B and everything in-between make use of the 12,000-plus capacity of the Van Andel. It is also home for the Grand Rapids Griffins and Grand Rapids Rampage games. 130 W. Fulton St.; 7426600; www.vanandelarena.com Van Singel Fine Arts Center This Byron Center High School facility hosts concerts and offBroadway touring productions in its 798-seat theater. 8500 Burlingame Ave. SW, Byron Center; 878-6800; www.vsfac.com

BARS & CLUBS From neighborhood watering holes to big city dance clubs, the city’s nightlife scene offers something for everyone. Here’s a sampling of some of the diverse bars, nightclubs, pubs and taverns in and around downtown. ANCHOR BAR More bars need a physical representation of their name hung in neon above the door. This spot features a cozy atmosphere, friendly beer prices, free popcorn, a curved bar, and a nautical theme that isn’t overdone. 447 Bridge St. NW; 774-7177 THE APARTMENT It has built a reputation for being GLBT-friendly without any of the stereotypical trappings usually associated with a “gay bar.” Features include a gorgeous wood interior, darts and a great jukebox. Cash only; ATM on-site. 33 Sheldon Ave. NE; 451-0815; www.theapartmentlounge.com BAR DIVANI Award-winning wine bar/restaurant focuses on small plates, while the drink menu focuses on wine, Belgian-style beers, martinis and an extensive liquor collection. 15 Ionia Ave. SW; 774-9463; www.bar-divani.com BISTRO BELLA VITA The lounge is synonymous with the phrase “Best Martini” in our Best of GR Readers Poll. An innovative menu with great beer and wine selections, all in a contemporary atmosphere. 44 Grandville Ave. SW; 222-4600; www.bistrobellavita.com BILLY’S LOUNGE Chicago-style décor, a variety of happy-hour specials, open mics for bands and soloists, and a slate of touring blues bands and regional rock/roots music add to this Eastown bar’s appeal. On Sundays, ’80s night has developed a following so fervent, local college students avoid scheduling early morning classes on Mondays. 1437 Wealthy St. SE; 459-5757; www.billyslounge.com

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Building” houses a variety of entertainment options: Dr. Grins Comedy Club, Crush (an upscale dance club), Eve (a posh nightclub), the Sky Deck (downtown’s summertime relaxation al fresco) … the list goes on. 20 Monroe Ave. NW; 356-2000; www.thebob.com BOB’S SPORTS BAR Proud to serve third-shifters, it’s one of the only GR bars that opens daily at 7 a.m. Full menu and nicely priced drinks. 725 Michigan St. NE; 774-0512 BROADWAY BAR Movie star memorabilia plus Big 10 and Notre Dame souvenirs equal one comfortably kitschy corner bar. Also known for its menu. 740 Broadway Ave. NW; 454-0565 BULL’S HEAD TAVERN A great place to see and be seen by taxidermy mounts. Occasional weekend entertainment. Open-air seating up front is a hot commodity during summer months. 188 Monroe Ave. NW; 454-3580; www.thebullshead tavern.com CAMBRIDGE HOUSE Brick, stone, iron and wood — all natural materials add up to a comfortable setting in which to enjoy more of nature’s providence: grapes and grain (or at least beverages made from them). Plus darts, pool and a fabulous appetizer menu along with a full menu. 600 Monroe Ave. NW; 356-1622; www.cambridge housegr.com COREZ With an amazing selection of fine wines and liquors, this new wine bar is the place to go to try something new. Infused spirits, creative cocktails and a menu of decadent cheeses, spreads and more will leave you feeling indulged. 919 Cherry St. SE; 855-2310; www. corezwinebar.com COTTAGE BAR & RESTAURANT Established in 1927, this is the oldest operating bar and restaurant in downtown Grand Rapids. No dancing. No karaoke. Just a warm, welcoming atmosphere and top-quality casual dining (the burgers, in particular). A favorite of the literary and theater crowd after the show. 18 LaGrave Ave. SE; 454-9088; www.cottagebar.biz CYGNUS 27 No lounge in GR offers a better view of the city than this one, situated near the top of the Amway Grand Plaza. Cygnus has been remodeled to combine the lounge and dining room on the 27th floor. It’s one of the classiest places in the city for a nightcap. Private dining is available. 187 Monroe Ave. NW; 774-2000; www.amwaygrand.com DIVERSIONS DJs at downtown GR’s most popular gay club spin the dance music tonight that DJs at other GR clubs will spin months from now. Need a break from the pulsing dance floor? The atrium, pool room and upstairs weekend karaoke bar offer respite. 10 Fountain St. NW; 451-3800; www.diversionscollections.com DRINK ULTRA LOUNGE Perhaps most infamous as the home of the Retro D’luxe — a packed, “predominantly ’80s” night occurring every Thursday, this downtown bar is actually a

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functioning nightclub every night of the week with a front and back bar, lush lounge seating and spacious dance floor. 72 Monroe Center NW; 458-8001 DUKE’S Apparently named after a portrait of John Wayne that hangs above the bar, Duke’s caters to a diverse clientele. The friendly staff serves up some of the best pub grub in town at great prices. 700 Michigan St. NE; 774-9388 FLANAGAN’S Opened in 1981, Flanagan’s is Grand Rapids’ original Irish pub. It boasts a fine menu and a casual atmosphere. It caters to the postwork professional crowd during the week with more of a college-age crowd on weekends for live music (cover tunes mostly) with no cover charge (usually). 139 Pearl St. NW; 454-7852; www.flanagansgr.com FOUNDERS BREWING CO. With World Class, handcrafted ales (always six to 10 on tap), one of the best jukeboxes in the city and a friendly, laid-back environment, you’ll be glad you found it. Founders’ new, much larger location offers outdoor seating, a kitchen featuring delicious sandwiches, and a huge bar. Eclectic grassroots, local indie rock, touring national bands and everything in between squeezes in on Thursday and Saturday nights, with the Grand Rapids Jazz Orchestra on Sundays. 235 Grandville Ave. SW; 776-1195; www.founders brewing.com GP SPORTS With TVs everywhere you look, it would seem impossible to miss a minute of the game. Add a fairly extensive selection of draft and bottled beers and excellent pub fare, and you’ve got the Amway Grand Plaza’s formula for a spacious, high-energy sports bar. 187 Monroe Ave. NW; 774-2000; www.amwaygrand. com GRAND WOODS LOUNGE The owners transformed this one-time manufacturing facility into a bar/restaurant with a “north woods” theme expressed in antler chandeliers and two fireplaces (including a giant, wood-burning fireplace outside). Entertainment includes live local bands and DJs playing great music. 77 Grandville Ave. SW; 451-4300; www.woods lounge.com GRAYDON’S CROSSING Great Britain’s days of colonizing are (thankfully) over. And while there wasn’t much to celebrate in the exploitation of native peoples and their natural resources, the resulting mixing of cultures — particularly those of India and England — gave birth to the Graydon’s Crossing concept and one of the most interesting menus in town. Curry + ale = crazy delicious. Outdoor courtyard seating available. 1223 Plainfield Ave. NE; 726-8260; www.graydonscrossing.com GRAYDON’S CROSSING – THE DERBY STATION Similar to its big brother, except in East Grand Rapids. 2237 Wealthy St. SE.; 301-3236 THE GREEN WELL A gastro pub is a public house known for high-quality food. The Green Well is

a gastro pub. A creative and frequently varying menu, extensive wine and beer list with emphasis on local brews, and a clean, green atmosphere make for a refreshing evening out. 924 Cherry St. SE; 808-3566; www.thegreenwell. com HOPCAT You won’t find any commercial beers like Coors or Bud Light in this microbrewloving bar. Serving 48 beers on tap, 150 bottled beers and their own brewing capacity, HopCat is the place to go for craft beers. Also offers a small selection of wine and liquor. 25 Ionia Ave. SW; 451-4677; www.hopcatgr.com INTERSECTION See “Entertainment Venues.” 133 Grandville Ave. SW; 451-8232 J. GARDELLA’S The grandfather of the wave of downtown bars that began sprouting in the mid-’90s, this fun, friendly tavern offers great bar food and an excellent import/microbrew beer selection. Pool tables and an additional bar downstairs. A more intimate third bar on the second floor handles overflow. Live entertainment includes DJs and music on weekends. Wednesdays are half-off night — the best special in town. 11 Ionia Ave. SW; 459-8824; www. jgardellas.com J.D. REARDON’S Formerly Waterworks Pub in The Boardwalk condominium complex, this bar offers casual dining, a great menu, a large outside deck and 24 taps of beer. 940 Monroe Ave. NW; 454-8590; www.jdreardons.com

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JUKES This West Side joint, its walls covered in album covers, features an Internet jukebox, live music on the weekends, and great specials, like the Sunday Bloody Mary bar with free tacos or hot dogs. 506 Leonard St. NW; 458-5399; www. jukesbar.com KALE’S KORNER Two words: saloon doors. Unassuming and friendly, this West Side landmark offers happy hour specials Monday through Friday 3-7 p.m. 511 Bridge St. NW; 4519638; www.myspace.com/kaleskornerbar KONKLE’S BAR Karaoke on weekends, some weekdays. And if that’s not enough, this blue-collar bar also drops its already low drink prices even lower for daily happy hour specials. 640 Bridge St. NW; 456-7623 KOPPER TOP Named for its copper-topped bar and known for its loyal patronage and overthe-top holiday décor, this tiny tavern takes the cake when it comes to casual dining and drinks. Polish platters are popular, and lively conversation is encouraged. 638 Stocking Ave. NW; 459-2001 LADY GODIVA See Sensations, a nearly identical club with the same owner. 234 Market Ave. SW; 458-0300 LOGAN’S ALLEY A summer evening in Grand Rapids spent with friends on Logan’s deck is time well spent. One of the city’s best beer menus — according to our resident beer writer CITY GUIDE 2009-10 GRAND RAPIDS 65

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Jon Koeze — adds to the experience, with over 220 beers in stock. And, as of May ’09, they now open at 7 a.m. 916 Michigan St. NE; 458-1612; www.logansalley.com

pulsing candlelight and Tuesday college night. Best of all, you don’t have to wait for the weekends to groove, with DJs all week long. 438 Bridge St. NW; 774-5969; www.monteslounge.com

LOG CABIN COCKTAIL LOUNGE Longtime drinking establishment where servers were wearing bikini tops before it was happening anywhere else. Burgers, hot dogs, sandwiches, fries and other munchies. 2401 S. Division Ave., 245-4394; www.logcabin.com

MULLIGAN’S PUB With a clientele of Eastown residents, college students and long-time regulars, the dark, smoky room with its louder-than-life jukebox fills the bill. Utilizing the rest of its space as a new music venue doesn’t hurt either. 419 Norwood Ave. SE; 454-7070; www.myspace. com/mulligans-pub

LOUIE’S BAR AND ROCKET LOUNGE Formerly Riggy’s Bar, this bar/music venue opened last July and features cover-free live bands every Friday and Saturday. Combines rock-n-roll with a classic bar look and feel. 608 Bridge St. NW; www. louiesbar.com LOUIS BENTON LOUNGE A lighter menu than the fancy steakhouse connected to it, but the same signature libations and the same valet parking. Live music Fridays and Saturdays. 77 Monroe Center Ave. NW; 454-7455; www.louisbenton.com LUMBER BARON BAR Named as a nod to GR’s founding fathers, this Amway Grand Plaza lounge serves up a smoke-free, upscale environment where patrons can escape, complete with fireplace and leather club chairs. Light appetizers, luxury wines and spirits. 187 Monroe Ave. NW; 774-2000; www.amwaygrand.com MCFADDEN’S This high-energy nightspot that sounds Irish but looks and feels more like a sports bar has dubbed itself a New York-style Irish Pub. The college crowd loves it, or maybe they love the drink specials. 58 Ionia Ave. SW; 454-9105; www.mcfaddensgrandrapids.com THE MEANWHILE BAR This little black and red hipster bar is cheap and quirky and often full of hipsters. A charming beer garden with handpainted picnic tables and a brick patio in the shape of Michigan offers an escape from the smoke. The bar refuses to sell commercial beverages, hangs bizarre local art on the walls and promotes local indie music by way of its one-ofa-kind jukebox. 1005 Wealthy St. SE; 233-1679; www.meanwhilebar.com MOJO’S Grand Rapids loves a dueling piano bar, and lucky for us there’s Mojo’s. A great drink menu with 20 unique martinis helps make this popular establishment worth a short wait. Pianists play anything from requests to oldies to top 40 to college fight songs. 180 Monroe Ave. NW; 776-9000; www.mojospianobar.com MONARCH’S CLUB Once a speakeasy with the same name, this casual club is now frequented by locals, 20-somethings and beer connoisseurs. Rebuilt around antique pieces, you’ll find canned retro beers at this bar, with happy-hour specials from 3-8 p.m. 646 Stocking Ave. NW; 233-9799; www.monarchsclub.com MONTE’S Popular dance club features sounds from classic rock to club beats. A high-energy bar and lounge, Monte’s sets the mood with

ONE TRICK PONY The younger sibling of the Cottage Bar is a favorite tour stop for emerging singer/songwriters played on community radio station WYCE FM-88.1. Menu ranges from ahi tuna to pizzas and pastas. 136 E. Fulton St.; 2357669; www.onetrick.biz

a variety of dishes including pastas, sushi and trendy appetizers. The bartenders know how to mix delicious cocktails, from classic Mojitos to modern martinis. 45 S. Division Ave.; 608-6465; www.republicgrandrapids.com ROCKWELL’S The casual side of Republic, this two-story bar boasts a diverse menu, a broad drink list, a fabulous cucumber martini, and an amazing outdoor patio on the second floor. 45 S. Division Ave.; 551-3563 ROCKY’S Exposed brick and rich wood grains lend a dark, rustic charm to this North Monroe neighborhood bar. Featuring live music three nights a week and good pub grub. 633 Ottawa Ave. NW; 356-2346; www.myspace.com/rockysgr

O’TOOLE’S PUBLIC HOUSE A great addition to the string of Bridge Street bars, this pub feels like a Key West drink-easy in summer when the large street windows are open. 448 Bridge St. NW; 742-6095; www.otoolesgr.com

RUMORS NIGHT CLUB Though primarily marketed as a high-energy gay dance club, this nightspot actually serves a diverse clientele. “Crazy” events (their word, not ours) include drag shows, foam parties and male exotic dancers every Wednesday. 69 S. Division Ave.; 454-8720; www.rumorsnightclub.net

OTTAWA TAVERN A practical concept from the Gilmore Collection — self-serve deli/café by day (called Bite), sports bar by night. A young crowd loves this bar’s full menu and 12 draft selections. 151 Ottawa Ave. NW; 451-8000; www. thegilmorecollection.com

SAZERAC LOUNGE This Creston neighborhood watering hole features a New Orleans theme and menu and a signature cocktail made from whiskey, maple syrup, bitters and wormwoodfree absinthe. 1418 Plainfield Ave. NE; 451-0010; www.myspace.com/sazeraclounge

PICKWICK TAVERN This watering hole thrives with no food menu, no pool tables or dart boards, no juke box and a wine selection you can memorize after one visit (No. 1 is red, No. 2 is white). It does so by only serving quality well liquors, staffing friendly bartenders and catering to anyone seeking a down-to-earth alternative to the typical scene. Cash only. 970 Cherry St. SE; 774-9647

SENSATIONS “Gentleman’s Club” offers adult entertainment, with dancers in dance wear and bikinis and waitresses in tuxedo uniforms. Previously limited to 21 and over, it now is open to 18 and over. Serves liquor, beer and wine. Dancers are more covered up as a result of a strip club city ordinance. Cover charge varies; no cover before 6 p.m. for those 21 and over. Appetizer menu. 3535 East Mall Drive SE, 9400100; www.myspace.com/sensationsshowgirls

PUB 43 Cozy little hideaway in the heart of downtown’s Avenue of the Arts attracts a diverse clientele in every sense of the word — age, race, sexual orientation, you name it. Also: board games and shuffle board. 43 S. Division Ave.; 458-2205 QUEEN’S PUB A sports bar attached to Bombay Cuisine, this place has an open environment nothing like Bombay and the biggest plasma screen TVs in town. 1420 Lake Drive SE; 4567055 QUINN & TUITE’S IRISH PUB The most authentic Irish pub experience in the city limits. Featuring live music from some of Ireland’s and America’s best touring Celtic artists, with the occasional gig by any of several talented local rock acts mixed in. 1535 Plainfield Ave. NE; 363-8380; www.quinnandtuites.com RAGGS TO RICHES Dance club draws the college crowd with unbelievable drink specials and DJs always armed with the quintessential collegenight play list. 108 Pearl St. NW; 454-0770 REPUBLIC Contemporary, sleek and hip, this more sophisticated twin of Rockwell’s serves

SIX.ONE.SIX. The lounge in the prestigious JW Marriott has a modern feel, with bold colors and seats of velvet and mohair. Food is categorized as 5-10-20, the number of minutes it takes to reach the table — and martinis correlate with Grand Rapids’ sister cities. 235 Louis St. NW; 242-1500; www.jwgr.com SIXX It used to be The Level and before that The Stack, but it seems like it’s always been a nightclub. This huge multi-level space in the American Seating Complex features all the DJs, dancing, bottle service and neon lighting one would expect from a place you go to party. 889 Broadway NW; 235-7666; www.sixxgr.com THE TAPHOUSE LOUNGE Featuring a staggering draft beer selection (24), this bar/dance club features nightly specials, an exceptionally good menu and conspicuous go-go dancers in the top floor windows. 8 Ionia Ave. SW; 774-3338 TEAZER’S Home of the best olive burgers this side of The Cottage. Weekend entertainment includes karaoke, DJs and the occasional live band. 819 Ottawa Ave. NW; 459-2481; www. teazersbar.com

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We’re known for brewing some of the best beers in the world. You could be known for drinking one of them. FOUNDERS BREWING COMPANY. BREWED FOR US. ENJOYED BY EVERYONE. 235 GRANDVILLE AVE SW GRAND RAPIDS, MI 49503 WWW.FOUNDERSBREWING.COM

JUN 5–SEPT 7

1969 ALEXANDER CALDER: 1969 THE FORTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF LA GRANDE VITESSE Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park celebrates Alexander Calder’s prolific work from 1969 — the year when Grand Rapids received the nation’s first National Endowment for the Arts grant for the Works of Art in Public Places. Highlights of this exhibition will include sculptures, mobiles, drawings, prints, ceramics and an 8-foot model of La Grande Vitesse. in addition, we will present CaLder: CreatiVe tHinker, an interactive exhibition that encourages visitors to engage with Calder's work. Meijer Gardens.org

THIS EXHIBITION MadE pOSSIBlE IN paRT By: THE MEIjER FOuNdaTION, NaTIONal ENdOwMENT FOR THE aRTS, MICHIGaN COuNCIl FOR aRTS aNd CulTuRal aFFaIRS, MEdIa SpONSOR: MICHIGaN RadIO (104.1 FM) © 2009 Calder Foundation/ARS, New York, all rights reserved. Calder™ is a trademark of the Calder Foundation.

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THROWBACKS A lively gay bar now inhabits this spot on North Division. Events vary but tend to include fabulous drink specials, male dancers, bingo, karaoke and DJs. 245 N. Division Ave.; 451-2337; throwbackspub.com TINI BIKINI’S BAR & GRILL The name states what the waitresses and dancers wear, which is the main attraction. A bar with typical pub-grub of munchies, burgers, wings and chicken fingers. 76 S. Division Ave.; 774-8848 THE WHISKEY LOUNGE A bright spot of neon marks the Whiskey Lounge, the only bar on its block. The sleek black, red and metal interior provides atmosphere for an eclectic mix of live music, a large dance floor and a fully stocked bar always beckoning with specials. 1044 Godfrey SW; 301-0228 THE WINCHESTER A charming English pub featuring a unique and flavorful menu. The building was converted from an old meat market and officially opened in early 2009. 648 Wealthy St. SE; www.winchestergr.com Z’S With a full menu available until 2 a.m., this downtown mainstay is a great place for a late night bite. Features open mic on Monday, karaoke on Wednesday, jazz every other Thursday. Check out the party store in the basement that sells chips, beer and wine every night. 168 Louis Campau Promenade NW; 454-3141; www. zsbar.com

PROFESSIONAL SPORTS Grand Rapids Flight The Grand Rapids Flight is part of the International Basketball League, which has its own rules of play that reduce dead time and make games fun to watch. The season runs from April through June. The Junior Jammers Youth Foundation allows the players to serve as role models as they visit schools and host instructional clinics. Plays at Davenport University Student Center, 6191 Kraft Ave. SE; 824-2255; www.grflight.com Grand Rapids Griffins In October, the American Hockey League’s Grand Rapids Griffins will commence its 14th season on the ice, the eighth as primary affiliate of the NHL’s Detroit Red Wings. The Griffins’ season ends in April. The Griffins Youth Foundation offers instruction and games for youth in grades 1-9, and sled hockey to physically disabled youth. Plays at Van Andel Arena, 130 W. Fulton St.; Star Tickets for tickets, or at “The Zone” in the arena; www. griffinshockey.com

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Grand Rapids Rampage Although the Arena Football League went dark prior to the start of the 2009 season due to financial losses, the 23-year-old league announced in April that it has finalized a revitalized business model and hopes to turn the lights back on for the 2010 season, which generally runs from March through July. The Rampage played its first game at the Van Andel Arena in 1998 and in 2001 took home the AFL ArenaBowl XV title. Plays at Van Andel Arena, 130 W. Fulton St.;

Star Tickets for tickets, or at “The Zone” in the arena; www.rampagefootball.com West Michigan Whitecaps This professional minor-league team affiliated with the Detroit Tigers is a member of the Midwest League and plays 140 games each season. In 2007, the team repeated as Midwest League Champions, earning its fifth title since joining the league in 1994. The Caps play April through early September. Plays at Fifth Third Ballpark, 4500 West River Drive, Comstock Park; 7844131 or (800) CAPS-WIN; www.whitecapsbaseball.com

SPORTING EVENTS 5K Triple Crown Series A trio of 5K road races in the Grand Rapids and East Grand Rapids area comprise the Triple Crown Series: the Spectrum Health Irish Jig 5K, held March 26 this year; the Brian Diemer Amerikam 5K Race, June 13; and the Bank of America Reeds Lake Run 5K, June 27. The series is a corporate team competition, but individual races are open to all racers. Teams shave 10 percent off their overall score for each race the CEO finishes. 391-1514, www.spectrum health.org/irishjig; 890-1337, www.diemerrun. com; 949-1750; www.reedslakerun.com Fifth Third River Bank Run This May event celebrated 32 years in 2009, with its highest ever number of participants: more than 16,200! It’s the largest 25K road race in the U.S. People from all over the United States and around the world compete in this event. The River Bank run also includes a 5K run, 5K walk, 10K run, River Bank Run Junior and 25K wheelchair race. Downtown Grand Rapids; 771-1590; www.53riverbankrun.com Golden Gloves Tournament of Champions A nationwide amateur boxing league, Golden Gloves is represented locally by the Michigan Golden Gloves Association. 2009 marks the 78th anniversary of its championships, held in mid-March through April at the Grand Valley National Guard Armory. 1200 44th St. SW, Wyoming; 784-0862 Grand Rapids Marathon When the leaves are falling, runners are rising to the occasion on the certified 26.2-mile course around downtown. On Oct. 18, the sixth annual Metro Health Grand Rapids Marathon begins at 7 a.m. for walkers and velocity-challenged runners, 8 a.m. for racers running full and half-marathons. Begins and ends at the David D. Hunting YMCA; www.grandrapidsmarathon.com Gus Macker Basketball Tournament What began on a driveway in Lowell 35 years ago has spawned 3-on-3 basketball tournaments nationwide. The 2009 Grand Rapids tournament was held in May; proceeds benefit Grand Rapids Public Schools athletes. Fifth Third Ballpark; (800) 876-HOOP; www.macker.com National 24-Hour Challenge Not for the faint of heart — or legs, this is the nation’s largest

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on-road, 24-hour, personal best bicycle endurance race. The event takes place in Middleville on Father’s Day weekend. 2009 was the 27th annual event. Thornapple Kellogg Middle School, 241-1969; www.n24hc.org Rhoades McKee Reeds Lake Triathlon During this annual event held in September, entrants must avoid swans and ducks and swim a halfmile in Reeds Lake, then bike 17 miles and run five miles. The triathlon is open to 11 age divisions beginning at age 14. John Collins Park, East Grand Rapids; 949-1750; www.eastgr.org

SPORTS CLUBS Grand Raggidy Roller Girls The all-women roller derby league underwent major changes last year when its four teams merged to form two: a travel team and a home team. The travel team was formed in November 2006 and is a member of the Women’s Flat Track Roller Association. Bouts are scheduled year-round. Home games played at Rivertown Sports, 2605 Sanford Ave. SW, Grandville; www.gr-rollergirls.com Grand Rapids Gazelles Rugby Football Club In 2009, this Division I club marks 31 years of tries, scrums and mauls. Games are scheduled in spring and fall against other Midwest teams. Newcomers as well as skilled players are welcome to join. The Gazelles’ Rock Hard 7’s Tournament (rugby’s version of three-on-three basketball) is the last weekend in June. Home field is Douglas Walker Park, 84th Street in Byron Center; 878-4039; www.grrfc.org Grand Rapids Rifle and Pistol Club This shooting club offers an array of programs for all skill levels and the only beginners’ competition classes in the area. Programs take place in an indoor, 50-foot shooting facility. Also offers adult and junior shooting leagues. 1331 Nagel Ave. SW, Wyoming; 243-6399; www.grrpc.com Grand Rapids Rowing Association Sporting a 106-year-old tradition and a new boathouse, this club provides the area with equipment and facilities. It hosts novice and varsity rowing for high school teams and a summer program for college students. Learn to Row classes are offered each summer. Membership and instructional mentor programs are available. The club’s annual regatta is in July. 364-5150; www.grrowing.org Grand Rapids Running Club Formerly known as the Grand Rapids Track Club, this group organizes training runs and races and offers its members discounts at area retailers. You don’t have to be a member to participate in runs or races, and out-of-town visitors are welcome. 742-0384 for club president; www.grandrapids runningclub.org Grand Rapids Yacht Club The GR Yacht Club, established in 1931, finds Reeds Lake to be the perfect place to hold its sailing lessons, competitive racing and summer regattas. Yearly dues and fees (there are various levels of membership) are required to be a part of this con-

BlueMoonBrewingCo.com

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sortium of sailors, who sail between Memorial Day and Labor Day. 740 Lakeside Drive SE, East Grand Rapids; 949-0221; www.grandrapids yachtclub.org Greater Grand Rapids Figure Skating Club Founded in 1972, this club has brought the joy of ice-skating to all ages and all abilities. The group lesson program offers 40 minutes of ice time, skate rental and instruction. Club

events include the Grand Rapids Open and an Annual Spring Ice Show. The club is part of the U.S. Figure Skating Association. Home ice is Standard Federal Ice Arena, 2550 Patterson Ave. SE; 942-4814; www.ggrfsc.org Greater Grand Rapids Ski Club Sure, the members of this club downhill and cross-country ski in the winter, but hardly a month goes by without a planned activity, such as golf outings,

bike trips, canoeing, parties, volleyball and more. Ski and snowboarding clinics are offered. 365-8204; www.ggrsc.org Meadowview Polo Club Joining this club is as simple as paying the grounds fees and being part of the U.S. Polo Association. If you’ve never played, Meadowview Farms is the place to saddle up. Polo Playing School is offered in December for those looking to learn the basics. Tournaments are played between the end of May and September. Games are Sundays at 2 p.m. Tournaments held at Flat River Park, Lowell Township; 897-9944; www.meadowviewfarm.com Rapid Wheelmen Bicycle Club Monthly meetings, annual gatherings, a Rapid Wheelmen Race Team, summer training events, bicycle education programs, invitationals, year-round weekly and summer daily rides are offered. The club has more than 350 members. Meetings are held the first Thursday of the month at the KDL Kentwood branch library. 4700 Kalamazoo Ave. SE; www.lmb.org/rapidwheels West Michigan Fencing Academy This club offers classes for all ages and has hosted Michigan’s highest-ranked tournament for the past 14 years: the Excalibur Open, which draws some of the Midwest’s top fencers. It also offers birthday party packages and corporate events. 1111 Godfrey Ave. SW; 245-5104; www.wmfa.org

Grand Rapids City Parks Grand Rapids city parks total roughly 2,000 acres and offer a variety of amenities, from baseball diamonds and playgrounds to picnic areas and shelters. Visit the Parks and Recreation Department’s Web site at www. grand-rapids.mi.us/parksandrec, or call (616) 456-3696 for updated amenity information. Aberdeen Park Amenities: baseball diamond, basketball court, water playground, tennis courts, playground. Eastern Avenue at Evelyn Street NE Ah-Nab-Awen Park Amenities: riverfront walkway. Adjacent to Gerald R. Ford Museum Alexander Park Amenities: playground. Alexander Street and Union Avenue SE Belknap Park/Ice Arena Amenities: baseball diamond, tennis courts. 30 Coldbrook St. NE Briggs Park Amenities: basketball court, swimming pool, tennis court, playground. Lafayette Avenue and Knapp Street NE Burton Woods Park Amenities: natural area with walking trails. Jefferson Drive south of Burton Street SE Cambridge Park Amenities: softball diamond. Adams Street and Cambridge Drive SE Camelot Park Amenities: Basketball courts, playground. 2398 Rowland Ave. SE 70 Grand Rapids City Guide 2009-10

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CAmPAu PARk Amenities: baseball diamond, basketball court, swimming pool, tennis courts, playground, soccer field, wading pool. 50 Antoine St. SE

lINCOlN PARk Amenities: softball diamond, basketball courts, swimming pool, tennis courts, shelter, playground. Bridge Street and Garfield Avenue NW

CANAl STREET PARk Amenities: shelter, playground, riverfront walkway. 941 Monroe Ave. NW

lOOk-OuT PARk Amenities: scenic overlook. Fairview Avenue and Newberry Street NE

CHERRy PARk Amenities: tennis courts, playground, wading pool. Eastern Avenue and Cherry Street SE CHESEBORO PARk Amenities: playground. Blaine Avenue and Merritt Street SE ClEmENTE PARk Amenities: baseball diamond, tennis court, soccer field. Rumsey Street and Godfrey Avenue SW

mACkAy-jAyCEE PARk Amenities: softball diamonds, basketball, tennis courts, shelter, playground, soccer fields. 2531 Kalamazoo Ave. SE mARTIN luTHER kING PARk Amenities: softball diamond, basketball courts, swimming pool, tennis courts, shelter, playground. Fuller Avenue and Franklin Street SE mARy wATERS PARk Amenities: softball diamond, basketball court, water playground, playground. Lafayette Avenue and Leonard Street NE

COIT PARk Amenities: baseball diamond, basketball court, playground. Coit Avenue and Newberry Street

mId-TOwN GREEN PARk Amenities: none. Eastern Avenue and Fountain Street NE

CRESCENT PARk Amenities: scenic overlook. Crescent Street and Bostwick Avenue NE

mOONEy PARk Amenities: none. Prospect Avenue and Logan Street SE

dICkINSON PARk Amenities: basketball court, playground. College Avenue north of Dickinson Street SE

mulICk PARk Amenities: softball diamond, water playground, tennis courts, playground. 1761 Rosewood Ave. SE

dOuGlAS PARk Amenities: basketball court, playground. Lexington Avenue and Douglas Street NW

NAGOld PARk Amenities: none. 945 Nagold St. NW

fOSTER PARk Amenities: none. State Street and Cherry Street SE fullER PARk Amenities: softball diamond, basketball court, tennis courts, playground. Lyon Street and Fuller Avenue NE GARfIEld PARk Amenities: baseball diamond, basketball and tennis courts, shelter, playground, wading pool. Burton Street SE, between Madison and Jefferson HEARTSIdE PARk Amenities: water playground, pavilion/picnic areas. South of Ionia Avenue SW and Cherry Street SE HERITAGE HIllS PARk Amenities: none. Logan Street and Paris Avenue SE HIGHlANd PARk Amenities: baseball diamond, swimming pool, playground, soccer field. Grand Avenue and Capen Street NE HIllCREST PARk Amenities: baseball diamond, playground, dog park. 1415 Lyon St. NE Huff PARk Amenities: softball diamonds, playground, shelter, natural area, walking trail. Ball Avenue and Aberdeen Street NE jOE TAylOR PARk Amenities: none. Neland Avenue and Baxter Street SE kEN-O-SHA PARk Amenities: softball field, playground, walking trail. 3155 Kalamazoo Ave. SE

PARIS PARk Amenities: none. Ottilla Street SE PlASTER CREEk fAmIly PARk Amenities: tennis court, playground, soccer field. 2133 Buchanan Ave. SE PROVIN TRAIlS PARk Amenities: natural area, walking trails. Four Mile Road west of Bird Avenue NE RICHmONd PARk Amenities: baseball diamond, basketball courts, swimming pool, tennis courts, shelter, playground. Richmond Street and Tamarack Avenue NW RIVERSIdE PARk Amenities: baseball diamond, softball diamonds, shelter, playgrounds, soccer fields, riverfront walkway. Monroe Avenue NE (between Ann and North Park streets) ROOSEVElT PARk Amenities: shelter, playground. Grandville Avenue and Van Raalte Drive SW ROSA PARkS CIRClE Amenities: amphitheater, ice rink. Monroe Center and Monroe Avenue NW

CiviC THEATRE

2009/2010 Sept 18 - Oct 4

CHICAGO

$16 - $30 • Musical Oct 23 - Nov 1

CAPTAIN LOUIE* $8 - $14 • Children’s Nov 20 - Dec 20

CINDERELLA* $16 - $30 • Musical Jan 15 - Jan 31

Moon over BUffALO

$14 - $25 • Play

Feb 26 - March 21

WEST SIDE STORy $16 - $30 • Musical

April 23 - May 2

SARAH PLAIN AND TALL* $8-$14 • Children’s

June 4 - June 13

DOUBT

$14 - $25 • Play July 30 - Aug 8

THE BfG

(BIG fRIENDLy GIANT)* $8-$14 • Children’s July 30 - Aug 8

PIRATES Of PENZANCE JR*

$8-$14 • Musical

*FAMily Friendly

SEymOuR PARk Amenities: none. Ottilla Street SE SIxTH STREET BRIdGE PARk Amenities: shelter, playground, riverfront walkway. 647 Monroe Ave. NW SullIVAN (VAllEy) fIEld Amenities: baseball diamond. Valley Avenue and Sixth Street NW VETERANS mEmORIAl PARk Amenities: historic

Call: 222-4000 www.grct.org GRAND RAPIDS CIVIC THEATRE & SCHOOL OF THEATRE ARTS City Guide 2009-10 Grand rapids 71

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I

f you love fresh food, you won’t want to miss out on the fruits, vegetables, meats, eggs, cheese, breads and more available at local farmers markets. Some markets also offer arts and crafts, children’s activities, and live entertainment by artisans and musicians. To check out a full list of West Michigan markets, go to www.farmersmarkets. msu.edu. Ada Covered Bridge Farmers Market: www.ada.mi.us; Ada Historic Museum, Thornapple River Drive, Ada; (616) 676-9191; June-Oct., 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Fri. Allendale Farmers Market: www.allendalechamber.org; 6101 Lake Michigan Drive, Heritage Towne Square Parking Lot (north side of Lake Michigan Drive), Allendale; (616) 892-2632; June-Oct., 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Tue. and Fri. Allendale-Grand Valley State University Farmers Market: www.gvsu.edu/healthwellness; GVSU campus, in the southeast corner of Lot F, Allendale; (616) 331-8011; June 11-Aug. 20, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. second Wed. of every month. Belmont-Plainfield Charter Township: www.plainfieldchartertwp.org; across from Township Hall, 6156 Belmont Ave., Belmont; (616) 364-8466; June 19-Oct. 30, 3-7 p.m. Thu. Byron Center Farmers Market: www.kentcwc.com; behind Walgreen’s store and adjacent to the church, 8350 Byron Center Ave., Byron Center; (616) 3645535; May-Oct., 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Sat. Coopersville Farmers Market: www.coopersville.com; N. Main Street parking lot pavilion, Coopersville; (616) 997-5164; May 7-Oct. 29, 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Wed. Grand Haven Farmers Market: Next to the Chinook Pier, corner of Harbor Drive & 1st Street, Grand Haven; (616) 842-4910; June-Oct., 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Wed. and Sat. Grand Rapids-Fulton Street City of Holland Municipal Farmers Market Farmers Market: www.fulton streetmarket.org; 1147 E. Fulton St., just west of Fuller, Grand Rapids; (616) 454-4118; May-Christmas, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Tue., Wed., Fri. and Sat. Grand Rapids-Metro Health Farmers Market: Main Street in the Metro Health Village, Grand Rapids; (616) 252-7911; June 19-Oct., 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Thu. Grand Rapids-Southeast Area Farmers Market: corner of Franklin and Fuller, Grand Rapids; (616) 336-9427; mid June-mid Oct., noon-6 p.m. Thu. Grand Rapids-Westside Farmers Market: Cityview Baptist Church, 936 N. Pine Ave. NW, Grand Rapids; (616) 451-0150; May 2-Oct., 10 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Thu. City of Holland Municipal Farmers Market: www.cityofholland.com or www.holland farmersmarket.com; On 8th Street between Pine and Maple, Holland; (616) 355-1138; May 16-Dec. 16, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Wed. and Sat. Hudsonville Farmers Market & Crafts: www.fcelevator.com; Farmers Co-op, 3302 Prospect St., Hudsonville; (616) 669-9596, ext. 411; June-Sep, 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Wed. Lowell Area Farmers Market: www.kcfg.org; Lowell Fairgrounds, 225 S. Hudson, Lowell; (616) 292-9786; May 15-Oct 9, 3-7 p.m. Thu. Muskegon Farmers’ Market: 700 Yuba, off Seaway Drive between Spring and Marquette, Muskegon; (231) 722-3251; May-Nov., 7 a.m.-3 p.m. Tue., Thu. and Sat.; Saturday market continues Thanksgiving to Christmas. Rockford Farm Market: South Squires Street parking lot off Main Street, Rockford; (616) 866-1537; June-end Oct., 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Sat. Spring Lake Farm and Garden Market: Downtown Spring Lake on Church Street just east of the library; (616) 842-4910; June 20-Oct. 9, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Thu. Zeeland Main Place Market: Heritage Square, corner of Elm and Main, downtown Zeeland; (616) 772-2494; June 6-Sept. 26, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Fri.

monuments. 22 Sheldon Ave. NE Westown Commons Park Amenities: basketball court, playground, wading pool. Straight Avenue and Watson Street NW Wilcox Park Amenities: softball diamond, tennis courts, shelter, playground, soccer field. 100 Youell Ave. SE (Robinson Road at Wilcox Park Drive)

Kent County Parks There are 34 Kent County parks encompassing more than 4,500 acres of land. The parks are open May 1 through Oct. 31, from 7 a.m. to dusk. Some parks are open for winter activities when snow is sufficient, but snowmobiling is not allowed. Beer and wine are allowed in all parks during Memorial Day weekend and from June 15 through Oct. 31 (a reservation permit is required prior to June 15). For information, call (616) 336-7275 or go to www.accesskent. com, click on “parks and leisure” and select “parks.” Bettes Memorial Park Undeveloped. 2455 3 Mile Road, Sparta Brewer Park Amenities: disc golf course, soccer, picnicking, playground, restrooms, baseball diamonds, basketball, tennis courts, open shelter house. 399 84th St., Byron Center Caledonia Lakeside Park Scenic view of Lake Emmons. Amenities: shelter house, baseball diamonds, picnicking, playground, restrooms, fishing. 370 Lake St., Caledonia Chief Hazy Cloud Park Amenities: restrooms, fishing, picnicking. 21 Pettis Ave., Ada Coldwater River Park Amenities: restrooms, fishing (good trout stream), picnicking. 9901 Morse Lake, Alto Cooper Creek Amenities: Trailhead for bridle trail, hiking, fishing, horseback riding, restrooms, 4-mile hiking trail. 13807 17 Mile Road, Gowen Creekside Park Amenities: baseball diamonds, exercise equipment, open shelter house, soccer, restrooms, playgrounds, picnicking. 1035 68th St. SE, Dutton Donald Lamoreaux Park Amenities: baseball diamonds, cross-country skiing, fishing, nature trails lead to wooded overlook of the Grand River. 801 Bailey Park Drive, Grand Rapids Douglas Walker Park Year-round heated shelter and Kent trails access point. Amenities: baseball diamonds, biking, picnicking, soccer, restrooms, enclosed shelter house. 1195 84th St., Byron Center Dutton Shadyside Park Amenities: tennis courts, baseball diamonds, open shelter house, picnicking, playground, restrooms. 7343 Hammond Ave., Dutton

Photography by Johnny Quirin

Eat fresh and buy Michigan at area markets

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Dwight Lydell Park Amenities: baseball diamonds, fishing, nature trails, picnicking, playground, restrooms, basketball, open shelter houses. 4040 Leland Ave., Comstock Park Fallasburg Park One of two covered bridges in Kent County spans the Flat River. Amenities: baseball diamonds, fishing, nature trails, open and enclosed shelter houses, picnicking, playgrounds, restrooms, disc golf course. 1124 Fallasburg Road, Lowell

Palmer Park Amenities: baseball diamonds, biking, cross country skiing, fishing, 18-hole golf course, picnicking, boardwalk along Buck Creek, playground, open shelter houses and restrooms. 1275 52nd St. SW, Wyoming; L.E. Kau-fman Golf Course, 4807 Clyde Park, Wyoming Paris Park Amenities: handicap-accessible trails, hiking. 3300 60th St., Kentwood

Pickerel Lake Park (Frederik Meijer Nature Preserve) Excellent bird-watching along boardwalk and trail system. Amenities: cross-country skiing, fishing, restrooms. 6001 Ramsdell Road NE, Cannonsburg Provin Trails Park Amenities: cross-country skiing, challenging hiking trail, restrooms. 2900 4 Mile Road, Grand Rapids Township

Fisk Knob Park Highest point in Kent County. Closed to auto traffic much of year but open in fall for color tours. 17533 Algoma Ave., Cedar Springs Gordon Park First park in Kent County (1924). Amenities: baseball diamonds, picnicking, playground, restrooms. 17150 Northland Drive, Sand Lake Johnson Park Amenities: Grand River boat launch, baseball diamonds, biking, exercise equipment, fishing, disc golf course, picnicking, playground, open and enclosed shelter houses, restrooms, winter sports. 2600 Wilson Ave., Walker Kent Trails A 15-mile, non-motorized, handicap accessible trail that follows an old railroad line, surface streets and easements through the GR metropolitan area. Four main access points (with parking areas): Johnson Park, John Ball Park, Douglas Walker Park and Byron Center at 84th Street. Knapp Valley Forest Park Amenities: walking trails. 4255 Knapp Valley Road, Grand Rapids Township Lamoreaux Memorial Park Amenities: walking, biking. 3500 West River Drive, Comstock Park Long Lake Park Amenities: non-motorized boat launch facility, baseball diamonds, playground, fishing, biking, open and enclosed shelter houses, picnicking, swimming, bathhouse, restrooms. 13747 Krauskopf NE, Sparta Luton Park Amenities: walking paths. 6125 Kies St., Rockford Millennium Park This 1,500-acre park is twice as big as New York City’s Central Park. Amenities: basketball, bike trails, fishing, open shelter houses, picnicking, playgrounds, volleyball, restrooms, swimming, beach house (100-acre lake with sandy beach frontage). Future plans include more canoeing, fishing, picnicking; more miles of trails. Expected to be complete in 2014. 1415 Maynard Ave. SW, Grand Rapids. Accessible via the Kent Trails, which stretch from the western border of John Ball Park southwest to Johnson Park. The northern boundary is Butterworth Avenue; southern boundary I-196.

Shaping our community Areas of Study Nursing Health and Biomedical Science Clinical Laboratory Science Therapeutic Recreation Radiologic and Imaging Sciences Occupational Safety and Health Management Health Professions Occupational Therapy Physician Assistant Studies Doctorate in Physical Therapy Health Administration M.B.A. with Health Care Emphasis Master of Public Administration with Health Care Emphasis

PROGRAMS IN heAlth PROfeSSIONS, NURSING, lIfe SCIeNCeS, AND heAlth ADMINIStRAtION. We’re educating the next generation of health care professionals in West Michigan. Our bachelor’s, master’s, and doctorate programs are preparing students for positions of service and leadership in many health care fields. Plus, many of our graduates choose to live and work here in this area, greatly expanding the pool of qualified health care providers and administrators. It’s a dynamic connection between Grand Valley and the community that enhances the quality of care in the region and makes West Michigan a better place to live. gvsu.edu

616.331.2025

Myers Lake Park Amenities: fishing, picnicking, playground, swimming, restrooms. 7350 Hessler Drive, Rockford City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 73

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Rogue River Park Amenities: baseball diamonds, cross-country skiing, fishing, picnicking, playground, tennis courts, open shelter house. 6300 Belshire Ave., Belmont Ruehs Park Borders the rapids on the Thornapple River. Amenities: playground, restrooms, fishing, picnicking. 7602 68th St., Alaska Seidman Park Forest Trails are popular for fall color and cross-country skiing. Amenities: restrooms, cross-country skiing, fishing, nature trails. 8155 Conservation Road, Ada Spencer Forest Acts as model forest educational program for students. Amenities: horseback riding. Morgan Mills Avenue and 16 Mile Road, Gowen Warren Townsend Park Circa 1926 shelter is popular for weddings. Amenities: baseball diamonds, cross-country skiing, fishing, nature trails, open and enclosed shelter houses, playground, restrooms. 8280 6 Mile Road, Cannonsburg Wabasis Lake Park Amenities: cottage available for weekly rental during camping season, baseball diamonds, campground, fishing, open and enclosed shelter houses, picnicking, playground, swimming, bathhouse, boat launch, basketball, restrooms. 11220 Springhill Drive, Oakfield Township Wahlfield Park Amenities: woodchip path, picnicking, cross-country skiing, open shelter houses, restrooms. 6811 Alpine Ave., Alpine Township White Pine Park Amenities: picnicking, crosscountry skiing, restrooms. 13590 Lincoln Lake Ave., Gowen

Higher Education Tuition costs, unless otherwise noted, are estimated for in-state students attending two undergraduate semesters of 12 credit hours each. Room and board costs, unless otherwise noted, also represent two undergraduate semesters. AQUINAS COLLEGE An educational community rooted in the Catholic Dominican tradition, Aquinas has a liberal arts curriculum that aims “to prepare students focused on leadership and service to others.” 1607 Robinson Road SE, Grand Rapids; 632-8900; www.aquinas.edu Bachelor’s programs: 61 Graduate programs: 4 Student population: 2,200 Campus acreage: 107 2009-2010 tuition: $22,314 (up to 18) 2009-2010 room and board: $7,014 CALVIN COLLEGE Since 1876, Calvin’s liberal arts approach to education has been designed to prepare students with a calling to be God’s agents in the world. It is an educational institution of the Christian Reformed Church and one

of the largest Christian colleges in the country. 3201 Burton St. SE, Grand Rapids; 526-6000; www.calvin.edu Bachelor’s programs: 66 Graduate programs: 4 Student population: 4,200 Campus acreage: 390 2009-2010 tuition: $23,810 2009-2010 room and board: $8,276 CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY CMU Off-Campus is one of the largest providers of off-campus degree programs in the U.S., with more than 60 locations throughout the United States, Canada and Mexico. Grand Rapids Center: 1633 East Beltline Ave NE, 1st Floor, Grand Rapids; 957-4361; www.cel.cmich.edu In Grand Rapids: Bachelor’s programs: 2 Graduate programs: 6 Student population: 300 2009-2010 tuition: Undergraduate $325 per credit hour, graduate $425 CORNERSTONE UNIVERSITY Cornerstone’s mission is “to empower men and women to excel as influences in our world for Christ by offering a student-focused learning community where Jesus Christ is central.” This applies also to the listeners of the school’s radio broadcast ministry. 1001 East Beltline Ave. NE, Grand Rapids; 949-5300; www.cornerstone.edu Bachelor’s programs: 43 Graduate programs: 4 Student population: 2,657 (includes traditional, nontraditional and GR Theological Seminary of Cornerstone students) Campus acreage: 130 2009-2010 tuition and fees: $19,960 2009-2010 room and board: $6,510 DAVENPORT UNIVERSITY Davenport is the only West Michigan-based private university specializing in business, technology and health professions, serving approximately 12,000 students through its campus in Caledonia Township, other locations in Michigan and Indiana, and online. Grand Rapids campus: 6191 Kraft Ave. SE (W.A. Lettinga campus), 698-7111; www.davenport.edu In Grand Rapids: Bachelor’s programs: 23 Graduate programs: 6 Student population: 3,100 Campus acreage: 69 2009-2010 tuition: $11,016 2009-2010 room and board: $7,876 FERRIS STATE UNIVERSITY With its main campus in Big Rapids, Ferris serves a total of 13,087 students. Ferris-Grand Rapids has been educating students at the Applied Technology Center in downtown GR since 1991, where it primarily serves adult, part-time students. Classes are typically small and meet during evening hours. Grand Rapids campus: 151 Fountain St. NE, Room 182, Grand Rapids; 451-4777; www.ferris. edu/grandrapids In Grand Rapids: Bachelor’s programs: 18

Graduate programs: 6 Student population: 1,200 2009-2010 tuition: Will be set in late July (2008-2009 tuition: undergraduate $300 per credit hour, technology intensive $350, graduate courses $403) GRACE BIBLE COLLEGE Grace Bible College’s aim is “graduating godly individuals prepared to serve Christ in church and society.” 1011 Aldon St. SW, Grand Rapids; 538-2330; www.gbcol.edu Bachelor’s programs: 11 Associate programs: 3 Graduate programs: 0 Student population: 180 Campus acreage: 20 2009-2010 tuition: $13,400 2009-2010 room and board: $6,850 GRAND RAPIDS COMMUNITY COLLEGE GRCC, founded in 1914, offers coursework in more than 100 fields, including certificate programs and associate degrees (about 45 technical fields and the first two years of a four-year college education in several fields). Non-credit instructional opportunities also are available. Through various partnerships, GRCC offers workforce training in its three Michigan Technical Education Centers (M-TECs). 143 Bostwick Ave. NE, Grand Rapids; 234-4000; www.grcc.edu Associate programs: 103 Student population: 15,247 credit students, 26,032 credit and non-credit students Campus acreage: 40 2009-2010 tuition: Not available (2008-2009 tuition: resident $82.50 per contact hour; nonresident $173 per contact hour; out-of-state $253 per contact hour. Contact hours are instructional hours spent with an instructor as opposed to credit hours. For example, a biology class with three hours of lecture and one of lab would be 3 credit hours but 4 contact hours.) 2009-2010 room and board: Not applicable GRAND VALLEY STATE UNIVERSITY This four-year public university provides liberal arts educations to more than 24,000 students and offers more than 200 areas of study between its suburban Allendale campus and the campuses in Grand Rapids, Holland, Muskegon and Traverse City. Grand Rapids (Pew) campus: 301 Michigan St. NE; 401 W. Fulton St.; 301 W. Fulton St.; 331-5000; www.gvsu.edu/pewcampus In Grand Rapids: Bachelor’s programs: 71 Graduate programs: 27 Student population: 23,892 Campus acreage: 38 2009-2010 tuition: Not available (2008-2009 in-state: $8,196) 2009-2010 room and board: Not available (2008-2009: $7,478) ITT TECHNICAL INSTITUTE ITT’s mission is to “provide a quality post-secondary education and the services that can help a diverse student body prepare for career opportunities in various fields involving technology.” The Grand Rapids campus is one of more

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than 100 locations in 32 states. There are about 55,000 students at all of ITT’s locations. Grand Rapids campus: 1980 Metro Court SW, Wyoming; 406-1200; www.itt-tech.edu In Grand Rapids: Associate programs: 9 Bachelor’s programs: 6 Student population: Not available School size: 30,767-square-foot building 2009 tuition: $468 per credit hour 2009-2010 room and board: Not applicable KENDALL COLLEGE OF ART AND DESIGN OF FERRIS STATE UNIVERSITY As a college within Ferris State University, Kendall College of Art and Design prepares students for leadership in the visual arts, design, art history, and art education; provides innovative, collaborative education that fosters intellectual growth and individual creativity; and promotes ethical and civic responsibilities of artists and designers, locally and globally. 17 Fountain St. NW, Grand Rapids; 451-2787; www.kcad.edu Bachelor’s programs: 14 Graduate programs: 5; and offers the MBA concentration in Design and Innovation Management as part of Ferris State University’s MBA program Student population: 1,352 2009-2010 tuition: $14,096 (estimate) 2009-2010 room and board: $8,340 (estimate)

THOMAS M. COOLEY LAW SCHOOL Cooley’s mission is to prepare its students for entry into the legal profession through a practical and integrated program. Cooley’s flexible scheduling lets students attend full- or part-time in the daytime, evenings or on weekends. Video conferencing combines with traditional classroom studies to allow faculty to teach at the Grand Rapids, Lansing and Auburn Hills campuses simultaneously.

AUTHORIZED DEALER

Grand Rapids campus: 111 Commerce Ave. SW, Grand Rapids; 301-6800; www.cooley.edu Graduate programs: 1 (juris doctor degree) Post-J.D: 2 LL.M degrees (Master of Laws) Student population: 547 2009-2010 tuition: Not available (2008- 2009 tuition: $957 per credit hour) 2009-2010 room and board: Not Applicable UNIVERSITY OF PHOENIX University of Phoenix

ORG West Michigan

KUYPER COLLEGE Kuyper College is a Christian leadership college focused on training students for ministry and service in a number of fields. A Christian Reformed world view is integrated into Kuyper’s academic curriculum to provide students with a well-rounded biblical and academic college experience. 3333 East Beltline Ave. NE, Grand Rapids Township; 222-3000; www.kuyper.edu Bachelor’s programs: 19 Certificate programs: 4 Associate programs: 2 Student population: 400 Campus acreage: 33 2009-2010 tuition: $14,694 2009-2010 room and board: $5,350 SPRING ARBOR UNIVERSITY This four-year, evangelical Christian university whose main campus is located in Spring Arbor offers degree completion programs at various regional sites including Grand Rapids. Approximately 4,000 students attend Spring Arbor at all campuses in an evening format to accommodate working adults. The school is affiliated with the Free Methodist Church of North America. Grand Rapids campus: 1550 East Beltline Ave. SE, Suite 230, Grand Rapids; (800) 968-0223; www.arbor. edu In Grand Rapids: Bachelor’s degree completion programs: 3 Endorsement programs: 1 Graduate programs: 1 Student population: 75 2009-2010 tuition: Varies, average $400 per credit hour undergrad with books included in tuition 2009-2010 room and board: Not applicable

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offers accelerated degree programs to working adult students. The West Michigan campus is one of a network that serves more than 300,000 students at nearly 200 locations. West Michigan Campus: 318 River Ridge Drive NW, Walker; 647-5100; www.phoenix.edu/westmichi gan In Grand Rapids: Bachelor’s programs: 70 (including online) Graduate programs: 45 (including online)

Student population: 4,000 (including online) Campus acreage: 3 2009-2010 tuition: Not available, variable by area of interest. (2008-2009 tuition: undergraduate $390 per credit hour, upper division undergrad $410, graduate $575) 2009-2010 room and board: Not applicable

WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY With a main campus located in Kalamazoo, WMU and its satellite campuses serve almost 25,000 students and offer more than 140 bachelor’s programs and almost 100 graduate programs. WMU’s two Grand Rapids campuses offer graduate-level courses, with night and weekend class times as well as day classes during the summer. Grand Rapids campuses: 200 Ionia Ave. SW, Grand Rapids, 771-4100; 2333 East Beltline Ave. SE, Grand Rapids, 771-9470; www.gr.wmich. edu In Grand Rapids: Bachelor’s programs: 0 Graduate programs: 23 Graduate certificate programs: 3 Student population: 1,800 Campus acreage: 2 downtown, 11 on East Beltline 2009-2010 tuition: Not available (2008-2009 tuition: graduate $420.50 per credit hour; both in state and out of state) 2009-2010 room and board: Not applicable

FAIRS & FESTIVALS Occasionally dates are changed, so call or check the Web site to confirm.

July

Muskegon Summer Celebration June 25-July 5, Heritage Landing, Muskegon; (231) 722-6520; www.summercelebration.com Field of Flight July 1-5, W.K. Kellogg Airport, Battle Creek; (269) 962-0592; www.bcballoons. com Riverwalk Festival July 9-12, Downtown Lowell; (616) 897-9161; www.lowellchamber.org Berlin Fair July 13-18, Marne; (616) 677-1140; www.berlinfair.org Ionia Free Fair July 16-25, Ionia Fairgrounds; (616) 527-1310; www.ioniafreefair.com Muskegon County Youth Fair July 20-26, Muskegon Fairgrounds; (231) 788-4568; www. muskegonfairgrounds.com

everything for the palate pleasing pantry. With a variety of exceptional edibles and fabulous wines, Art of the Table helps turn everyday pantries into a gourmet’s dream. No matter what you consider “gourmet.”

National Baby Food Festival July 22-25, Fremont; (231) 924-2270; www.babyfoodfest. com Coast Guard Festival July 24-Aug. 2, Grand Haven; (888) 207-2434; www.ghcgfest.org Ottawa County Fair July 27-Aug. 1, Ottawa County Fairgrounds, Holland; (616) 399-4904; www.ottawacountyfair.com

August

606 wealthy se grand rapids 616.301.1885 artofthetable.com

Summerfest/Del Shannon Memorial Car Show Aug. 3-9, Downtown Coopersville; (616) 9975164; www.coopersville.com National Blueberry Festival Aug. 6-9, South

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Haven; (269) 637-5252; www.blueberryfestival. com Rockford Celtic Festival Aug. 8, Rockford; (616) 866-4465; www.artsrockford.com Danish Festival Aug. 20-23, Greenville; (616) 754-6369; www.danishfestival.org Polish Festival Aug. 24-26, Calder Plaza, Downtown Grand Rapids; (616) 791-9030

506-1299; www.holland.org, click on “Events” Flat River Freeze Dec. 5, Lowell; (616) 897-9161; www.lowellchamber.org

January 2010

Grand Haven Winterfest Jan. 28-31, Grand Haven; (800) 303-4097; www.winterfestonline. org

April

Michigan Film Festival Aug. 28-29, Downtown Grand Rapids, (616) 831-1000; www.michigan filmfest.org

24-Hour Film Festival Date TBD, Compass Academy, Grand Rapids; (616) 458-4238; www. compassfilmacademy.com

September

May

Hispanic Festival Sept. 4-6, Downtown Grand Rapids; (616) 742-0221; www.hispanic-center. org/festival Celebration on the Grand Sept. 10-12, Downtown Grand Rapids; (616) 752-8257; www.celebra tiononthegrand.org Fiesta Mexicana Sept. 11-13, Calder Plaza, Downtown Grand Rapids; www.visitgrandrap ids.org Tulipanes Latino Art & Film Festival Sept. 12-13, Holland; (616) 394-0000; www.tulipanes.org Eastown Street Fair Sept. 19, Lake Drive at Wealthy Street, Grand Rapids; www.eastown gr.com Oktoberfest West Michigan Sept. 25-26, John Ball Park, Grand Rapids; www.edelweissclub gr.com Rockford Harvest Festival Sept. 25-27, Rockford; (616) 866-2000; www.rockford.mi.us Fallasburg Fall Festival Sept. 26-27, Fallasburg Park, north of Lowell; (616) 897-8545; www.low ellartscouncil.org/fallasburg.htm

October

Tulip Time Festival May 1-8, Downtown Holland; (800) 822-2770; www.tuliptime.com Jewish Film Festival May 2-6, Various Grand Rapids venues; (616) 942-5553; www.jewish grandrapids.org Great Lakes Kite Festival May 15-16, Grand Haven State Park; (800) 303-4092; www. mackite.com

June

Reeds Lake Clothesline Art Festival June 19, East Grand Rapids; (616) 949-1247; www.east gr.org Festival of the Arts June 4-6, Downtown Grand Rapids; (616) 459-1300; www.festivalofthearts. org Feast of the Strawberry Moon June 11-13, Harbor Island, Grand Haven; (616) 842-0700; www.tri-citiesmuseum.org/straw_moon.php Waterfront Film Festival June 11-14, Various venues, Saugatuck; www.waterfrontfilm.org Rockford Start of Summer Celebration June 11-13, Rockford; (616) 866-1537; www.rockford. mi.us

Pulaski Days Oct. 2-4, Grand Rapids; www. pulaskidays.org

African American Festival June 15-17, Down­ town Grand Rapids; www.visitgrandrapids.org

Red Flannel Festival Oct. 3, Downtown Cedar Springs; (616) 696-2662; www.redflannelfesti val.org

Spring Lake Heritage Festival June 16-24, Downtown Spring Lake; (616) 846-3912; www. slheritagefestival.com

Rockford Harvest Festival Oct. 3-4, Oct. 10-11, Rockford; (616) 866-2000; www.rockford.mi.us Harvest Celebration Oct. 10, Lowell; (616) 8979161; www.lowellchamber.org

November/December

Grand Rapids Wine & Food Festival Nov. 12-14, Grand Rapids, (616) 447-2860; www.showspan. com Christmas in Lowell Nov 20-22, Lowell; (616) 897-9161; www.lowellchamber.org Dutch Winterfest Nov. 21-Dec. 11, Holland; (800) City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 77

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(Future Site)

8

7

6

5

4

Kendall

(Federal Building)

(Future Site)

SECCHIA CENTER MICHIGAN STREET MSU COLLEGE DEVELOPMENT OF HUMAN MEDICINE

G

SPECTRUM HEALTH LEMMEN-HOLTON LEMMEN-HOLTEN CANCER PAVILION

HELEN DEVOS CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL (Future Site)

Center

H

I

8

7

6

5

4

3

F

3

E

2

D

2

C

1

B

1

A


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B

C

D

E

F

G

H

I

Ferris State University Grand Rapids.....................................................H6 Grand Rapids Community College...................G6 Grand Valley State University Cook-DeVos Center for Health Sciences...........I4 Grand Valley State University Pew Grand Rapids Campus................................................. B8 Kendall College of Art & Design of Ferris State University...................................F6 Michigan State University College of Human Medicine (future site).........F4 Thomas M. Cooley Law School.........................F9 Van Andel Institute............................................G4 Western Michigan University Graduate Center..............................................F10 Chase Building...................................................F5 Comerica Bank/Campau Square Building.......F4 Fifth Third Building............................................ E6 Huntington Bank Building..................................E7 National City Bank/PNC Building.................... E6 Select Bank Building..........................................F7 LaSalle Bank/Trust Building.............................F6

Financial Institutions

The BOB............................................................. E8 DeVos Performance Hall.................................. D5 DeVos Place Convention Center...................... D4 Grand Rapids Ballet Company........................D12 Grand Rapids Civic Theatre.............................. G7 The Intersection.............................................. D10 Ladies Literary Club/Calvin College................G9 St. Cecilia Music Center....................................H8 Opera Grand Rapids (future site)........ east of I8 Spectrum Theater............................................. H7 Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts (UICA) (new building F8)..........................G9 Van Andel Arena................................................ E8

Amway Grand Plaza Hotel................................ D6 Courtyard by Marriott....................................... D7 Days Inn Downtown.......................................... C6 JW Marriott........................................................ D6

Higher Education/ Research Institutions

Entertainment Venues

Accommodations

Downtown Grand Rapids

Ecliptic, Rosa Parks Circle (Maya Lin)..............E7 Steel Water/fluoridation monument (Cyril Lixenberg)............................................... D6 Grand River Sculpture and Fish Ladder (Joseph E. Kinnebrew IV)................................................ C2 La Grand Vitesse (Alexander Calder)...............E5 Motu Viget (Mark di Suvero)............................ E4 Gerald R. Ford Federal Building....................... E4 Grand Rapids City Hall.......................................E5 Grand Rapids Police Department.....................F8 Kent County Building.........................................E5 Kent County Courthouse...................................F5 Michigan Secretary of State..............................F8 State Building.....................................................F4 U.S. Post Office................................................. D3

Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum............... C5 Grand Rapids Art Museum................................E7

Museums/Libraries

Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital.....................G4 Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital.............I11 Saint Mary’s Health Care...................................I11 Spectrum Health Butterworth Campus...........H4

Ah-Nab-Awen Park............................................ C5 Calder Plaza.......................................................E5 Coit Park.............................................................H1 Crescent Park.................................................... G5 Fish Ladder Park............................................... C2 Heartside Park.................................................. E11 Lookout Park......................................................G1 Rosa Parks Circle...............................................E7 Sixth Street Bridge Park.................................... E1

Parks/Plazas

Major Public Art (Not all labeled)

Government Buildings/Services

Hospitals

Grand Rapids Children’s Museum...................G8 Grand Rapids Public Library............................. G7 Van Andel Museum Center............................... C6

David D. Hunting YMCA.................................... A6 YWCA.................................................................G8

Fitness/Health

Amtrak Station.................................................B12 The Rapid Central Station............................... E11

Transportation

Cathedral of St. Andrew..................................G11 Catholic Information Center.............................F11 First Church of Christ, Scientist.........................I9 First Methodist Church.....................................H8 First (Park) Congregational Church................G8 Fountain Street Church.................................... G7 Immanuel Lutheran Church..............................F4 LaGrave Avenue Christian Reformed Church..............................................G9 St. George’s Antiochian Orthodox Church.............................................H11 St. Mark’s Episcopal Church............................G6 Seventh Day Adventist Church Central..................................................G9 Westminster Presbyterian Church..................H9

Places of Worship

Veterans Memorial Park...................................G8

Courtesy City of Grand Rapids

12

12

A

11

11

10

10

(Future Site)

9

9

The Hauenstein Center

8

8

Center


backstagepass | Destinations & experiences

RESTAURANTS

In addition to its annual Dining Awards, Grand Rapids Magazine maintains a comprehensive list of dining establishments in 11 categories based on their menus: the food they serve and the way they serve it. The 10 winners of the 2008 Grand Rapids Magazine Dining Awards, presented in February at the Grand Culinary Affair prepared by the Secchia Institute for Culinary Education at Grand Rapids Community College, are: Restaurant of the Year: The 1913 Room Fine Dining: Leo’s, Reds on the River, Restaurant Bloom Casual Dining: Blue Water Grill, Bonefish Grill, Marco New American Bistro ethnic Dining: Tre Cugini, XO Asian Cuisine, Beltline Bar Here are the Grand Rapids Magazine definitions for the categories: haute Cuisine: Top-quality ingredients sourced fresh, prepared with true innovation and artistically presented with superb service, which adds up to a true “signature.” It’s a “culinary experience.” Fine Dining: Top-quality ingredients, well presented, somewhat innovative — a complexity of flavors, using the highest-quality product. Excellent service and knowledgeable staff. Casual Dining: Anticipated fare, a good meal. “You know what you like and that’s what you get.” Typical and/or less inventive food preparation. A few ethnic restaurants that don’t fit one of the three ethnic categories are included here. seafood/steaks: Fifty percent or more of the menu is seafood or steak. ethnic (3): Fifty percent or more of the menu is within the ethnicity: Asian, European, and Central/South American, Mexican. Other ethnic restaurants are listed under Casual Dining. Mug & a Meal: A tavern with food (more than appetizers). sandwich spots: Menu focuses on soup, salad and sandwiches; formal entrées are not served. Coffeehouses: Free-standing locations (not inside bookstores, hospitals, schools, etc.) that offer specialty coffee, have inside seating and do not serve dinner.

haute Cuisine

OTHE 1913 ROOM — 2008 GRM Restaurant of the Year. On par with the best in the country, as proven by its multi-year AAA Five-Diamond awards. Innovative French-inspired fare, excellent wine list and superb desserts, along with lavish French décor and impeccable service. Closed Sun. Amway Grand Plaza Hotel, 187 Monroe Ave NW, (800) 253-3590 for reservations desk, 776-6426 for restaurant. www. amwaygrand.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS, RSVP $$ BELVEDERE INN — American haute cuisine is the hallmark of this elegantly restored Saugatuck mansion. Guests are invited to bring their own wine selections. In the winter it is only open for special events, parties and by special arrangement. Reservations required; call ahead (typically serving dinner Wed-Sun beginning in May). 3656 63rd St, Saugatuck, (269) 857-5777 or toll-free (877) 858-5777. www.thebelvedere inn.com. H, D, 3, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $$ FRESTAURANT BLOOM — 2008 GRM Dining Award of Excellence winner. Unique and imaginative American regional fare with an ever-changing seasonal menu from a brilliant chef/owner. In the heart of downtown with a decidedly upscale ambience. Innovative desserts, lovely wine list and microbrew beers. Smoke-free. Lunch served 11-4; Sun brunch; closed Mon. 40 Monroe Center, 632-2233. www. bloomgr.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$

Fine Dining

ACORN GRILLE AT THOUSAND OAKS — Delightful blend of traditional and innovative cuisine, artfully presented for a memorable experience. Excellent service in the open, recently renovated dining room with golf course views. Closed Mon and Tue (Jan, Feb, Mar). 4100 Thousand Oaks Dr, 447-7750. www.thousand oaksgolf.com. H, L (Tue-Fri), D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS $$ ARBOREAL INN — New England-style inn off the beaten track offers fresh whitefish, Alaskan king crab, tournedos Oscar and more; small, cozy atmosphere with dining and bar area. Portion of menu requires 24-hour notice. Closed Sun. 18191 174th Ave, Spring Lake, (616) 842-3800. www.arborealinn.com. H, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $$ BAR DIVANI — Premier wine bar and restaurant offering wine flights, with 50 available by the

photoGraphy by MiChaeL buCk

Dining list - with definitions

GRAND RAPIDS MAGAZINE has compiled this list of selected area restaurants as a service to our readers. The recommendations and reviews in the listings are the opinions of the editors. Restaurants are included in the guide by virtue of overall quality. We have created symbols to area restaurant amenities, which are defined in a legend at the end of this listing.

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backstagepass | Destinations & Experiences

glass, and a large array of spirits in comfortable, upscale surroundings. European-inspired food with plates meant for sharing; everything from filet mignon to innovative pizza-like flatbreads. Made-from-scratch soups, interesting salads and more. Menu changes monthly. Closed Sun. 15 Ionia Ave SW, 774-9463. www. bar-divani.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$

gourmet dishes from steaks to exceptional vegan fare. The low cost of the extraordinary meals will surprise you; menu changes weekly. Now offering wine with dinner. Open TueFri during academic year. Applied Technology Center, 151 Fountain St NE, 234-3700; www. grcc.edu/heritage. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$

BAY POINTE INN & RESTAURANT — Casual gourmet dining with exceptional service, impressive wine list, martini bar and lakeside dining on the terrace. Seasonally changing menu includes seafood, steaks, pasta and specials emphasizing regional fare. In-house pastry chef ensures tantalizing desserts. Open daily; Sun brunch 10 am-2 pm. Reservations recommended. 11456 Marsh Rd, Shelbyville (off US 131), (269) 672-5202 or (888) GUN-LAKE. www.baypoin teinn.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC, RSVP $-$$

JACK’S — On the Grand River at Grand Haven Waterfront Holiday Inn. This restaurant begins the day with breakfast specialties, moves on to lunch with salads, sandwiches and featured entrées, and into the dinner hour with appetizers, wine by the glass and a wide range of entrées. 940 W Savidge St, Spring Lake, (616) 846-1370. www.higrandhaven.com. H, B, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$

BIL-MAR RESTAURANT — With a great view of Lake Michigan on the beach in Grand Haven, this spot serves spectacular sunsets with a wide selection of fine-dining entrées. Full bar. Open daily. 1223 S Harbor St, Grand Haven, (616) 842-5920. www.bil-margrandhaven.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $$-$$$ BUTCH’S — New York-style deli by day, fine dining New American cuisine by night. Menu changes seasonally. Superb lunch fare served in smoke-free atmosphere. More than 200 bottled beer selections and 700 varieties of wine available for takeout. Closed Sun. 44 E 8th St, Holland, (616) 396-8227. www.butchs.net. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $$ CROWNE ROOM — Comfortably accoutered dining room in the Crowne Plaza Hotel offers breakfast buffet, popular lunch choices and fine dining selections from an extensive seasonal menu that ranges from seafood linguine to filet mignon. Open daily. 5700 28th St SE, 957-1770. B, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS, RSVP $-$$ CYGNUS 27 — Stylized décor reflects a celestial theme that matches the stellar views from the 27th floor of the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel. Now with a more casual, but exciting, seasonally driven menu that encourages sharing. Open Tue-Sat eves; superb Sun brunch Labor Day to Mother’s Day. 187 Monroe Ave NW, 776-6425. www.amwaygrand.com. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $$ THE DINING ROOM AT CLEARBROOK — New entrées created daily featuring locally grown products. Known for hand-cut steaks, double-cut lamb chops and melt-in-your-mouth Canadian walleye, the contemporary classic cuisine is served in gracious surroundings overlooking the gardens. Casual dining in The Grill Room. Open daily in summer. Clearbrook Golf Club, 6594 Clearbrook Dr (just north of Saugatuck), (269) 857-2000. www.clearbrookgolfclub.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC, RSVP $-$$ THE HERITAGE — Grand Rapids Community College culinary arts students prepare superb

LEGENDS — Macatawa Legends Country Club’s fine-dining venue (on the lower level) opens at 5 pm Tue-Sat during summer months, with Sun brunch year-round. Menu features contemporary fare focused on seasonal ingredients sourced locally. Well-represented wine list is affordably priced. Floor-to-ceiling windows provide golf course views. Spacious patio for al fresco dining. 4600 Macatawa Legends Blvd, Holland, (616) 738-7800. www.macata walegends.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$ MARCO NEW AMERICAN BISTRO — Cozy dining in a French-country-casual, white-linen atmosphere. Try the veal osso buco or pan-fried walleye with lemon beurre blanc. Lunch features pizza, pasta, salads and sandwiches, all available for takeout. Superb desserts. Full bar with nice wine list. Closed Sun. 884 Forest Hill Ave SE, 942-9100. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$ MAXFIELD’S — Knowledgeable staff carries on the family tradition of elegant dining. Vast lunch and dinner menus are enhanced by daily feature buffets. Open Tue-Sun. 11228 Wyman Rd, Blanchard, (800) 550-563. www.maxfields restaurant.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $$ PIPER — Stunning view, fun décor, good service and a menu with everything from appetizers, pasta and wood-fired pizza to haute cuisine entrées and homemade desserts. Closed Sun and Mon during winter. 2225 South Shore Dr, Macatawa, (616) 335-5866. www.piperrestau rant.com. H, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$$ FREDS ON THE RIVER — 2008 GRM Dining Award of Excellence winner. Fine dining on the banks of the Rogue River in Rockford. Combines casual sophistication with Old-World Tuscan sensibilities. Menu offers something for everyone: seafood, chicken, pork, aged steaks, dinner salads and burgers. Nice wine list, too. Serving lunch 11-4 pm; closed Sun. 2 E Bridge St, Rockford, 863-8181. www.reds-live.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $-$$ REPUBLIC — This upscale sister of Rockwell’s Kitchen & Tap serves Asian-influenced California cuisine, from steaks, seafood and

chicken dishes to creative pastas and plates to share. Multi-level, arts-inspired décor with upper-level outdoor seating and attentive bar service. Closed Sun. 45 S Division Ave, 6086465. www.republicgrandrapids.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ RESTAURANT TOULOUSE — French country mansion-style setting with a creative, changing menu, including French classics such as cassoulet and bouillabaisse. Limited but representative entrées run the gamut, with delectable appetizers and desserts. Award-winning wines and Zagat Survey notable. Hours vary seasonally: fall/winter, open 5 pm Thu-Sun for dinner; private parties can be arranged. Sun brunch during summer. 248 Culver St, Saugatuck, (269) 857-1561. www.restauranttoulouse.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, RSVP $$ SAYFEE’S — Longtime GR favorite with wellrounded, top-notch menu also offers early-dining specials; chateaubriand served tableside. Luscious dessert cart. Live music and dancing Wed-Sat. Deck open in summer. Closed Sun. 3555 Lake Eastbrook Blvd, 949-5750. www. sayfees.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $$ SIX.ONE.SIX — In the JW Marriott Hotel in the heart of downtown, with a decidedly uptown vibe. Menu emphasizes regional products in a continually changing menu to accommodate market-fresh, contemporary American fare “with a global soul.” Enjoy the mini “Chef’s Lab” exhibition kitchen inside the dining room to interact with chefs, or visit the Mixology lounge. 235 Louis St NW, 242-1500. www. ilovethejw.com. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $-$$ TULLYMORE — Well worth the drive north to Mecosta County where the restaurant at Tullymore, the sister golf club of St. Ives, offers a superbly executed, seasonally inspired menu with layers of flavors and artful presentations. Top-notch service in beautifully appointed surroundings that are both elegant and comfortable, with expansive views of the wooded course. Large patio for outdoor dining. 11969 Tullymore, Stanwood, (800) 972-4837. www. tullymoregolf.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$

Casual Dining

8TH STREET GRILL — This haven obliges with entrées ranging from catfish Valdosta to ribs, along with sandwiches, salads, burgers and pasta. Closed Sun. 20 W 8th St, Holland, (616) 392-5888. H, L, D, 3, V, MC, AE $ 84 EAST FOOD & SPIRITS — Neat restoration lends atmosphere to this place specializing in unique pasta dishes and thin-crust pizzas. House specialty is baked spaghetti pie. Closed Sun. 84 E 8th St, Holland, (616) 396-8484. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DC, DS ¢-$ ANNA’S HOUSE — Family dining offers great breakfast fare. Open daily for breakfast and lunch. 3874 Plainfield Ave NE, 361-8500. H, B, L ¢ City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 81

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backstagepass | Destinations & Experiences

APPLEBEE’S NEIGHBORHOOD GRILL & BAR — “America’s Favorite Neighbor” offers casual dining and a full-service bar at six locations: 3851 Alpine Ave NE, 784-6199; 1375 28th St SW, 261-2588; 4955 28th St SE, 977-1900; 3250 Grand Ridge Dr NE, 364-9492; 4488 Potomac Ave SW, 534-8173; 1685 Marketplace Dr SE, Gaines Twp, 698-9363. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ ARNIE’S BAKERY & RESTAURANT — GR favorite for sandwiches, baked goods and desserts; dinner menu and good breakfasts. Open daily. 3561 28th St, 956-7901; 777 54th St SW, 532-5662; 34 Squires St, Rockford, 866-4306. H, B, L, D, 3, V, MC, AE $ BAR LOUIE — Urban-cool décor at Woodland Shopping Center. Menu offers a variety of signature sandwiches, appetizers, deluxe burgers and hearty entrées. More than 20 domestic, imported and microbrew beers, along with a nice by-the-glass or bottle wine selection and specialty cocktails. Outdoor seating. 3191 28th St SE, 885-9050. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ BD’S MONGOLIAN BARBEQUE — Concoct stir-fry sensations by choosing from a variety of veggies, meats, spices, oils and sauces, then stand back and watch the chef do the work. Convivial atmosphere. Open 11 am daily. 2619 28th St SE, 957-7500. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $ BENTHAM’S RIVERFRONT RESTAURANT — American selections served in casually elegant surroundings that feature rich fabrics, warm woods and tiered river-view seating. Open daily from breakfast through dinner in the West Tower of the Amway Grand Plaza, 774-2000. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $ BITE — Deli side of Ottawa Tavern features eight soups daily, big wraps, fresh salads and build-your-own burgers. Weekday Happy Hour drink and appetizer specials 4-7 pm. Closed Sun. 151 Ottawa Ave NW, 451-8000. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$$ BLUE PLATE — Upscale décor and a menu that takes comfort food to a new level: pancettawrapped meat loaf, sophisticated pot pies, and lobster-morel mac & cheese. The popular Pasta Station (create your own from fresh ingredients) is available at lunch, with breakfast offered daily. In the lounge, light fare and appetizers. Open daily. 11 Monroe Ave NW, 242-6000, ext 6646. H, B, L, D, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $ FBLUE WATER GRILL — 2008 GRM Dining Award of Excellence winner. Tableside views of Versluis Lake from this Frank Lloyd Wrightinspired eatery. Enjoy grilled appetizers and live music on the outdoor patio with fireplace and full-service bar. Wood-burning rotisserie and wood-fired pizza oven allow for inspired dishes from fresh seafood to beef. Nice wine selection and The BOB’s microbrews. 5180 Northland Dr NE, 363-5900. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$

BOATWERKS WATERFRONT RESTAURANT — Vintage motorboat ambiance overlooking Lake Macatawa with a spacious outdoor patio and two menus: casual dining in the main dining room, bar and patio, and another room for fine dining. Upscale comfort food at its best. 216 Van Raalte Ave, Holland, (616) 396-0600. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $-$$ BOBARINO’S — All-American grill on the second floor of The BOB, offering a wide variety of menu items from wood-fired pizza, burgers and sandwiches to pasta and more up-scale entrées, with The BOB’s microbrews on tap in the full-service bar. Live entertainment in Cisco’s Island Lounge. Closed Sun. 20 Monroe Ave NW, 356-2000. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $ BOBBY J’S DOWNTOWN — Lively smoke-free deli/ diner stays open 24 hours Fri-Sat, with breakfast, lunch and dinner options daily. Unique appetizers like fried pickle chips and kickin’ chipotle shrimp, along with pitas, paninis, specialty sandwiches and salads at lunch. Dinner specials include barbecue ribs. 15 Jefferson Ave SE, 459-8150. H, B, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ BOSTON’S — “The Gourmet Pizza” restaurant and sports bar offers 26 specialty pizzas, pasta dishes, barbecued ribs and more in a contemporary setting. Outside deck has TVs and live music. Separate sports bar features TVs, pool tables, dartboards and video sports games. 2024 Celebration Ave NE, 363-4948. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$$ BOSTWICK LAKE INN — Roomy, cottage-style eatery offers regionally influenced cuisine in casual surroundings. Among the favorites are fresh seafood, pasta, steaks and ribs. Open Tue-Sat, also Mon between Memorial Day and Labor Day. 8521 Belding Rd NE, Cannon Township, 874-7290. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $ BOULDER CREEK RESTAURANT — The restaurant at Boulder Creek Golf Club serves up an affordable selection of appetizers, sandwiches and salads as well as fowl, seafood and beef for dinner. Enjoy golf-course views from inside or on the deck. 5750 Brewer Ave NE, Belmont, (616) 363-1330, ext 2. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ BRANDYWINE — Pleasant café atmosphere serving exceptional breakfasts, innovative lunches with many vegetarian choices and salads, and dinner selections ranging from Mexican to beef Wellington and pastas. 1345 Lake Dr SE, 7748641; 2844 East Beltline Ave NE, 363-1723. H, B, L, D, 3, V, MC ¢-$ THE BREAKFAST NOOK — Opens at 6 am (7 on Sun) and serves three squares daily in comfortable surroundings on the corner of Plainfield and Fuller. 3100 Plainfield Ave NE, 364-3280. H, B, L, D, V, MC, DS, AE ¢-$ BUD & STANLEY’S — Tiffany-style lamps and cherry-wood pillars mingle with moose and elk head trophies. Mirrored bar and TV sets galore. Inexpensive Mexican and Italian dishes,

burgers, lots of starters, salads and sandwiches. Main entrées range from homemade pasties to the one-pound Texas cut sirloin. Takeout available. Open daily. 1701 4 Mile Rd NE, 3619782. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ BULL’S HEAD TAVERN — A dozen appetizers from brie to crab cakes, pot stickers and bruschetta. Lunch menu showcases salads, soups, buildyour-own burgers and sandwiches. Dinners include warm bread and chef-selected sides. Banquette and table seating downstairs, comfy booths and tables in the more intimate upstairs. 188 Monroe Ave NW, 454-3580. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $ C’S GRILLE — Centennial Country Club has recently revamped its menu, offering a nice variety of starters, salads, daily soup creations and imaginative entrées. Great selection of lighter fare under $10 on the casual dinner menu. Lunch menu offers soups, salads, sandwiches, wraps and more. Top-notch service in comfortable dining room overlooking golf course. Now non-smoking. Live music Fri-Sat. Reservations accepted. Open Tue-Sat. 3361 Charlevoix Dr SE, 954-0444. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $$ CASCADE ROADHOUSE — Relaxed, casual atmosphere with an expansive menu from fish and chips and gourmet burgers to delightful finedining appetizers and entrées from a skilled kitchen. Good bar, wine list. Closed Sun. 6817 Cascade Rd SE (at Old 28th St), 949-1540. H, L, D, C, V, AE $-$$ CASCADE’S SPORTS GRILL — Not your average sports bar from a food perspective: calamari, crab cakes, pot stickers, stuffed ’shrooms, great sandwiches, chicken, steak and more. Sizable bar with 10 brew taps and an extensive martini menu. Pool tables, dartboards, TVs and other amusements. Live DJ Sat night. Cascade Centre, 6240 28th St SE, 974-3338. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $ CHARLIE’S BAR & GRILLE — Well-rounded menu features dinners ranging from ribs, steaks and seafood to kielbasa and kraut. Also Mexican fare, chicken, shrimp and smelt baskets, many sandwiches, soups, salads, appetizers and daily specials, all in pleasant surroundings with fullservice bar. 3519 Plainfield Ave NE, 364-0567. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ CHEERS — Popular neighborhood spot with something for everyone: munchies, salads, south-of-the-border favorites, fish, steaks, burgers, breakfast fare, omelets and more, served daily in an inviting log-cabin environment. 3994 Plainfield Ave NE, 363-1188. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢ CHEQUERS — Creative cuisine with a British flair ranges from beef tips Sherwood to Welsh rarebit, fish and chips, shepherd’s pie and imported beer served in an English pub atmosphere. Open daily in summer. 220 Culver St, Saugatuck, (269) 857-1868. H, L, D, 3, V, MC, AE $

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Chef’s Daily Specials & Authentic Italian Dishes Express Lunch Buffet (Available Mon - Fri) NTN Trivia Now Available In Sports Pub Live Jazz And Blues Every Thursday Night

Pizza and a Whole Lot More! voted best pizza 6 years in a row

Open 7 Days | 400 Ada Dr. SE (in the Thornapple Village) www.vitalesada.com 676-5400

It’s never too early

to plan your Corporate holiday party. Watermark Country Club specializes in November and December Holiday Parties with rooms that can accommodate up to 300 guests. Any event can be customized to fit your business’ event.

Everything Banquets PUBLIC WELCOME

Watermark Country Club Jessica Migliaccio, Events Manager 949-0570 ext. 29 5500 Cascade Road • Grand Rapids, MI 49546 City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 83

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backstagepass | Destinations & Experiences

Feasting in the fresh air By Julie Burch

In West Michigan, one of life’s simple delights is dining al fresco. Many Grand Rapids restaurants acknowledge this by providing patios, dining decks and sidewalk cafés for the pleasure of their dining public. Here are some local favorites: The Gilmore Collection takes outdoor dining to heart. Practically all of the dining establishments in their stables offer dining decks. For instance, Bluewater Grill with its multi-terraced, Frank Lloyd-Wright-inspired deck and patio, complete with bar, fireplace and heaters. It’s a peaceful, handsomely landscaped escape heightened by the sparkling waters of the adjacent Versluis Lake. Another longtime Gilmore favorite that takes advantage of its lakeside perch is Rose’s on Reeds Lake. The recently expanded deck includes a screened-in porch to help keep flies out of your chardonnay. It also boasts a corner fireplace, while the familiar umbrella-covered tables provide shade out on the deck. A seat outside at Mangiamo lets one feel like lord of the manor holding court on the two-tiered patio off the back of the mansion. The accommodating deck outside Thornapple Daily Grill makes one feel close to nature with its woodland setting and visiting birds. Other Gilmore Collection properties offer loftier views from roof-top decks, such as that at Grand Haven’s Kirby House just across the street from the Lake Michigan channel and its musical fountain, as well as the rooftop deck atop the The BOB in downtown Grand Rapids, with its distinctive parachute-like skyline profile. But Gilmore restaurants aren’t the only al fresco’s in town. The outdoor patio in front of downtown’s Grand Woods Lounge is cozy with its built-in stone fireplace and outdoor-accessible bar. The rooftop dining decks at Rockwell’s Kitchen & Tap and Republic are also spacious with a screened-in porch behind the restaurants while the second level sports an open-air patio. Behind San Chez is a cozy screenedin porch for outdoor dining, and the new Winchester offers a long patio that runs the length of the restaurant. The Graydon’s Crossing location in East Grand Rapids is spacious, umbrella-filled, and provides a sidewalk café atmosphere that seats patrons right in the heart of things. Out in Rockford, Reds on the River offers a spectacular covered deck overlooking the river with its own bar service and comfortable amenities. The large deck at Sayfee’s also offers a water view with ducks and geese entertaining diners, while the deck outside Great Lakes Shipping Co. is cloistered away from its parking lot surroundings by flower-covered privacy fencing, with live entertainment offered certain nights of the week. Winchester

CHERIE INN — Warm-toned café is the relaxed setting for upscale breakfasts and innovative specials, served until 3 pm. Closed Mon. 969 Cherry St SE, 458-0588. B, L, 3, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ CHILI’S — Upbeat atmosphere with varied American menu featuring signature baby back ribs, fresh fajitas, the “awesome blossom” and big-mouth burgers. The lounge provides great margaritas and a place to watch a game. Three locations: 770 54th St SW, 261-9733; 4580 28th St SE, 949-5892; 3700 Rivertown Parkway SW, Grandville, 530-7483. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $ CITYVu BISTRO — Casual and hip top-floor restaurant in Holland’s eco-friendly City Flats Hotel specializing in creative flatbreads and small-plate fare with an emphasis on seasonal ingredients. Smoke-free, with outdoor veranda access. 61 E 7th St, Holland, (616) 796-2114. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ CORNUCOPIA — As the name implies, a little of everything: bakery, sandwich spot, pizzeria, take-home specialties, lunch buckets, freshground coffees and more; one-of-a-kind wine selection. Open daily. In the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel’s west tower on Pearl St, 776-6428. H, B, L, D, 3, V, MC, AE ¢-$ COUSIN’S TASTY CHICKEN — A 25-year local alternative to the chains with some of the tastiest fried chicken and side dishes around. Also serving seafood and other fried fare. Closed Sun. In the strip-mall at 1209 Leonard St NE, 456-5244. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ CULVER’S — Frozen custard made fresh daily and signature ButterBurgers are the stars here. Selection of specialty burgers, sandwiches, soups and salads, along with daily features and dinner plates of fried chicken, cod or shrimp. Kids menu. Open daily. 6300 28th St SE, 464-1190; 245 54th St SW, 530-8680; 7393 Cottonwood Dr, Jenison, 457-3209; newest location near Woodland Mall: 2510 East Beltline SE. H, L, D, V, MC, AE ¢

EVERYDAY PEOPLE CAFE — Excellent service and a changing menu of American bistro fare from appetizers through dessert. Impressive wine list with appropriate food pairings served in a pleasing, comfortable atmosphere. Closed Wed; no longer serving breakfast or lunch. 11 Center St, Douglas, (269) 857-4240. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ THE FALCON’S NEST — Grand Haven Golf Club

Photography by Johnny Quirin

DEE-LITE BAR & GRILL — Contemporary dining room and retro diner areas offer options. Nice selection of appetizers and house-made soups, salads and grilled sandwiches. Extensive “Fresh-Mex” dinner selections, along with seafood, chicken, steak, ribs and pasta dishes. Live music and superb martinis in the Theatre Bar (smoking). Open daily (until 1 pm for brunch on Sun). 24 Washington Ave, Grand Haven, (616) 844-5055. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $

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backstagepass | Destinations & Experiences restaurant features a creative lunch menu with a variety of hot and cold sandwiches, barbecue ribs, appetizers, chili and salads. Open 11 am-7 pm. 17000 Lincoln Ave, Grand Haven, (616) 842-4040. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ FALL CREEK — Appetizers, gourmet pizzas, spectacular salads, specialty pastas, stellar sandwiches, house-made desserts, and entrées such as maple bourbon chicken, duck, steaks, seafood, pork chops, and more. Closed Sun-Mon. 201 Jefferson St, Hastings, (269) 945-0100. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ FAMOUS DAVE’S — Legendary pit barbecue: ribs, brisket, chicken, sausage, ham and more, all hickory smoked onsite daily. St. Louis-style spareribs stand up to award-winning claims, but don’t miss the Texas beef brisket. 4505 Canal SW, Grandville, 301-7711; 1501 East Beltline Ave NE near Knapp’s Corner, 3018300. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ FLAT RIVER GRILL — Casual atmosphere in turnof-century building along the river in downtown Lowell. Al fresco dining on patio. Menu ranges from American comfort food to unique specials. Wood-fired pizzas, great desserts. Full bar with extensive list of wine by the glass and The BOB’s House of Brews beers on tap. Superb brunch. 201 E Main St, Lowell, 897-8523. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ FLEETWOOD DINER — A retro feast for the eyes. Extensive diner-style American menu with Greek influences, including saganaki (flaming cheese). Famous for signature “Hippie Hash.” Open 6:30 am for breakfast (8 am-4 pm Sun), serving dinner until 8 pm Mon-Thu, 9 pm FriSat. Smoke-free, but smokers can be accommodated on the outdoor patio. 2222 44th St SE, 281-2300. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ FOREST HILLS INN — A neighborhood favorite with casual dining featuring a broad menu, excellent pizza. Closed Sun. 4609 Cascade Rd SE, 949-4771. H, B, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE $ FRANCO’S 36TH SOUTH — Sports lounge and restaurant offers top-rated burritos and other Mexican and American specialties. Specializing in Italian pasta dishes. Big screen TVs and karaoke Tue-Thu, live DJ Fri-Sat. Open daily. 945 36th St SW, 538-5280. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ GAIA CAFÉ — Excellent and innovative, totally vegetarian fare served in a cozy atmosphere. Closed Mon. 209 Diamond Ave SE, 454-6233. H, B, L, D, V, MC, AE ¢ GARDEN ROOM CAFÉ — Cheery spot in Grand Central Plaza offers great breakfasts, super sandwiches, and home-made meals like Mojoglazed pork chops, pot roast and pan-fried white fish. Open daily. 2055 28th St SE, 4528544. H, B, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS, DC ¢-$ THE GATHERING PLACE — Cozy setting and country décor complement an imaginative menu. Terrific homemade soups, dessert selections. Open daily for breakfast and lunch. 6886

Cascade Rd SE, 949-3188. H, B, L, V, MC, AE, DS $ .GLENDEVON AT THE ELKS — The Elks at the Highlands now has a separately operated dining venue under the experienced guidance of Executive Chef Joseph George, who is making this open-to-the-public eatery worth a visit with a totally revamped menu that will pleasantly surprise. 2715 Leonard NW, 453-2451. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ GRAND WOODS LOUNGE — Year-round al-fresco dining in a courtyard complete with fireplace. Eclectic menu selections mixed with upscale takes on comfort foods. Live entertainment, pool tables and spacious bar. 77 Grandville Ave SW, 451-4300. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ GREAT LAKES SHIPPING CO. — Consistent kitchen does everything well. Beef done the way you ask, fine seafood and fowl. Spirited service in comfortable dockside motif. Lunch features variety of salads and entrées. Closed Sun. Patio open in summer. 2455 Burton St SE, 949-9440. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$ GREEN WELL GASTRO PUB — A sister restaurant to downtown’s Bistro Bella Vita in the East Hills neighborhood business district. The topnotch daily menu features comfort fare with a flare, emphasizing local and seasonal ingredients. Full bar features more than 20 rotating draught beers, many from local and regional microbreweries. Smoke-free; open daily. 924 Cherry St SE, 808-3566. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ GRILL 29 — In the Holiday Inn Select on Lake Eastbrook, this restaurant offers a varied menu, from breakfast (6 am) through salads, soup, specialty paninis, wraps, pasta, pizza and entrées of steak, seafood, ribs, chicken and more. Adjacent full-service bar. Open daily. 3063 Lake Eastbrook SE, 285-7600. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC $ GRILL ONE ELEVEN — Rockford’s upscale eatery includes impressive granite-topped fullservice bar and lounge on the lower level. The American-with-a-twist menu offers such entrées as seafood-stuffed grouper and prosciutto-wrapped filet. Brunch buffet 10 am-2 pm Sun; otherwise opens at 11 am. 111 Courtland Dr, 863-3300. H, B (Sun), L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ THE GRILLE AT WATERMARK — Relaxing atmosphere overlooking golf course. Innovative menu. Open for lunch and dinner Mon through Sat, and Sun brunch 10 am-2 pm. Banquet facilities for large gatherings. Reservations accepted. 5500 Cascade Rd SE, 949-0570. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE $-$$ HOLLY’S BACK DOOR BAR & GRILL — Full-service menu and good selection of munchies at the bar in the Howard Johnson Plaza Hotel. Opens 5 pm; closed Sun & Mon. 255 28th St SW, 2411417. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $ HONEY CREEK INN — Daily specials are the highCity Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 85

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light, mixed with standard fare that’s given rave reviews by patrons. Closed Sun. 8025 Cannonsburg Rd, Cannonsburg, 874-7849. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢-$ JD REARDON’S — Restaurant and lounge in The Boardwalk building offers American, Southwest, Thai and more, with a nice selection of nibbles, soups, sandwiches, dinner-size salads, steaks and other appealing entrées. Banquet facilities; outdoor seating with fountain views. 940 Monroe Ave NW, 454-8590. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $-$$ JO JO’S AMERICANA SUPPER CLUB — Now under new management, offering American comfort fare with offbeat touches. Hours vary seasonably so call ahead. 107 Blue Star Highway, Douglas, (269) 857-1523. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $-$$ KANSAS CITY DIP ’N’ GRILL — Chain specializes in foods that can be dipped, but also sandwiches, salads, Mexican specialties and full dinners at reasonable prices. Great dessert dips; full bar. Closed Sun. 5080 Alpine Ave NW, 785-7155. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ KENTWOOD BISTRO BAR & GRILL — Great American menu of steaks, barbecued ribs, chicken and seafood served in a family atmosphere with 85 percent of the menu priced under $10; adjacent, lively and spacious sports bar. Open daily. 1950 44th St SE, 455-9640, www.44thstreetbistro. com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $ KIRBY GRILL — The casual side of the Kirby House offers more than an average grill, such as baked Cajun catfish and homemade pasta primavera, along with fries and hamburgers. Family-friendly dining upstairs. 2 Washington Ave, Grand Haven, (616) 846-3299. L, D, C, V, MC, AE $ THE LANDING — Nautical décor, overlooks Grand River. Menu features seafood and American cuisine. Lounge with dancing. 270 Ann St NW (Radisson Riverfront Hotel at US 131), 3637748. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $ .LANNINGS’ RESTAURANT — The longstanding Westside eatery is now in the former Scalawags location in the Cascade Centre, still serving up their favorite family recipes and perfect fried chicken dinners. Reasonably priced menu includes sandwiches, fried shrimp, perch, flounder and beer-battered cod, with sides like house-made chips, hush puppies and beer-battered fries. All-you-can-eat salad bar ($5.99 stand-alone or $1.99 with dinner); take-out, catering and banquet facility. Pleasant window-fronted dining space is bright and fresh with knotty pine-logged walls. Open 11 am-7 pm Mon-Thurs, 11 am-8 pm Fri. 6246 28th St SE, 575-7000. H, L, D, V, MC ¢ LITTLE AFRICA CUISINE — This humble storefront café with dining area offers vegetarian dishes only. Hearty vegetable stews, sauces and fixings are served on Ethiopian flat bread. Sample

other Ethiopian specialties. Open daily. 956 E Fulton St, 222-1169. H, L, D ¢ MAIN STREET PUB — Casual, fun restaurant and sports bar offers large-screen TVs, with dining areas separated from the smoking-allowed bar. Variety of appetizers, salads, soups, sandwiches, wraps, burgers, desserts and nice entrée selections, including steaks, chicken, pasta and grilled meatloaf. Open 11 am daily, with breakfast 8 am Sun. 11240 University Parkway, Allendale, 895-1234. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ MALARKY’S — In the former Uno Chicago Grill locations, still featuring Chicago-style deepdish and regular pizza, steaks, chicken, seafood, pastas, burgers, sandwiches, Mexican selections, salads, appetizers, desserts and more, with plenty of seating and full-service bar. 1515 Eastport Dr, Gaines Township, 871-6660; 3210 Deposit Dr NE, 808-2956. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ MARIE CATRIB’S — Eclectic eatery in bright surroundings in East Hills Center. Everything made from scratch. Marie offers “care-free food” that includes some Middle-Easternleaning fare. On-site bakery; seasonal specialties. Breakfast 7 am Mon-Fri, 8 am Sat, with lunch/dinner starting at 11 am weekdays, noon on Sat. 1001 Lake Dr SE, 454-4020, www. mariecatribs.com. H, B, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS, DC ¢-$ MARINADES PIZZA BISTRO — Specialty wood-fired pizzas, ethnic salads, sandwiches, appetizers, dips, soups, desserts and coffee. Three locations, antique/garden atmosphere at the bistro near GVSU. Open daily. 2844 Lake Michigan Dr NW, 453-0200; 109 Courtland St, Rockford, 863-3300; 450 Baldwin, Jenison, 457-7400. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ MAX & ERMA’S — All-American favorites are on the menu of this upbeat eatery, ranging from Laredo steak, fresh Atlantic salmon and specialty burgers to grilled chicken and Philly steak sandwiches. All-you-can-eat sundae bar. 3940 Rivertown Parkway, 406-1600. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ MEADOWS RESTAURANT — GVSU’s professional and student-staffed restaurant features a patio and dining room overlooking golf course. Full-service menu and bar offers everything from burgers to NY strip steak. Seasonal hours; closed Sun. 1 W Campus Dr, Allendale, 895-1000. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$ THE MELTING POT — Fondue dining in upscalecasual surroundings. Four-course menu offers four fondue cooking styles and a variety of entrées from filet mignon, lobster and duck to blackened chicken, shrimp and seafood. Dessert fondues too. Nice wine list. 2090 Celebration Dr NE, 365-0055. H, D, C, V, MC, AE $-$$ MIA & GRACE — In downtown Muskegon, offers

a farm-to-table concept that currently focuses on breakfast and lunch service, with locally grown, top-quality seasonal products creatively composed and served in an intimate, upscale and artsy space. Watch for dinner offerings completely made from Michigan products during growing season. 1133 Third St, Muskegon, (231) 725-9500, www.miaandgrace.com. H, B, L, V, MC, AE $ MIDDLE VILLA INN — Weekly prime rib specials, salad bar, comfortable, casual atmosphere, occasional live bands; in Grand Rapids call 8911287 for restaurant information. Open daily. 4611 N Middleville Rd, Middleville, (269) 7953640. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, DS $ MILL CREEK TAVERN — Comstock Park’s casual, cozy eatery with dark wood, high ceilings and black-and-white photo art offers a nice menu with appetizers, from-scratch daily soups, sandwiches, wraps, burgers and wet burritos, as well as full dinner options. Full bar with separate, recently expanded dining room. 3874 West River Dr, 784-3806. H, L, D, C, V, MC, DS ¢-$ .MR. BURGER — Longtime favorite serving breakfast, lunch, dinner and desserts, affordably priced in large, clean surroundings. Walk through the line to place your order; help-yourself coffee refills. Great olive burgers and milkshakes. 2101 Lake Michigan Dr NW, 453-6291; 5181 Northland Dr NE, 363-3888; 2300 28th St SW, 538-4439; 1750 44th St SE, 455-8604; 950 44th St SW, 538-0363; 5835 Balsam Ave, Hudsonville, 662-5088. H, B, L, D, V, MC ¢ NOEL — It’s Christmas year-round at this restaurant located in the former church and parsonage in Jamestown. Family-style dinners. Lighter fare on lunch menu. Gift shop on the lower level. Hours vary by season. 2371 Riley St, Jamestown, 896-6427, www.noelrestaurant. com. H, L, D, 3, V, MC, RSVP ¢-$$ NOODLES AND CO. — American, Italian and Asian spins on pasta, along with salads, soups, and other nibbles. Add shrimp, beef or chicken to punch up the pasta dishes that are otherwise basically vegetarian-friendly offerings. Open daily. 2289 East Beltline Ave NE, 361-2600; 5070 28th St SE, 954-5800. H, L, D, V, MC, AE ¢ O’CHARLEY’S — Big menu with everything from soups, salads and famous burgers to filet mignon; weekend evenings feature prime rib. Open daily, with Sun brunch 10:30 am-3 pm. 1600 East Beltline Ave NE, 301-8171. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$$ OLD CHICAGO — Specializes in pizza and pasta, but also offers a variety of signature starters, soups and salads, stromboli, calzones, specialty sandwiches and burgers, and “classic” meals such as shrimp, steak, chicken and fish, as well as decadent desserts. Full-service bar stocks 110 brews. A great spot to catch your favorite sporting events on many screens. 3333

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Beyond Flowers

28th St SE, 940-1111. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $-$$ OLD COUNTRY BUFFET — Popular family spot features daily themes: Tue is Italian; Wed Asian; Fri seafood; Sat ribs; Sun turkey and trimmings. Patrons find “just like home” meals including carved meats, salad, soups, fresh baked goods. Breakfast begins 8:30 am Fri-Sun. 1037 Rogers Plaza SW, Wyoming, 530-1983. H, B (Fri-Sun), L, D, 3, V, MC, DS $ OLIVES — In the heart of East Grand Rapids’ Gaslight Village with a seasonally inspired menu. Full-bar service and comfortable surroundings set the scene for fusion American cuisine that emphasizes locally grown produce and hormone-free, organic meats, creative fare and classic comfort foods. Recent expansion provides additional second-floor seating and al fresco balcony. Closed Sun. 2162 Wealthy St SE, 451-8611. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$

Unique creations designed by local artist

Watch For Our Grand Opening Soon: 818 Butterworth SW

OMELETTE SHOPPE & BAKERY — A plethora of omelets, along with baked-fresh daily pecan rolls, cinnamon pastries and more. Now with a second location at 545 Michigan St NE, 7265800; 1880 Breton Rd SE, 726-7300. H, B, L, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$

7 convenient locations 800-494-2202 | 616-949-2200 | EasternFloral.com 2008-09

Readers Poll

ONE TRICK PONY — Cottage Bar’s upscale counterpart sports an innovative American menu with samplings of vegetarian, Mexican and European cuisines, plus creative lunch and dinner chef specials. Congenially casual surroundings inside or dine alfresco on their street-front patio. Offers live entertainment on occasion. Closed Sun. 136 E Fulton St, 235-7669. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ OTTAWA TAVERN — The full-service, full-menu sister restaurant sharing space with downtown’s Bite. Sports venue with weekday Happy Hour bar specials from 4-7 pm. Closed Sun. 151 Ottawa Ave NW, 451-8000. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$$ PAL’S DINER — A real diner with homemade food. Breakfast, lunch and dinner all day, served in fun surroundings accented with lots of pink. Closed Sun. 6503 28th St SE, 942-7257. H, B, L, D, V, MC, DS ¢ PEARL STREET GRILL — Bright, airy restaurant in the downtown Days Hotel. Opens early for breakfast, sandwiches and salads for lunch, steaks, pasta, chicken and fish for dinner. Open daily. 310 Pearl St NW, 235-7611. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE $

Where art, beauty and medical expertise converge.

PIER HEAD GRILL AND TAVERN — Family-friendly, nautical atmosphere with a nice selection of steaks, seafood, fish, chicken, and tasty nibbles like jalapeno bottle caps and asiago-stuffed ravioli bites. Popular choices include burgers, prime rib sandwich, pineapple barbecue chicken salad, sizzler steak and beer-battered cod. Great Bloody Mary Bar on Sun. Open daily in Cascade Centre, 6246 28th St SE, 974-9010. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$

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backstagepass | Destinations & Experiences

PILAR’S CAFÉ — In Creston Heights with eyepopping diner appeal, serving traditional American breakfast all day, along with soups, salads, sandwiches, burgers, vegetarian options and desserts, with a nice selection of freshmade, authentic Mexican fare. Open daily. 2162 Plainfield Ave NE, 365-6669. H, B, L, D ¢ RAINBOW GRILL — Longtime favorite, offering breakfasts, homemade soup, chili, steak sandwiches, daily luncheon specials, chicken, fish and other dinner staples. Closed Sun. 4158 Chicago Dr SW, Grandville, 534-8645. H, B, L, D, 3, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ REAL FOOD CAFÉ — Serving top-notch breakfast and lunch, with everything made fresh from scratch by chef owners in cheery locale in Alger Heights and second location on the northeast side. Closed Mon. 2419 Eastern Ave SE, 241-4080; 5430 Northland Dr NE, 361-1808. H, B, L ¢ RED BALL JET CAFÉ — Gilmore Collection restaurant in the former library in Creston Heights offers a coffee bar along with breakfast, omelets, crepes, soups, salads, sandwiches, paninis, specialty pizzas and more in casual, upbeat surroundings at affordable prices. 1431 Plainfield Ave NE, 719-5500. www.thegilmorecollection. com. H, B, L, D (Tue-Sat), V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ RED GERANIUM CAFE — Popular breakfast/lunch spot is known for its specialty omelets, homemade soups, breads and desserts. Two locations, both a stone’s throw from M-6: 6670 Kalamazoo Ave SE, 656-9800; 5751 Byron Center Ave. 532-8888. H, B, L, D ¢ RED ROBIN GOURMET BURGERS — Fun eatery with 22 burger options on the menu, along with interesting entrées, towering onion rings, mounds of steak fries and sinful desserts, all in mass quantities. Open daily. 3722 Potomac Circle SW (across from RiverTown Crossings), 257-3962; Woodland Mall, 957-1430. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$

with expanded, three-season porch seating. 550 Lakeside Dr SE, 458-1122. Also, “great food for the taking” at Rose’s Express, 2224 Wealthy St SE, 458-4646. H, B (weekends), L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS $ ROSIE’S DINER — The original 1946 Paramount diner made famous by paper towel commercials continues the tradition of classic homemade diner fare. Open daily. Half mile east of US 131. 4500 14 Mile Rd, Rockford, 866-3663. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ RUBY TUESDAY — Name it, they have it: appetizers, soups, salads, pasta, steaks, chicken, ribs, fajitas, burgers, desserts, kids menu, all served in a comfortable, upbeat setting. Open daily. 3684 28th St SE, 285-7917. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS ¢-$ RUSS’ RESTAURANTS — Fast service, inexpensive food. Closed Sun. 3966 Plainfield Ave NE, 3817545; 2750 28th St SE, 949-8631; 2340 28th St SW, 538-3410; 531 Alpine Ave NW, 784-2230; 6444 S Division Ave, 281-2790; 4440 Chicago Dr, Grandville, 531-1146. B, L, D, 3 ¢ SAM’S JOINT — Award-winning ribs and unique décor of antiques and memorabilia. Extensive menu includes Mexican selections. 2412 Briggs Rd, Gun Lake, (269) 795-3965; 7449 68th St, Dutton, 698-1833; 107 E Main St, Caledonia, 891-1128; 19 N Main St, Rockford, 866-3324; 6618 Old Grand Haven Rd, Norton Shores, (231) 798-7155; 15520 48th Ave, Coopersville, 8378558; 1665 Viewpond SE, Kentwood, 455-2111. Banquet facilities at some locations. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC $

cue with full menu and bar serving award-winning barbecue baby back ribs, St. Louis-style ribs, hand-pulled pork, smoked beef brisket, combo platters, sandwiches, salads, fish, chicken and steaks. Try the bag of hot donuts for dessert. 4875 28th St SE, 956-5398. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ SUNDANCE GRILL — Breakfast-and-lunch spot also offers a dinner menu in the California/ Southwestern tradition, with a selection of steaks, salmon, salads and pasta, along with a margarita bar. Two locations: 5755 28th St SE (Esplanade Plaza), 956-5644; 40 Pearl St NW (breakfast and lunch every day, dinner Tue-Sat), 776-1616. H, B, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS $ SWAN INN RESTAURANT — Home-cooked meals such as pot roast or Salisbury steak, with daily specials and an extensive menu that ranges from burgers and sandwiches to steaks, seafood, chicken and more. Also known for its gargantuan breakfasts; Cygnet Lounge offers cocktails and a lighter appetizer menu as well as full dinner menu. Smoke-free dining room with smoking allowed in the lounge. 5182 Alpine Ave NW (on M-37), 784-1245. H, B, L, C, D, V, MC, DS ¢ TAVERN ON KRAFT — Upscale, casual dining with bar/game room separated from non-smoking dining room. Menu includes everything from filet mignon and prime rib to sandwiches and appetizers. Martinis and well-rounded wine list. Deck parties, weekend entertainment and frequent diners program. 2929 Kraft Ave SE, 301-1008. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$$

SANDI’S FAMILY RESTAURANT — Home-cooked meals, family-friendly dining in casual surroundings. Daily specials; all-you-can-eat ocean perch on Fri. Senior discount Mon-Tue. Closed Sun. 6597 S Division Ave, 281-3160. H, B, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$

TGI FRIDAY’S — American menu with ethnic accents; décor is a riot of sights. 50 Monroe Ave NW (downtown), 742-8443; 3345 28th St SE (Woodland Mall), 957-3911; 3700 Rivertown Parkway, 257-8801; 3179 Alpine Ave NW, 7844600. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $

RITZ KONEY BAR & GRILLE — Hot dogs, gourmet sandwiches, burgers, wraps and salads plus chicken fingers, nachos, wings and fries. Full bar with limited wine list. Closed Sun. 64 Ionia Ave SW, 451-3701. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC ¢-$

SANDMANN’S — Soul Food Sundays include beef pot roast, mackerel patties, chitterlings, blackeyed peas and more. “Tummy ticklers” include peach cobbler and sweet potato pie. Limited outdoor eating. Carryout and catering. Closed Mon. 1200 Wealthy St SE, 459-0900, www. sandmanns.com. H, L, D, 3 ¢-$

ROCKWELL’S KITCHEN & TAP — The more casual kid sister adjacent to Republic in the heart of the city. Classic American pub features comfort foods with a twist in casual surroundings with upper-floor outdoor balcony seating. 45 S Division Ave, 551-3563. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$

SCHNITZ’S ADA GRILL — Deli by day, casual fine dining by night, complete with full bar. Nice selection of appetizers, soups, salads, burgers, sandwiches, steaks, seafood, pasta and more. Cozy atmosphere upstairs from Ada Village Bike Shop. 597 Ada Dr, Ada, 682-4660. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$$

THORNAPPLE DAILY GRILL — A Gilmore Collection restaurant with a diverse menu includes an extensive list of inventive appetizers, salads, sandwiches, steaks, seafood, poultry, chops and pasta along with specialty martinis, wine and micro-brewed beers. Closed Sun. 445 Ada Dr, Ada, 676-1233. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, RSVP $-$$

ROSEBUD — Sandwiches and pizza for lunch, a variety of steaks, ribs, pasta and more pizza for dinner. Live music Thu-Sat. Open daily. 100 Washington Ave, Grand Haven, (616) 846-7788. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS ¢-$

THE SCORE — Restaurant and Sports Bar with a wide-ranging menu that includes pizza, ribs, hand-cut steaks, seafood, chicken and comfort dishes like meatloaf in a lively atmosphere in the former northeast-side Pietro’s location. 5301 Northland Dr NE, 301-0600. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$

ROSE’S — Dockside dining on EGR’s Reeds Lake features a variety of sandwiches, salads, pastas, pizzas, entrées and desserts; now

SMOKEY BONES — Slow, hickory-smoked barbe-

TIMBERS INN — Menu ranges from appetizers, gourmet salads, sandwiches and charbroiled burgers to wild game offerings and lumberjack meat ’n’ potatoes fare. Open daily. Sun omelet bar til 2 pm. 6555 Belding Rd NE, 874-5553. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE ¢-$ VICTORY CLUB — Ada’s new “sports dining destination” with spacious dining room and lounge areas, fireplaces, TVs and sports-centric décor. Eclectic American menu offers appetizers, soups, salads, 16 sandwiches and burgers, pasta dishes like lobster-topped macaroni and cheese, out-of-the-norm pizzas, some Mexican fare, and entrées that range from NY strip steak and a 12-ounce pork chop to seared tuna,

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The ChoiCe of The DisCerning CrafTsman For the true craftsman, it is not only their skill, but the materials they choose which defines their personal benchmark.

Coho salmon and mile-high meatloaf, plus desserts and Michigan wines. 396 Pettis Ave SE, 425-7050. www.victoryclubada.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ VILLAGE INN PIZZA PARLOR — Longtime local favorite for pizza, pasta, burgers, chicken, soups, salads, Mexican and more, with karaoke nights Thu-Sat. Full bar with several beers on tap. Open daily; weekday lunch buffet. 2215 44th St SE, Kentwood, 281-1444; 934 Washington St, Holland, (616) 392-1818; 2345 Apple Ave, Muskegon, (231) 777-2609. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$

Quality is the most important part of those small differences that distinguish the master craftsman from the good worker.

WALLDORFF BREWPUB & BISTRO — Delightful menu full of surprises and an onsite microbrewery. Soups, salads, sandwiches, barbecue specialties, small plates, steaks, pork and lamb chops, duck, pastas and wood-fired pizzas. 105 E State St, Hastings, (269) 945-4400. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ WEST COAST GRILLE — At the Doubletree Hotel in Holland, with daily breakfast buffet, and eclectic mix of hearty American fare at lunch and dinner, from quesadillas and burgers to prime rib, steaks, barbecue half-ribs, chicken and seafood selections, in bright, colorful surroundings. Open daily. 650 E 24th St (just off US 31), Holland, (616) 394-0111. H, B, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $

620 LEONARD ST. NW GRAND RAPIDS, MI 49504 PHONE 616 . 459 . 8367 FAX 616 . 459 . 8421 w w w. b e l d e n b r i c k a n d s u p p l y. c o m

WINTER INN — Seafood, steaks and prime rib along with specialty dishes such as sautéed shrimp, seafood au gratin and pan-fried walleye in a historic inn. Convivial bar. Banquet facilities. 100 N Lafayette St, Greenville, (616) 754-7108. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC $ WOLFGANG’S — Great breakfast spot. Menu includes omelets, salads and sandwiches. Private meeting rooms available. Open 6:30 am-2:30 pm daily. 1530 Wealthy St SE, 4545776. H, B, L, 3 ¢ WOODY’S PRESS BOX — Pulled pork with pizzazz in a casually classy restaurant complex that includes two bars, a patio and bowling. Menu offers sandwiches and shrimp as well as standard barbecue fare. Open daily, breakfast and lunch only Sun. 5656 Clyde Park Ave SW, 530-3242. H, B, L, D, C, 3, V, MC $

Seafood

FBONEFISH GRILL — 2008 GRM Dining Award of Excellence winner. Daily fresh-from-theseas fare in the Terrazzo Fine Shops Plaza. A subsidiary of Outback Steakhouse with casual, white-linen dining. Seafood selections augmented by a variety of innovative sauces and toppings; also chicken, beef and pasta dishes. Full-service bar. 1100 East Paris Ave SE, 9497861. www.bonefishgrill.com. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ CHARLEY’S CRAB — Fresh seafood from an extensive menu that changes nightly; a spirited place to eat, perched on the river. Early menu (4:30-6 pm daily), Sun brunch. GR Steamer Bar offers its own menu and informal atmosphere. 63

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Market Ave SW, 459-2500, www.muer.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS, RSVP $-$$ DOCKERS FISH HOUSE & LOUNGE — Waterside dining on Muskegon Lake adjacent to Harbor Town Marina, with lively summer tiki bar, offering premier seafood selections along with land-lubber options. Lots of windows and full bar, along with dockside seating. Dockhands will assist with boat tie-up. 3505 Marina Point View, Muskegon, (231) 755-0400, www. harrishospitality.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ FRY DADDY’S FRESH FISH — Fried fresh fish, wingdings, walleye, orange roughy, catfish, blue gill, perch, smelt and shrimp, by the pound or in baskets with French fries in pleasant surroundings or to go. Closed Mon. In Kentwood’s Trinity Plaza, 1720 44th St SE, 455-FISH. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ GILL’S BLUE CRAB LOUNGE — Innovative takes on seafood on the first floor of The BOB, complete with raw bar. Seasonal menu offers cuttingedge fare from appetizers through desserts. 20 Monroe Ave NW, 356-2000, www.thegil morecollection.com. H, L (Sat), D, C, 3, V, MC, AE $-$$ THE GRAND SEAFOOD & OYSTER BAR — Adjacent to Dee-Lite in downtown Grand Haven’s former Grand Theatre. Open at 5 pm for dinner, with an oyster and sushi bar, superb seafood selections and steaks fit for the most discerning carnivore. Serves locally grown and organic produce whenever possible. Open daily. 22 Washington Ave, (616) 847-8944, www. harborrestaurants.com. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $-$$ .HUDSONVILLE GRILLE — The former Village Seafood still offers fish specialties like handdipped, beer-battered cod, garlic tilapia, buttercrumb scrod, or Sicilian cod. Also serving steaks, chops, chicken, soups, salads, sandwiches, Mexican favorites and breakfast. Closed Sun. 4676 32nd Ave, Suite F, Hudsonville, 6629670, www.hudsonvillegrille.com. H, B, L, D, V, MC, DS ¢-$ FLEO’S — 2008 GRM Dining Award of Excellence winner. Flawless combination of fine dining and casual comfort with great service, impressive wine list and full bar. Although jet-fresh seafood is the specialty, steaks and other dishes are just as good. Located on street level in the parking ramp at Ottawa and Louis. Closed Sun. 60 Ottawa Ave NW, 454-6700, www.leosrestaurant.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$ RED LOBSTER — Ever-popular seafood chain offers a set menu along with seasonal special features and combo plates. Portions are generous and reasonably priced. Open daily. 3920 28th St SE, 949-9190; 12405 Felch St, Holland, (616) 393-9700; 1681 Sternberg Rd, Muskegon, (231) 798-9586; 3464 Rivertown Point Circle, Grandville, (616) 406-1190, www.redlobster. com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $

THE SPINNAKER — Reminiscent of a fine East Coast eatery with beautiful décor, large selection of seafood, steaks and veal. Open daily, superb Sun brunch. 4747 28th St SE (Hilton Grand Rapids Airport), 957-1111. H, B, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS, RSVP $-$$

Steaks, Etc.

BRANN’S STEAKHOUSE AND GRILLE — The Brann brothers and partner Tom Doyle serve famous sizzler steaks with grill items and salads. All restaurants offer televised sporting events and munchies such as burgers and Mexican basket entrées. Brann’s of Grandville, 3475 Fairlanes, Grand Village Mall, 531-6210; Mike & Johnny Brann’s Steakhouse & Grille, 401 Leonard St NW, 454-9368; Tommy Brann’s Steakhouse & Grille, 4157 S Division Ave, 534-5421; John Brann’s of Cascade, 5510 28th St SE, 285-7800; Brann’s of Holland, 12234 James St, (616) 3930028; Brann’s of Muskegon, 5510 Harvey St, (231) 798-1399; Brann’s of Portage, 700 Martin Luther King Dr, (269) 321-8852. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $ CF PRIME CHOPHOUSE & WINE BAR — Muskegon’s big-city-style chophouse. Prime NY strips and a few all-natural beef selections, free of steroids, antibiotics and preservatives, join the impressive steak menu. Gourmet treatment from appetizers through salads, “serious sides,” signature sauces, make-your-own combos, fresh fish and seafood, and desserts made on-site. There are even a couple of options to suit vegetarians, an impressive wine list, full-service bar and an intimate atmosphere. Open at 5 pm for dinner (closed Sun). Conveniently located just a block past Seaway Drive. 950 W Norton, Muskegon, (231) 737-4943. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$ THE CHOP HOUSE — Excellent cuts of aged prime beef, some bone-in selections. Impressive seafood sampler appetizer feeds a crowd. Á la carte sides big enough to share. Downstairs is La Dolce Vita, a dessert and cigar bar with humidor offerings that rival the wine list. Closed Sun. 190 Monroe Ave NW, 451-6184. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $$ CRAZY HORSE STEAK HOUSE & SALOON — Holland’s family-friendly, casual eatery with a Western theme is renowned for steaks and prime rib, with a Saturday night special of prime rib and lobster. Also delectable chicken dishes and seafood selections, unique appetizers and desserts. 2027 North Park Dr, Holland, (616) 395-8393. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $$

NW, 776-6426. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS, RSVP $$ GRILL HOUSE & ROCK BOTTOM BAR — Allegan’s grill-your-own steakhouse with grillmasters to take over if you prefer. Pick your own spices, sauces, accompaniments and top-notch cuts of meat, bottomless salad bowl and potato bar. Tasty desserts, too. Smoking allowed downstairs in Rock Bottom Bar, which opens at 11 am daily, while the Grill House’s six grills fire up at 5:30 pm weekdays, 11 am Sundays, with a limited but affordably priced menu complete with all the regular sides. 1071 32nd St (M-40), Allegan, (269) 686-9192. H, L (downstairs), D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP (weekends) $-$$ THE GRILL ROOM — Quality aged steaks and chops, fresh seafood and fine wines in the top chophouse tradition, served in an unpretentious atmosphere. Seasonal menu. Closed Sun during winter. Kirby House, 2 Washington Ave, Grand Haven, (616) 846-3299. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $$ JUDSON’S STEAKHOUSE — The BOB’s “white linen” restaurant caters to GR’s penchant for meat and potatoes with style and expertise. Open 5-11 pm; closed Sun. 20 Monroe Ave NW, 356-2000. H, D, C, local 3, V, MC, AE $$ LOGAN’S ROADHOUSE — Steaks, chops and ribs cooked over a mesquite flame are the feature, along with burgers, chicken and seafood. Buckets of peanuts greet diners in a spacious Texas roadhouse atmosphere, complete with fireplace. Kids menu; separate smoking area and full-service bar. Open daily. 4425 Canal Ave SW, 534-6385; 3153 Alpine Ave NW, 647-4007; 1651 Marketplace Dr (Gaines Township), 5547044. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $ LONGHORN STEAKHOUSE — Well-established steakhouse chain with upscale-cowboy décor, featuring fresh Midwestern corn-fed beef in sizeable portions. Try the “bleu cheese crusted” filet atop a marinated grilled portabella mushroom. Limited but nice wine selection. Also ribs, chops, seafood and fresh chicken selections and mouth-watering desserts. Great bar with specialty drinks, local brews on tap, more than a dozen imported beers. 5088 28th St SE, 940-8180. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$

GRAND VILLA — Serving prime rib, seafood, complete salad bar. Closed Sun. 3594 Chicago Dr SW, 538-1360. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $

LOUIS BENTON STEAKHOUSE — Upscale steakhouse with a big-city ambiance, featuring premium Buckhead beef, wet- and dry-aged steaks, lamb, pork and veal chops, top-of-theline seafood and more. Superb wine list. Closed Sun. Free valet parking at Ionia Ave entrance. 77 Monroe Center Ave NW, Suite 100, 4547455, www.louisbenton.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS, RSVP $-$$

THE GRILL AT 1913 — “Kid sister” of Amway Grand Plaza’s Five-Diamond 1913 Room. Warm ambience, outstanding service and quality entrées that change seasonally but always feature superb prime, custom-aged beef. Try the filet mignon, grilled NY strip, or rack of marinated lamb au jus. Closed Sun. 187 Monroe Ave

OUTBACK STEAKHOUSE — Hearty fare with an Aussie flair, home of the famous “Bloomin’ Onion,” steaks, ribs, chicken, pasta. Open daily. 3650 28th St SE, 957-7932; 3475 Alpine Ave NW, 785-9686; 333 Century Center St SW, Grandville, 724-2329. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS ¢-$

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RIO GRAND STEAK HOUSE & SALOON — Texas-style barbecue ribs, steaks and more are offered at these Western-style Schelde restaurants. Open daily. 5501 Northland Dr NE, 364-6266; 1820 44th St SW, 534-0704. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ TEXAS ROADHOUSE — Steakhouse chain with a cowboy theme offers hearty (hand-cut) steak selections, ribs, a plethora of sides, and an array of burgers, sandwiches, fish, seafood, chicken and more. 3776 28th St SE, 575-0361; 4381 Canal SW, 530-7427. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $-$$

Come in and see the new look.

TILLMAN’S — Chicago-style chophouse that’s been hidden in a warehouse district for more than 25 years. Those who know it, love it. Something for every taste, from liver and onions to frog legs, but known for steaks. Closed Sun. 1245 Monroe Ave NW, 451-9266. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, RSVP requested $-$$

Ethnic/Asian/Indian

ABACUS — Serving up great Mandarin and Szechuan cuisine, with buffets at lunch, dinner and all day on weekends. Nice cocktail selection. Open daily. 2675 28th St SW, 530-3300. H, L, D, C, V, MC, DS, DC ¢-$ AKA SAKA SUSHI — Super sushi along with Korean and Japanese offerings in a friendly, low-key atmosphere in the Cascade Centre. Occasional sushi classes offered. Closed Sun. 6252 28th St SE, 977-0444. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ .ALPINE TERIYAKI AND SUSHI — Great sushi selections with some deep-fried roll options, shrimp tempura, and more, all masterfully presented. Try the Hawaii platter or lunch specialty combos. Pleasant, diminutive surroundings; takeout available; closed Sun. 4089 Alpine Ave NW, Suite F, 647-9935. H, L, D, V, MC, DS ¢-$ ASIAN PALACE — Bright and roomy Chinese and Vietnamese restaurant with extensive menus for each cuisine. Family owned and operated, some say it has the best beef noodle soup in town. For the inexperienced, try the “Bo 7 Mon” specialty featuring a seven-course beef sampling. Closed Mon. 825 28th St SW, 5347770. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS, DC ¢-$ BANGKOK TASTE — Jenison eatery features fresh and flavorful Thai fare at reasonable prices. Nice lunch buffet, with Pad Thai, Thai curry and Thai fried rice prepared fresh daily. Attentive service in pleasant surroundings in Baldwin Plaza. Closed Sun. 674 Baldwin St, 667-8901, www.bangkoktastes.com. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ BANGKOK VIEW — The place to go for authentic Thai food and great Chinese fare, too. Super lunch buffet. Closed Mon. 1233 28th St SW, 5318070. L, D, V, MC ¢-$ BEIJING KITCHEN — Extensive menu featuring Hunan, Szechuan and Cantonese cuisines at reasonable prices. Cashew chicken is a special-

Come in and see the new look 4100 Thousand Oaks One mile east off E. Beltline on 5-mile road 616-447-7750 www.thousandoaksgolf.com

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Dining | Special Occasions | Cocktails

VOTED

“Best BBQ” 2009 GRAND RAPIDS MAGAZINE READERS POLL

Dine in or Carry out

Specializing in on-site grilling. Catering available up to 5000 people. See website for details: www.sandmanns.com 1200 Wealthy SE, Grand Rapids, MI

459-0900

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ty. Lunch specials priced at $5.95. Open daily. 342 State St SE, 458-8383. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ BOMBAY CUISINE — Great Indian fare. Succulent tandoori and vindaloo dishes spiced to your satisfaction. Naan (bread) is cooked to order. The newly expanded and renovated space is modern, warm and welcoming with full bar service, eight beers on tap, and live music Thu-Sat eves. Takeout available; closed Tue. 1420 Lake Dr SE, 456-7055. H, L, D, C, V, MC $ CHINA CHEF — Cozy, family-style Chinese restaurant in a Standale strip mall with some surprisingly innovative dishes. The Szechuan-style entrées are especially popular; try the combination, offering a bit of everything with pork, chicken, shrimp and beef. A few Hunan choices available. Closed Mon. 4335 Lake Michigan Dr NW, 791-4488. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ CHINA GOURMET BUFFET — Daily buffets for lunch and dinner with more than 100 items to choose from; dinner buffet offered all day on weekends. Seniors get 10 percent discount, with discounts for children 10 and under. Open daily. 1633 28th St SW, 252-1379. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ CHINA INN — Menu includes Mandarin, Szechuan, Hunan and Cantonese cuisine; cocktails served at West Shore Drive location only. Open all week at two locations: 2863 West Shore Dr, Holland, (616) 786-9230; 457 E 32nd St, Holland, (616) 395-8383. L, D, V, MC $ CHINA PALACE — Pleasant Chinese eateries with all the amenities and a large selection of popular dishes. Open daily. 3330 Alpine Ave NW, 785-9668; 3633 Eastern Ave SE, 246-9966. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS $ CHINA YI WANG — Reasonably priced Chinese dishes including seafood, beef and poultry specialties, along with combination plates. Try the chef’s special bourbon chicken with fried rice. Spicy Hunan dishes, too. Open daily. 1947 Eastern Ave SE, 241-3885. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ CHINATOWN RESTAURANT AND JAPANESE STEAK HOUSE — Serves both Chinese and Japanese cuisine with tabletop, Benihana-style meals available. Great lunch and dinner buffets. Full bar service. Open daily. 69 28th St SW, 4523025. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢-$ CHU’S CHINESE RESTAURANT — Bright and airy, smoke-free environment offers a nice selection of Chinese cuisine. Good service, willing to accommodate requests. Lo mein is a specialty, along with Hong Kong-style chow mein noodles. Lunch prices all day Tue; free soup and egg roll Sun; closed Mon. 5299 Eastern Ave SE, 257-7038. H, L, D, V, MC, DS ¢-$

cuisine in Kentwood. Open daily with buffet and large menu selection. 6038 Kalamazoo Ave SE, 698-8933. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ EMPIRE CHINESE BUFFET II — Full scale, all-youcan-eat Chinese buffet served all day with more than 80 freshly made items at reasonable prices. Special seafood buffet Sat-Sun. Delivery available. 4255 Alpine Ave NW, 785-8880. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ EMPIRE WOK BUFFET — More than 150 daily selections of fresh Chinese food, complete with Mongolian barbecue and sushi stations. Open daily. 4176 28th St SE, 940-9928. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS $ FAR-EAST RESTAURANT — Serving Chinese, Vietnamese and Korean dishes; vegetable-oilonly cooking. Carryout and catering available. Open daily. 3639 Clyde Park Ave SW, 531-7176. L, D, V, MC, DC, DS $ FIRST WOK — Mandarin, Hunan, Szechuan cuisine. Dine-in and take-out seven days a week. 2301 44th St SE, 281-0681; 3509 Alpine Ave NW, 784-1616; 6740 28th St SE, 575-9088. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, RSVP $ GOLDEN 28 — Szechuan, Hunan, Mandarin cuisine complemented by a Vietnamese menu. Seasonal specialties and family dinners, served in an elegant atmosphere. Closed Mon. 627 28th St SW, Wyoming, 531-2800. H, L, D, V, MC, DS $ GOLDEN DRAGON — Chinese, Mandarin and Japanese cuisines, occasionally excellent. Closed Sun. 3629 Plainfield Ave NE, 363-1318. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC $ GOLDEN GATE RESTAURANT — Tasty Chinese fare served in pleasant, roomy surroundings at affordable prices. All-inclusive lunch combination plates, tasty egg rolls, great sweet-andsour dishes with some hot and spicy choices. Takeout available. 4023 S Division Ave, 5347087. H, L, D, V, MC, AE ¢ GOLDEN WOK — Knapp’s Corner eatery offers wide variety of lunch and dinner options, including Hunan-spiced dishes along with other favorites in a cheery dining room. Open daily. 1971 East Beltline Ave NE, 363-8880. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ GRAND LAKES — Behind Breton Village D&W, offering a wide selection of Chinese specialties, along with daily lunch combinations. Take out or dine in; open daily. 1810 Breton Rd SE, 9542500. H, L, D, V, MC, DS ¢-$

DONG PHUONG — Authentic Vietnamese cuisine offering a wide-ranging menu of noodle dishes, hot pots, seafood selections (select your own from live tanks) and more. 2907 S Division Ave, 245-1755. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$$

GRAYDON’S CROSSING — English pub with excellent Indian food (with a British influence) delivering sophisticated layers of flavors. Full bar features a mighty array of specialty beers. New East Grand Rapids location at 2237 Wealthy St SE, 301-3236; 1223 Plainfield Ave NE, 726-8260. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $

EAST GARDEN — Cantonese, Hunan, Szechuan

HONG KONG EXPRESS — Offers Szechuan and

Cantonese cuisine for dine-in or carry-out. Allyou-can-eat lunch buffet, reasonably priced. Open daily. 150 E Fulton St, 235-2888. H, B, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ HUNAN — Full menu of Chinese options, house and family dinners for groups, efficient service in pleasant surroundings. 1740 44th St SW, 530-3377; 1263 Leonard St NE, 458-0977. H, L, D, 3, V, MC, RSVP $ .INDIAN CUISINE — Now open in the former Chez Bayou space, offering a full range of authentic Indian dishes, including chicken, lamb, seafood, tandoori, vindaloo, biryani rice dishes and vegetarian options, the full range of delectable Indian breads, and nibbles like pakoras, samosas, and potato aloo tikki patties. Open daily; liquor license pending. 1520 Wealthy St SE, 235-0700. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ INDIA TOWN — A great spot offering the unique tastes of authentic Indian food in a humble but cozy atmosphere. Tandooris are especially good. Closed Tue. 3760 S Division Ave, 2431219. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DC, DS ¢-$ JADE GARDEN — Extensive menu includes a full range of Chinese cuisine, limited selection of American dishes, children’s menu and an array of tropical drinks. All dishes cooked with 100 percent vegetable oil, no MSG. Open daily. 4514 Breton Rd SE, 455-8888. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS, RSVP ¢-$ KOBE JAPANESE STEAK HOUSE — Chefs entertain behind giant grills as they slice, dice, toss, grill and flambé filet mignon, shrimp, chicken, salmon, scallops and lobster. Separate à la carte sushi counter. Opens 4 pm weekdays, 2:30 pm Sat, noon Sun. 3434 Rivertown Point Ct, Grandville, 301-8696. H, L (Sat/Sun), D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$$ LOBSTER HOUSE CHINESE RESTAURANT — Live lobster tanks are a surprise in this low-key eatery offering Cantonese and Szechuan cuisine. Chow and lo mein, fried rice, egg foo young, moo shu and a variety of specialties, combos and lunch specials. Open daily. 4208 S Division Ave, 249-2988. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ MARADO SUSHI — Sushi bar in downtown GR also offers a wide selection of tasty Japanese fare along with a few Korean specialties. Try the teriyaki, beef bibimbob or something from the hibachi. 47 Monroe Center, 742-6793. Closed Sun. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS, DC ¢-$ MIKADO — Separate menus for sushi and sashimi à la carte, lunch specials served with soup and rice. Dinners offer a full range of Japanese cuisine from appetizers to hearty entrées such as ginger beef and broiled eel. Closed Sun. 3971 28th St SE, 285-7666. H, L, D, 3, V, MC, RSVP ¢-$ MYNT FUSION BISTRO — Classy surroundings with a fusion of Asian fare that includes Thai, Korean and Chinese selections. Renowned for

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its curries: blue, peanut or yellow. Try the FAT dish (Fusion Appetizer T) for a sampling of nibbles. Awaiting liquor license; closed Sun. 800 W Main St, Lowell, 987-9307. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$

Summer is finally here! Book some time for you and the family

NING YE — Authentic, family-owned Chinese restaurant in Ada also serves Korean fare. Closed Sun during winter months. 6747 E Fulton St, Suite A, 676-5888. H, L, D, V, MC, AE $ ORIENTAL FOREST — Elegant surroundings at RiverTown Crossings location, serving a huge Chinese buffet with more than 200 Cantonese, Hunan and Szechuan dishes. Open daily. RiverTown Crossings, 3540 44th St SW, 2577777; 5316 Clyde Park Ave SW, 538-9988. H, L, D, C, V, MC, DS, AE ¢-$ PALACE OF INDIA — Authentic Indian cuisine with a sizeable menu that includes 20 vegetarian-friendly selections. Lunch buffet 11 am-3 pm. Open daily. 961 E Fulton St, 913-9000. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ PEKING WOK — Cheery window-fronted Chinese eatery, affordably priced, in the Cascade Centre. Closed Sun. 6264 28th St SE, 956-6525. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ PHO SOC TRANG — Vietnamese cuisine in a large, windowed dining room. Appetizers of fried dumplings, spring and rice paper rolls, shrimp toast or egg rolls are nice precursors to a large variety of pho (beef noodle soup), mi (egg noodle soup), hu tieu (clear noodle soup) and a slew of vermicelli and rice plate options. Open daily. 4242 S Division Ave (Golden Bridge Plaza), 531-0755. H, B, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ RED SUN BUFFET — All-you-can-eat international buffet loaded with 300 options, including sushi, Chinese, American, Italian and Japanese selections along with soups, salads, desserts and more, including a menu of house specialties. Open daily with lunch served Mon-Sat, and dinner served from 11 am-9:30 pm on Sun. 4176 28th St SE, 940-9999. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ .RED THAI RESTAURANT — Authentic Thai food featuring classic Thai recipes with a fusion twist; great noodle dishes. Awaiting liquor license. Handsomely renovated interior in the space that formerly housed the Formosa restaurant. Takeout available. 5260 Northland Dr NE, 364-8225. L, D, V, MC $

Grand Haven

Spring Lake

940 W. Savidge Spring Lake, Michigan 1-800-788-8411 www.higrandhaven.com

Almost surrounded by water, our hotel offers beautiful views and many activities. Whether your visit is for business or pleasure, we will do our best to accommodate your every need. We are the place to stay while visiting West Michigan.

The power went out three days ago, and the milk is still good A KOHLER® residential generator provides automatic, worry-free emergency power to supply your electrical needs for days, even weeks. Plus, a KOHLER generator easily and permanently links to your existing LP or natural gas connection, which means it never needs to be refueled. So, whether you’re building or remodeling, with a KOHLER residential generator, life keeps running smoothly.

SEOUL GARDEN — Authentic Chinese and Korean cuisine and gracious service in beautiful surroundings. Banquet and catering facilities available. Closed Sun. 3321 28th St SE, 9561522. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$ SHANG HAI ICHIBAN — Authentic Chinese and Japanese cuisine served in two distinct areas, each featuring its own menu, ambience and service. Food is prepared tableside in the Japanese area by skilled hibachi chefs. Chinese area offers superb cuisine in a warm, inviting

Integrity Electrical Services, Inc. (616) 875-6090 www.integritywired.com

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atmosphere. 3005 Broadmoor Ave SE (at 29th St), 942-5120. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, RSVP $-$$ SHOGUN — Authentic Japanese and Korean cuisine including sushi, teriyaki, hibachi, tempura, bulgogi and more, served in lovely, handcrafted Japanese surroundings. Your private group can eat in a traditional (shoe-free) Japanese tatami room. Closed Sun. 2901 Breton Rd SE, 241-4141. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, RSVP ¢-$$ SOC TRANG — Chinese and Vietnamese restaurant in Caledonia with a wide selection of offerings representing both cuisines. Open daily. 1831 Market Place Dr, 871-9909. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ SPICES ASIAN CAFÉ — Byron Center eatery serving authentic Chinese fare with create-yourown stir fry options, a selection of Korean dishes, vegetarian options and, surprise: broasted chicken dinners and buckets to go. Lunch specials priced under $5; open daily. 2237 84th St SW, 878-0109, www.spicesasiancafe.net. H, L, D, V, MC, DS ¢-$ SZECHUAN GARDEN — Chinese restaurant in Eastown with a diverse menu of beef, chicken, pork, seafood and vegetable dishes. Lunch specials daily 11 am-4 pm. Open daily. 1510 Wealthy St SE, 456-9879. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ TASTE OF INDIA — Full range of authentic North and South Indian cuisine, from vegetarian channa masala to fish curry and sizzling tandoori specialties. All dishes made hot or mild on request. Closed Mon. 4445-D Breton Rd SE, Kentwood, 281-5216. H, L, D, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS ¢-$ THAI BASIL CUISINE — Serving authentic Thai fare in warm, modern surroundings in the York Town Center Plaza. Open daily. 4022 Alpine Ave NW, 785-3030. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$

Visit Fenn Valley Vineyards & Wine Cellar, where you can sample from over 25 award winning wines, or take an educational tasting-tour of our cellar and vineyards. We’re located just minutes from Grand Rapids. • Tours Available, call for more information • Tasting room in downtown Saugatuck

Vineyard Tasting Tours on the “Grape Train”

• Estate Bottled Wines • Free Wine Tasting • Winery Direct Discounts • Retail Sales • Picnic Area

The Lake Effect Everyone Loves.

Over 25 award winning wines and champaigns

6130 - 122nd Ave. Fennville, MI 49408 I-196 exit 34, follow the “winery” signs. Open year around Mon - Sat 11-5, Sun 1-5 Summer: July/Aug. Mon-Sat 11-6 Sun 1-5 Fall: Sept/Oct Mon-Thur 11-5 Fri-Sat 11-6 Sun 1-5

800-432-6265 www.fennvalley.com winery@fennvalley.com

THAI EXPRESS — Humble storefront location in the Towne & Country Plaza belies the quality of these made-in-front-of-you Thai specialties, all spiced to your specification. Popular curry dishes, great noodles, and affordably priced lunch combo specials. 4317 Kalamazoo Ave SE, 827-9955. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ THAI GARDEN — Cutlerville eatery features Chinese and Thai cuisines with Chinese combo and dinner plates specially priced. Lunch specials with an all-you-can-eat buffet (11 am-2:30 pm) priced under $5, served in pleasant, comfortable surroundings. Closed Sun. 6717 S Division Ave, 455-9988. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ THAI HOUSE RESTAURANT — A little bit of Bangkok in Cascade. Broad-ranging, eclectic menu, from three-alarm spicy to delicately subtle Thai dishes. Lunch and dinner specials. Try the Thai banana pie. Closed Sun-Mon. 6447 28th St SE, 285-9944. L, D, 3, V, MC $ THAI PALACE — Holland’s authentic Thai restaurant offers a full gamut of tasty Thai selections.

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Closed Mon. 977 Butternut Dr, (616) 994-9624. www.thaipalacefood.com. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$

vita.com. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS, RSVP $

TOKYO GRILL & SUSHI — Recently renovated sushi restaurant offers Japanese-style tatami rooms, sushi bars and Japanese atmosphere with friendly service. New menu choices include hibachi, teriyaki, Udon, tempura and fresh sushi. Hot and cold sake, Japanese and American beer and wine. Lunch boxes available. Closed Sun. 4478 Breton Rd SE, 455-3433, www.tokyogrillsushi.com. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS ¢-$

THE BLACK ROSE — Irish pub features authentic décor and menu, with many items from Ireland. Appetizers, soups, salads, sandwiches and entrées from steaks to fish and chips. Great full-service bar with entertainment. 100 Ionia Ave SW, 456-7673, www.blackrosegr. com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$

WEI WEI PALACE — Chinese seafood restaurant features a huge menu of authentic Cantonese cuisine, dim sum and barbecue. Fresh lobster, crab; fish tanks let diners choose their own. Lunchtime offers superb selection of dim sum offerings. Super selections from the barbecue pit as well. Open daily. 4242 S Division Ave, 724-1818. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS $ FXO ASIAN CUISINE — 2008 GRM Dining Award of Excellence winner. Upscale Thai, Chinese and Vietnamese cuisine in downtown GR. Try the Panang Curry: shrimp and chicken sautéed with Thai basil lemongrass and coconut. Vegetarian dishes available; lunch specials Mon-Sat. Full-service bar. Open daily (free valet parking with $30 purchase). Will deliver. 58 Monroe Center, 235-6969, www.xoasiancui sine.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ YEN CHING/ROARING ’20s — Expertly prepared entrées served amid elaborate décor; a perennial favorite. 4605 28th St SE, 940-4111. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $$ YUMMY WOK — Extensive selections include combo platters, sweet and sour dishes, egg foo young, Cantonese, Hunan and Szechuan dishes, chow and lo mein, chop suey, tofu and Peking sizzling dishes in nicely accoutered surroundings. Half-orders available. Open daily. 4325 Breton Rd SE, 827-2068. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$

Ethnic European

ALPENROSE — An original in casual fine dining. From premium Certified Aged Black Angus steaks to poultry and fish dishes, this Europeaninspired restaurant boasts a beautiful banquet facility, five private dinning rooms, a bakery and café. Breakfast, lunch and dinner Mon-Sat. Award-winning Sun brunch buffet. 4 E 8th St, Holland, (616) 393-2111, www.alpenroserestau rant.com. H, B, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS, RSVP ¢-$$ BELLA MIA PIZZERIA & ITALIAN GRILL — Features authentic Italian fare, pasta dishes and handtossed New York-style pizza (even dessert pizzas) in roomy, window-fronted dining room. Daily lunch buffet. 6333 Kalamazoo Ave SE, Suite 450, 554-9930. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ BISTRO BELLA VITA — Big-city, casual restaurant features fresh French and Italian cuisine prepared over a wood fire, with a mammoth bar serving martinis and wine. 44 Grandville Ave SW (downtown), 222-4600, www.bistrobella

beSt!

BRICK ROAD PIZZA — A nice selection of pasta, pizza, salads, desserts and vegan specialties in smoke-free surroundings. Buffet available at lunch. Meatball crust specialty. Open daily. 1017 Wealthy St SE, 719-2409. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ CARRABBA’S ITALIAN GRILL — Classic Italian favorites from chicken parmesan and manicotti to wood-fired pizzas and fire-roasted chicken. Great calamari; nice wine list. Open daily for dinner. 3441 Century Center St SW at RiverTown Crossings, 261-3020; 4061 28th St SE, 261-3020, www.carrabbas.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $ FLORENTINE PIZZERIA & SPORTS LOUNGE — Spacious location featuring Italian fare with American and Mexican choices in addition to its thincrust pizzas. Ten beers on tap. Four big-screen TVs and 19 others showcase sporting events. Pool tables, darts, video games, Foosball. 4261 Kalamazoo Ave SE, 455-2230, www.florentines pizza.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ FLORENTINE RISTORANTE — Italian and American cuisine. Pizza and pasta served in the lounge until midnight; full-menu dinner 4-10 pm. Closed Sun. 3245 28th St SW, 534-5419. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC $ FRANCO’S PIZZERIA — Spaghetti, manicotti, lasagna, stromboli and great pizza and subs packed with fresh ingredients at low prices. Authentic Italian recipes make the fare extra special. Limited seating, takeout available (delivery offered). Cash only; open daily. 2103 Alpine Ave NW, 361-7307. H, L, D ¢-$ FRANKIE V’s PIZZERIA & SPORTS BAR — Large and roomy with central bar, good ventilation, pool tables, jukebox, video games, TVs. Covered patio. Nice selection of appetizers, subs, stromboli, pizza, Italian and pasta entrées, plus burgers and Mexican dinners. Weekday lunch buffet. Tap your own 100-ounce beer tower. 1420 28th St SW, 532-8998, www.frankievs.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ FRED’S PIZZA AND ITALIAN RESTAURANT — Longtime Northeast family-friendly favorite offering from-scratch Italian fare, fresh pasta, gourmet pizza, full-service bar. Closed Sun. 3619 Plainfield Ave NE, 361-8994, www.fredspizza. com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ FRICANO’S PIZZA RESTAURANT — The same original-recipe, thin-crust pizza that Grand Haven has enjoyed for more than 50 years. Also pasta dinners with sauce that has made its way to

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the retail market. Closed Sun. 5808 Alpine Ave NW, Comstock Park, 785-5800. H, D, C ¢-$ JOHNNY CARINO’S — Italian countryside dining famed for its 12-layer lasagna. Try the Italian pot roast or grilled sirloin topped with mushroom Gorgonzola cream sauce. Dinners are priced as single meals or family-style servings. Also curbside service to go. 2183 East Beltline Ave NE, 363-7100; 3015 W Shore Dr, Holland, (616) 738-5200, www.carinos.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, DS, AE $-$$ .LA CRAVE CAFÉ & GRILLE — Mediterranean fare in Kentwood’s Ridgemoor Center by Woodland Mall. Family-owned and operated, authentic Lebanese and Mediterranean cuisine prepared fresh daily and served in roomy, comfortable surroundings with colorful regional touches. Extensive menu includes appetizers in half or full orders: hummus, baba ghanouge, various kibbie dishes, from fried to vegetarian, grape leaves, falafel, and their special cauliflowerbased “Mama ghanouge.” Salads, soups, sandwiches — from pitas and French baguette creations to burgers — seafood selections, and entrées ranging from kabobs and kaftas to shawarmas, ghalabas, mujadra, lamb and chicken dishes. Specialty combination platters for two or more, with desserts, options for the kids, and even a healthy juice bar. Lunch plate specials daily from 11 am-3 pm. Smoke-free, no alcohol. 2923 28th St SE, 949-9449. www.lacraverestau rant.com. H, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ MANGIAMO — The historic mansion that formerly housed Gibson’s offers a family-friendly Italian eatery with strict attention to culinary detail. Steaks and seafood in addition to pasta and pizza. Open daily for dinner; extensive wine list, evening entertainment. 1033 Lake Dr SE, 742-0600, www.thegilmorecollection.com. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $-$$ MONELLI’S RESTAURANT AND SPORTS BAR — Southern Italian cuisine from the same folks who own Monelli’s Pizza. Spacious sports bar with five big screen HD TV screens; inviting, family-friendly dining room with fireplace. 5675 Byron Center Ave, Wyoming, 530-9700. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ NOTO’S OLD WORLD ITALIAN DINING — Italian dining in elegant surroundings. Extensive menu and impeccable service. Offerings include appetizers, soups, salads, pasta, veal, fish and dazzling desserts. Special Wine Cellar dinners in unique surroundings; separate lounge menu features light fare. Closed Sun. 6600 28th St SE, 493-6686, www.notosoldworld.com. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, RSVP $-$$ THE OLIVE GARDEN — A variety of northern and southern Italian cuisine served in a garden setting; table wines include three made exclusively for Olive Garden. Takeout service on all items; catering available. Open daily. 3883 28th St SE, 940-1632; 3030 Alpine Ave NW, 785-0087; 4499 Potomac SW, Grandville, 406-0852, www. olivegarden.com. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $

OSTA’S LEBANESE CUISINE — Authentic Lebanese cuisine, from grape leaf appetizer and tabbouleh to shish kebob, falafel and baklava. Takeout and full-service catering. Closed Sun-Mon. 2228 Wealthy St SE in EGR, 456-8999, www.ostasle banese.com. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, DS ¢-$ PAPA VINO’S — Family trattoria-style dining. Homey, unpretentious, homemade. Robust dishes with portions large enough to share. Open daily. 4570 28th St SE, 285-5004. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS, RSVP $ PEPPINO’S RISTORANTE PIZZERIA AND SPORTS LOUNGE — Contemporary ambience with smoke-free dining separated from the sports bar. Extensive menu of appetizers, Italian specialties, create-your-own pasta, char-grilled Sicilian-style steak and chicken, burgers, subs, paninis, pizza. House-made desserts. 5053 Lake Michigan Dr NW, Allendale, 895-1615. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$$ PEREDDIES — Italian fine-dining, best garlic bread anywhere, and a deli with restaurantbaked breads, wonderful salads, meats, pâté, desserts and imported food. Wine list, full bar, wine to go. More casual fare in Scusi lounge. Closed Sun. 447 Washington Square, Holland, (616) 394-3061, www.pereddiesrestau rant.com. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DC $-$$ PIETRO’S BACK DOOR PIZZERIA — Tucked behind Pietro’s Restaurant off 28th Street, this pizzeria features Chicago-style, thin-crust, Sicilian pan and wood-fired pizzas. Menu also offers skillet pastas, paninis, appetizers, salads and desserts. Kids menu. 2780 Birchcrest Dr SE, 452-7488. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ PIETRO’S ITALIAN RISTORANTE — Regional and contemporary preparation of Italian cuisine. Fresh-baked breads, Tuscan wines, desserts and cappuccinos. Nightly features give you a full experience of Italy. Kids menu, meeting room and takeout available. 2780 Birchcrest Dr SE, 452-3228. H, L, D, 3, V, MC, AE, DS $ ROMANO’S MACARONI GRILL — Top-notch Italian fare at this international chain. Roomy dining room with fireplace and separate bar area. Creative menu with a “design-your-own-pasta” option. A pour-your-own honor system prevails with a bottle of wine at your table. Reservations accepted. Open daily. 5525 28th St SE, 9498430. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC ¢-$ SALVATORE’S ITALIAN RESTAURANT — Authentic Sicilian and southern Italian fare. Spaghetti, lasagna, manicotti, cannelloni, meatballs, pizza, subs, plus desserts made by Mama Tinervia. New sports bar, extra dining room and patio seating. Weekday lunch buffet. All menu items, beer and wine available to go. Delivery and catering. Closed Sun. 654 Stocking Ave NW, 454-4280. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ SAN CHEZ, A TAPAS BISTRO — Legendary downtown hotspot offers authentic Spanish bill of fare that focuses on tapas-style appetizers, side dishes and entrées. Extensive wine and beer list

includes Spanish varieties and sherry. Lively mood enhanced by hand-tiled columns and paintings by the late GR artist José Narezo. 38 W Fulton St, 774-8272. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $-$$ FTRE CUGINI — 2008 GRM Dining Award of Excellence winner. Authentic high-end Italian menu, impressive wine list, fresh daily pastas and risotto specialties. Other main courses include beef, veal, lamb, chicken and seafood. Closed Sun. 122 Monroe Center, 235-9339, www.trecugini.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ TUSCAN — Popular Cascade Township restaurant features a full range of authentic Italian cuisine, primarily from Tuscany. Call ahead and take out, or eat in. Exclusive Italian wine list and domestic and imported beers. Closed Sun. 6450 28th St SE, 956-5522. H, L, D, 3, V, MC, AE, DC, DS $ TWO TONYS TAVERNA GRILLE — Features Italian, Greek and American specialties with a full-service bar and extensive wine list. Wide-ranging menu includes wood-fired pizzas and nightly specials all made from scratch. Artsy ambience, open kitchen and large patio. Closed Sun. Private dining rooms available for parties. 723 E Savidge Rd, Spring Lake, (616) 844-0888. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $ UCCELLO’S RISTORANTE — Pizzeria, grill and sports lounge featuring a selection of Italian cuisine, American dishes and an array of freshly baked pizzas. Open daily. 2630 East Beltline Ave SE, 954-2002; 4787 Lake Michigan Dr NW, 735-5520; 8256 Broadmoor SE, 891-5958, www.uccellos.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DC, DS ¢-$ VIA MARIA TRATTORIA — Holland’s Italian brewery offers superb pasta, entrées, pizza, sandwiches, frittatas, soups, salads, sandwiches and desserts in a delightful Italian courtyard ambiance. Nice wine list and on-site brewed birras. Closed Sun. 13 W 7th St, Holland, (616) 494-0016. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ VITALE’S — Longtime traditional Italian ristorante offers regional Italian dishes along with a lunch buffet weekdays; reservations and takeout available. Also Vitale’s Sports Lounge on Leonard next door, 458-2090 (takeout 4583766). 834 Leonard St NE, 458-8368; 3868 West River Dr NE, Comstock Park, 784-2526 (takeout 784-5011); 400 Ada Dr SE, Ada, 676-5400. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ ZEYTIN — Contemporary Turkish-American cuisine with a menu that reflects influences from the Mediterranean and Middle Eastern regions, including saganaki (flaming kasseri cheese), borek (savory-filled pastries), dolma (rice and pine-nut stuffed grape leaves), along with shish kebab and hummus, falafel, baba ghanoush, tabbouleh and more. Cozy dining room and full-service bar with extensive beer and wine lists; smoke free. 400 Ada Dr SE, Ada, 682-2222. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $

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Ethnic — Mexican, Central/ South American

7 MARES (SEAS) — Deliciously authentic, fullscale Mexican meals and specialty dishes that go well beyond the norm in this family-owned eatery. Excellent seafood selections, along with Friday fish fry by the pound. Super breakfasts. 1403 Kalamazoo Ave SE, 452-3872. H, B, L, D ¢-$$ ADOBE IN & OUT — The usual Mexican offerings served quickly at drive-through or seated (Grandville location is drive-through only). Open daily. 617 W Fulton St, 454-0279; 1216 Leonard St NE, 451-9050; 4389 Chicago Dr, Grandville, 257-7091. H, L, D, V, MC ¢ FBELTLINE BAR — 2008 GRM Dining Award of Excellence winner. A local favorite with warm décor;. Big wet burritos are the claim to fame, but full Americanized Tex-Mex menu. Great margaritas. Now offering The Big Enchilada curbside service: call in your order and have it delivered to your car. 16 28th St SE, 245-0494. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE $ CABANA TRES AMIGOS — A large menu of authentic Mexican fare including starters, salads, burritos, enchiladas, quesadillas, tamales, combination plates, house steak and shrimp specialties, and lots more, along with daily lunch specials, a children’s menu, à la carte items, full bar service with separated smoking section, take-out service and even a nice vegetarian selection. Spacious, pleasant surroundings with fireplaces and tastefully done Mexican décor. Open daily. 1409 60th St SE, 281-6891. www.cabanatresamigos.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$

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CAFÉ SAN JUAN — Puerto Rican cuisine is the emphasis, with a full menu offering bistec (beef), chuletas (pork chops) and pollo (chicken) dishes along with unique appetizers, soups and sandwiches. Mexican dishes also available. Now serving breakfast. Open daily. 3549 Burlingame Ave SW, 530-2293. H, B, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ CANCUN RESTAURANT — This neighborhood eatery specializes in Mexican seafood dishes but offers a full range of fare. Open daily. 1518 Grandville Ave SW, 248-2824. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢-$ CANTINA — Longtime favorite with an extensive menu of Mexican specialties, including beef and/or chicken fajitas, in an authentic, casual setting with a full-service bar. 2770 East Paris Ave SE, 949-9120. H, L, D, C, V, MC, DS, AE $ CARLOS O’KELLY’S — Casual Mexican café atmosphere specializing in fajitas, enchiladas and other Mexican fare. American options available; complimentary chips and salsa. 4977 28th St SE, 942-1600. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC ¢-$ CHIPOTLE MEXICAN GRILL — Pick your style: burrito, bowl, salad, soft or crispy taco. Pick your

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Medical Mile’s

first condominium project

fresh-made fillings, starting from the base of chicken, steak, carnitas, barbacoa or vegetarian. Meats are naturally raised, vegetarian-fed, hormone- and antibiotic-free. Modern vibe with lots of windows. Online ordering. Open daily at 11 am. 3610 28th St SE, 885-1520, www.chipotle.com. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ DOWNTOWN TRINI’S — Sparta’s destination for great Mexican food had to expand to meet popular demands. Traditional taco, fajita and wet burrito offerings are augmented with other creative and tasty dishes. Gigantic portions; full bar. Closed Sun and Mon. 148 E Division Ave, Sparta, 887-2500. H, L, D, V, MC, DS ¢-$ EL ARRIERO — Get an authentic taste of Mexico at this clean, airy location near Woodland Mall. Extensive menu offers the best tastes and specialty dishes of Mexico, with à la carte selections for smaller appetites. Now with a liquor license, they offer Mexican and domestic beers, great Margaritas and other bar beverages. 2948 28th St SE, 977-2674. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$

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EL BURRITO GIGANTE — Huge burritos, yes, plus tacos, tortas, gorditas, tostados, quesadillas and Mexican-style hamburgers. A tiny space, but tasty fare at downright reasonable prices. Try the shrimp wet burrito. Cash only. Open daily. 1342 Grandville Ave SW, 475-0478. H, L, D ¢ EL BURRITO LOCO — Offering a broad menu of more than 70 authentic, affordable Mexican selections in casual, contemporary surroundings. Complimentary chips and salsa; beer, wine and especially good margaritas from the full bar. Open daily. 1971 East Beltline Ave NE, 447-0415; 4499 Ivanrest SW, 530-9470; 4174 Alpine NW, 785-4102. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ EL GRANJERO — Generous portions of tasty Mexican fare, from steak and shrimp dishes and dinner platters to à la carte tacos, burritos, tostadas, tamales, quesadillas, flautas, gorditas, sopes, tortas and traditional menudo on weekends. Colorful surroundings with a roomy, windowed dining room. No alcohol but tasty virgin coladas. Open daily. 950 Bridge St NW, 458-5595. H, B, L, D, C, V, MC ¢ EL SOMBRERO — Offers the wet burrito, and dry ones too. Weekly specials. Closed Sun. 527 Bridge St NW, 451-4290. H, L, D ¢ GRAND VILLA DUNGEON — Mexican food is the specialty. Features 40-inch TV screen, broadcasts satellite programs and many sporting events. Closed Sun. 3594 Chicago Dr SW, 5348435, www.grandvillarestaurants.com. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS $ GRINGO’S GRILL — Roomy, upscale atmosphere near Holland’s West Shore Mall where Latin American-inspired flavors mingle in creative fare such as scallop or sticky-shrimp tacos, creative burritos, empanadas, chiles rellenos, chicken and seafood dishes and filet medal-

lions served with polenta and fried goat cheese. Fresh guacamole made tableside. Full bar, desserts, smoke-free. Open daily at 11 am. 2863 West Shore Dr, Holland, (616) 994-9722. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ JAMAICAN DAVE’S — Jerked, fricasseed or curried chicken; curry goat, oxtail, beef and chicken patties; jerked wings; salt fish and spicy “escoveitched” fish; a tofu-with-veggies dish; plus Jamaican fruit cake. With only a couple tables, takeout is the best bet. Near the back of the Tillman Retail Center in the Baxter neighborhood. Cash and checks only. 1059 Wealthy St SE, 458-7875. H, L, D, 3 ¢ JOSE’S RESTAURANTE — Authentic Mexican fare in a low-key locale with overhead fans, jukebox, pinball and a video game. Patrons crave their chalupas, burritos and tostadas. Open daily. 3954 S Division Ave, 530-7934. H, L, D ¢ LAS CAZUELAS — Casual and cozy locale opens for breakfast at 10 am, serving lunch and dinner seven days a week. Genuine flavors from Hispanic kitchen features chalupas, tacos, quesadillas, enchiladas, carne asada, fajitas, tampiquena and more. 411 Wilson Ave NW, Walker, 726-6600. H, B, L, D, V, MC ¢ LINDO MEXICO — Touches of Mexico adorn the roomy dining area in this unassuming location near 28th Street. Menu and daily specials feature true Mexican fare, including specials such as tacos de barbacoa, tripitos or lengua. Enchiladas, burritos, combo plates and more. Open daily. 2747 Clyde Park Ave SW, 261-2280. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS, DC ¢-$ MAGGIE’S KITCHEN — Authentic Mexican food, homemade with a lighter taste, hot sauces are options, in a clean, bright café setting. Great choice for breakfast too. Cafeteria-style ordering in restaurant that earns raves. 636 Bridge St NW, 458-8583. H, B, L, D ¢ MEXICAN CONEXION RESTAURANTE — Popular Hastings location serves authentically prepared Mexican favorites in large and inviting surroundings. Burritos, enchiladas, tacos, tostadas, carnitas, asada, combination dinner plates, and more. Open daily. 131 S Jefferson St, Hastings, (269) 945-4403. L, D, V, MC ¢-$ MICHOACAN — Restaurante y taqueria offers a huge selection of tortas, enchiladas, sopes, tacos, burritos, gorditas, flautas, tamales, carne asada, seafood, chicken and steak selections, and parrillada, a sizzling skillet full of spiced beef, chicken, shrimp and chorizo. Window-lit, brightly colored, low-key surroundings with serapes-and-sombreros décor, a jukebox and flat screen TV. Open daily at 9 am, breakfast options. 334 Burton St SW, 452-0018. H, B, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ MI TIERRA RESTAURANT Y TAQUERIA — Authentic Mexican offerings from Spanish-speaking staff whether dining in or driving through. Tacos, burritos, enchiladas and other traditional dishes. 2300 S Division Ave, 245-7533. H, L, D ¢

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INDIVIDUAL CONDOMINIUM HOMES ON GOLF COURSE

MOE’S SOUTHWEST GRILL — Build-your-own Mexican fare, Subway-style. Variety of fresh-daily ingredients; four meat selections. Burritos, fajitas, tacos, salads, quesadillas, and more. Open daily in the Waterfall Shoppes. 5070 28th St SE, 285-7114. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ ON THE BORDER MEXICAN GRILL & CANTINA — All the classic favorites and more from this popular chain serving higher-end Mexican delights. Guacamole made tableside. Complimentary chips and salsa, full-service bar. Open daily 11 am. 3676 Potomac Ave, Grandville, 257-3185; Woodland Mall, 3195 28th St SE, 285-4649. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ QDOBA MEXICAN GRILL — Sort of a Subway-goesMexico, with freshly made salsas and tasty fillers ready to wrap up in a tortilla or taco shell. Copper-fronted serving counter (faxed orders accepted). 2887 28th St SE, 957-9600; 3871 Rivertown Parkway, Grandville, 724-1600; 5150 Northland Dr NE, 364-8400; 3225 Alpine Ave NW, 988-5650, www.qdoba.com. H, L, D, 3, V, MC ¢ RAFAV’S FRESH MEX — Authentic Mexican fare in bright, cozy surroundings in that “cool wood building” in the Eastown area. Nice selection of appetizers, tacos, burritos, tostadas, quesadillas, vegetarian options and dinner platters (third taco free on request). Breakfast choices, too, but they don’t open until 11:30 am. Closed Sun (and Mon, July-Aug). 1441 Wealthy St SE, 458-1457. H, (B), L, D, V, MC ¢-$ SAN MARCOS — Mexican Grill in front of Caledonia’s Big O’ Smokehouse pulls out all the stops (order the giant margarita at your own risk). Extensive menu of authentic fare made from scratch by Spanish-speaking kitchen. Top-shelf tequilas, complimentary chips/ salsa, kids menu, lunch specials, desserts and even veggie plates. Mariachi band plays monthly. Open daily. 9740 Cherry Valley Ave SE, Caledonia, 891-2511. Second location coming to Hastings. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢-$$ SU CASA — Longtime Fennville favorite for authentic Mexican fare. Full array of choices from tacos, tostadas, quesadillas and enchiladas to tortas, gorditas, sopa, barbacoa, seafood selections and more, with burritos especially popular. Breakfast is served beginning at 8:30 am; open daily in the Super Mercado, 306 W Main St, Fennville, (269) 561-5493. H, B, L, D, V, MC ¢-$ TACO BOB’S — Open for lunch weekdays 11 am-3 pm (plus Sat when exhibitions are at DeVos Place), offering fresh-Mex tacos, burritos, quesadillas, taco salads, combo plates, and featuring the “funny taco,” a hard-shell taco wrapped in a soft shell, with nacho cheese between the shells; free delivery with $7 minimum purchase. Across from DeVos Place, 250 Monroe Ave NW, 458-1533. H, L, V, MC, AE, DS ¢

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TACO BOY — Local alternative to the chains. Reasonably priced, tasty fare from burritos, City Guide 2009-10 Grand rapids 99

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backstagepass | Destinations & experiences Where Great Food & Sports Come Together! Since 1978

tacos, enchiladas, tostadas and more, to combination plates complete with refried beans and salad. 3475 Plainfield Ave NE, 363-7111; 6539 28th St SE, 956-3424; 509 44th St SE, 257-0057; 2529 Alpine Ave NW, 365-9255. H, L, D, V, MC ¢ TACOS EL CAPORAL — Two humble locations serving food to brag about. Reasonable prices, generous portions of Mexican fare: tacos, burritos, tostadas, tamales, quesadillas, flautas, etc., with menudo served Sat and Sun. Open daily; quick takeout. 1024 Burton St SW, 246-6180; 1717 28th St SW, Wyoming, 261-2711. H, B, L, D, V, MC ¢ TACOS EL RANCHERO — Genuine Mexican fare in low-key surroundings with five booths to eat in or take out. Cash only. 1240 Burton St SW, 2456514. H, L, D ¢

Voted Best Happy Hour & Grand Rapids Best Sports Bar 6 years in a Row! HD Big Screen TV’s Express Lunch Buffet Mon - Fri 11 am - 2 pm 22 Beers on Tap Kitchen Open Late 1:30 am Everyday Free WIFI Banquet Rooms & Catering Trivia, Texas Hold ‘Em, Keno Daily Drink Specials Happy Hour Mon - Fri 3 pm - 6 pm

TEQUILA WILLY’S — A Mexican-American café and bar offering more than 30 different types of tequila, eight specialty wet burritos, and a large selection of Mexican entrées in a multilevel, fun environment with a lively bar and big dance floor. A great place for parties; closed Sun. 925 4 Mile Rd NW, 785-7383, www.tequilawillys. com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ TRES LOBOS GRILL & BAR — The true taste of Mexico with an expansive menu. Try lobster fajitas or parrilladas served in stone bowls. Separate full-service bar with giant TV offers 10 Mexican beers, several top-shelf tequilas and Agavero, a tequila liqueur. Inexpensive, fast lunch served ’til 4 pm daily in GR; closed Mon in Holland. 825 28th St SE, 245-5389; 381 Douglas, Holland, (616) 355-7424, www.treslobosrestau rant.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$

sandwich spots

BIG APPLE BAGELS — A host of fresh bagels and 15 cream cheese mixtures. Choose your favorite bagel to wrap around the sandwiches or breakfast options, or build your own from the deli. 3915 Plainfield Ave NE, 364-1919; 2058 Lake Michigan Dr NW, 735-2390; 6670 Kalamazoo Ave SE, 554-7915. H, B, L, D, 3 ¢ BLAKE’S TURKEY SANDWICH SHOPPE — Ovenroasted, hand-carved turkey is just one option at this carryout, eat-in, speedy-delivery deli cafe in the heart of downtown GR. Soups, salads and an array of deli sandwiches on homebaked breads are also on the menu. Closed Sun. 103 Monroe Center, 774-2220. H, B, L, D, 3, V, AE ¢ BOARDWALK SUBS — Owner Chris Tallarico offers 20 huge Jersey-style subs using familyrecipe Italian dressing and specialty meats such as capacola and prostitini in addition to familiar choices. Also soups, chili, salads, chips, fresh-baked cookies, ice cream treats and kids meals. Take out or eat in. Catering and delivery. Open daily. 5422 S Division Ave, Kentwood, 724-2492. H, L, D, V, MC ¢ CAFE SCALA — Tre Cugini’s cousin in the Ledyard

Building offers sandwiches and other Euro nibbles at reasonable prices. Open 11:30 am-2:30 pm Mon-Fri. 125 Ottawa Ave NW, 235-9115. H, L, V, MC, AE, DS, DC ¢ CHERRY DELI — Extensive deli menu offers more than 50 sandwiches, a dozen salads, five daily soups and more with catering and takeout options. Outdoor patio; closed Sun. 834 Cherry St SE, 459-6182. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ CRAZY CHARLIE’S — Great Coney Island-style dogs on steamed buns, affordably priced and quickly served. The usual condiments plus tasty Coney sauce, cheddar cheese, shredded pickle, jalapenos and hot sauce. Also serving a daily soup, chips, shakes, slushies, fountain drinks, and soft-serve ice cream service with walk-up window on Bagley Ave in warmer months. Retro-inspired décor. 2184 Wealthy St SE. 451-6720. H, L, D, V, MC ¢ D&W/FAMILY FARE CAFETERIAS — Great luncheon and deli fare served in agreeable surroundings at reasonable prices. Great salad bar, soups and some of the best Italian panini sandwiches around. In the following D&W stores: Breton Meadows, Grand Haven, Walker, Breton Village, Grandville, Cascade, Holland, Stevensville. H, L, D ¢-$ THE DOG PIT — Every variation on a hot dog, with house-made chili topping a specialty. Large variety of condiments, all downright affordable. Also daily soups. Closed Sun. 132 Monroe Center NW, 988-1508. H, L, D ¢ THE CONEY — Even though they’ve taken “Grand” out of their name, they still offer home-style dinners, burgers, salads, sandwiches, Mexican fare, desserts and all-day breakfasts and, of course, the authentic Coney Island hot dogs, all served in diner atmosphere. Open 24 hours daily. 809 Michigan St NE, 776-5580. H, B, L, D, Cash only ¢ .FAT BOY BURGERS – The legendary burger joint in the Cheshire neighborhood offers breakfast 6-11 am weekdays (7 am Sat) and lunch until 3 pm in newly renovated, smoke-free surroundings. Closed Sun. 2450 Plainfield Ave NE, 3617075. H, B, L, V, MC ¢ GRAND TRAVERSE PIE CO.— Bakery and café offers an extensive menu that covers breakfast, lunch and dinner, with quiche and breakfast options, soups, salads, sandwiches and pastries. Try the grilled smokehouse sandwich with smoked ham and cheddar on sourdough bread. Open daily. 3224 28th St SE, 977-7600. H, B, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ JERSEY JUNCTION — Special sandwiches, ice cream treats, candies and hot dogs served in comfortable, old-fashioned “soda shop” atmosphere. Open daily in season beginning March 1. 652 Croswell Ave SE (Gaslight Village, EGR), 458-4107. H, L, D ¢ JIMMY JOHN’S — Gourmet subs on freshly baked French bread and giant club sandwiches on

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First Impressions for home, business & community

seven-grain honey wheat, made to order “so fast you’ll freak” is its claim to fame. Oversized cookies, chips and soft drinks also available in this ’50s retro spot. 1851 44th St SW, 257-0700; 63 Monroe Center St SW, 235-4500; 3790 Alpine Ave NW, 785-3000; 2751 East Beltline Ave SE, 285-4700; 2121 Celebration Ave NE, 364-1111, www.jimmyjohns.com. H, L, D, 3 ¢ LIL’ BITE — Offers sandwiches, fresh salads and a variety of traditional favorites in Bridgewater Place and at the YMCA. 333 Bridge St NW, 4512400; 475 Lake Michigan Dr NW, 988-1381. H, B, L, 3, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ MAMA’S PIZZA & GRINDERS — A busy spot in Thornhills Plaza offering gargantuan grinders (half-size available), super wraps (such as Greek chicken or steak fajita), pizza (including taco pizza and grinders), salads and a selection of pastas. 6504 28th St SE, 954-1964. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ MUSEUM CAFÉ — Deli-style sandwiches, soups, salads, desserts and beverages on the second floor of the Van Andel Museum Center with a view of the riverfront. Closed Sun. 272 Pearl St NW, 456-3977. H, L ¢ .NUNZIA’S CAFÉ – In the former Eastown Deli location in the Merrill Lynch building by Calder Plaza, offering combination specials of soups, chili, salads, sandwiches, pasta and Italian dishes. Open 11 am-3 pm weekdays. 250 Monroe Ave NW, No. 140, 458-1533. H, L, V, MC, AE, DS ¢

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OLGA’S KITCHEN — Popular Greek-style wrapped sandwiches, salads and desserts, with uniquely flavored fries, interesting appetizers and great frozen yogurt desserts in roomy settings. Open daily. 2213 Wealthy St SE, 456-0600; 3195 28th St, 942-8020; 3700 Rivertown Parkway SW, Grandville, 531-6572. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ PANERA BREAD — Fresh-baked breads, sandwich fixings, delicious pastries. Excellent soups, salads, breads and bagels. Espresso drinks are popular, all served up in a pleasant, help-yourself atmosphere. 3150 Alpine Ave, Walker, 6473500; RiverTown Crossings Mall, 532-2900; 2044 Celebration Ave NE, 363-9100; 3770 28th St SE, 957-1100; 6080 28th St SE, 949-1200; 32 44th St, 667-4800; 1669 Marketplace Dr SE, Gaines Township, 656-9300; 3067 West Shore Dr, Holland, (616) 738-2400, www.panerabread. com. H, B, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ THE PITA HOUSE — Gargantuan, meat-filled Sami’s gyros with all the Mediterranean trimmings, great chicken salad with cucumber sauce and a variety of other Middle Eastern specialties such as fried kibbe, hummus and Greek salads, falafels and baklava. Open daily. 1450 Wealthy St SE, 454-1171; 3730 28th St SE, 940-3029; 6333 Kalamazoo Ave SE, 698-8722; and their newest location at 134 Monroe Center NW. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ QUIZNOS SUBS — Ingredients are oven-toasted on baguette-style bread. Choices include low-

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“Providing window and door solutions for over 20 years”

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fat options such as honey bourbon chicken, all available in three sizes. Soups served with a honey butter polenta roll. Fresh-made salads and desserts. Open daily. 6066 Kalamazoo Ave SE, 554-1200; 1971 East Beltline Ave NE, 364-9050; 1633 28th St SW, 532-0200; 4033 Cascade Rd, 940-0510; 6275 28th St SE, 3011038; 5751 Byron Center SW, 988-2345; 146 Monroe Center, 742-4400; 3555 Alpine Ave NW, 988-7721; 5429 Northland Dr NE, 4477741. H, L, D, V, MC, AE ¢ RAMONA’S TABLE — New EGR deli with selections made from scratch: soups, sandwiches, salads and baked items as well as meals for takeout. Special-event dinners by RSVP. 2232 Wealthy St SE, 459-8500, www.ramonastable. com. H, B, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ SCHNITZ DELICATESSEN — Super deli with a German flair. Delicious sandwiches and the creamiest of potato salads. Save room for the fudgiest brownies in town. All available for takeout. Closed Sun. 1315 E Fulton St, 451-4444; Schnitz East, 597 Ada Dr SE, 682-4660; Schnitz South, 1529 Langley St SE, 281-5010, www. schnitzdeli.com. H, L, D, ✓, V, MC ¢-$ ✎SUNDAES CAFÉ — In Alger Heights, adjacent to Sundaes in the Heights ice cream shop, featuring salads, sandwiches, subs, wraps, coffee specialty drinks and a variety of desserts. Served up in quaint surroundings, the café is open 11 am-9 pm Mon-Sat. 2404 Eastern Ave SE, 245-4962. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ TASTE OF THE GARDENS CAFÉ — At Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park. Deli selections, soups and fresh-baked pastries available. Same hours as gardens; brunch on second Sun of month by reservation only. 1000 East Beltline Ave NE, 977-7691. H, L, ✓, V, MC ¢-$

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URBAN MILL CAFÉ — Sharing dining space with It’s a Grind Coffeehouse. Comfy wing-backed chairs and table seating. Superb deli-style, grilled and baked specialty sandwiches, using all-natural ingredients on freshly baked breads. Top-notch soups, salads, desserts, baked goods and breakfast also available. 629 Michigan St NE, 855-1526. H, B, L, D, V, MC, AE ¢-$ WG GRINDERS — Oven-baked gourmet grinders (6-, 10- or 20-inch), excellent variety of greens, deli and signature salads, soups and desserts, in pleasant surroundings. A few hot pasta selections. Catering, delivery and takeout. Closed Sun. Esplanade Center, 5769 28th St SE, 9743354. H, L, D, ✓, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ YESTERDOG — The best hot dogs anywhere in a fun, nostalgic Eastown setting. Try the Ultradog. Closed Sun. 1505 Wealthy St SE, www.yesterdog.com. L, D ¢

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ZOUP! THE FRESH SOUP CO. — 12 soups daily, always rotating, served with a hunk of bread. Selection of fresh salads and panini sandwiches, fruit smoothies. Open daily. 4021 Cascade Rd SE, 956-3052. H, L, D, V, MC, DS ¢

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Mug & A Meal

BUFFALO WILD WINGS — Bar/restaurant features barbecued chicken wings and a dozen sauces. Order at the counter from a long list of options, including appetizers, salads, sandwiches, burgers and tortillas in this sports-bar-type restaurant with televised sporting events, video games, interactive trivia-game consoles. Kids menu, $3. 2121 Celebration Ave NE, 364-2999; 2035 28th St SE, 241-2999; 3050 Alpine Ave NW, 784-9464. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢-$ CAMBRIDGE HOUSE — Wash down your fish ’n chips with a pint of John Courage at this relaxing pub, complete with pool tables and dart board. Hoagies, Reubens and burgers appease hungry diners, while appetizers (served until 11 pm) satisfy snackers. Lots of liquor choices and good-sized wine list. Takeout available. 600 Monroe Ave NW, 356-1622, www.cambridge housegr.com. L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ .COREZ — Wine Bar & Restaurant opens at 4 pm Mon-Sat, offering “the highest level of excellence in wine, drink, food and service,” with an ever-changing Midwest menu. Extensive, realistically priced wine list, top-shelf spirits, crafted beers and specialty cocktails with creatively companionable small and “not so small” dishes such as caramelized onion soup with braised short ribs and aged cheddar; pork belly with sweet potato, pecans and maple vinegar; escargot; seared duck liver; mussels; braised lamb shank; slow-cooked organic salmon; and beef sirloin. Inspired desserts. Cozy, modern smoke-free space adorned with featured artists’ works. 919 Cherry St SE, 855-2310. www.corezwinebar.com. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$

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THE CORNER BAR — Rockford’s much-loved spot for a brew and a chili dog, with hall-of-fame status for quantity gorging; a decades-long tradition. Bar fare includes burgers, sandwiches, soups, nibbles, etc. Smoke free. 31 N Main St, Rockford, 866-9866. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢ COTTAGE BAR & RESTAURANT — Longtime favorite since 1927. Cottage burgers are delicious along with Cottage fries. Daily specials, imported beers, unique chili. Comfortable and cordial. Closed Sun. 8 LaGrave Ave SE, 454-9088, www. cottagebar.biz. L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢ THE CURRAGH — Downtown Holland traditional Irish pub features all the fun foods, spirits, music and environment of Old World Ireland. Grab a pint and enjoy authentic Irish fare from a full menu, with seasonal outdoor seating, live entertainment and valet parking. 73 E 8th St, Holland, (616) 393-6340. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢-$$ ELBOW ROOM BAR & GRILL — Friendly, cozy neighborhood watering hole with good bar food to match: burgers, sandwiches, nachos, salads, chicken fingers, etc. Open daily 10 am-2 am. Play darts, Golden Tee or the jukebox. 501 Fuller Ave NE, 454-6666. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢-$ FLANAGAN’S — Popular Irish pub, 20 draft beers, imported beers, Guinness stout on tap.

Giro Del Mondo A taste of the world

Experience the different tastes of the world paired with wine tastings. Held every third Monday each month. Visit our website for details at www.trecugini.com

122 Monroe Center St., NW Grand Rapids, MI 49503

616-235-9339

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July 16 — 18, 2009

COVENANT VILLAGE OF THE GREAT LAKES

A Covenant Retirement Community

A 3-DAY, SIMULTANEOUS OPEN HOUSE AT WEST MICHIGAN’S FINEST RETIREMENT COMMUNITIES. DON’T MISS THE FOURTH ANNUAL

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backstagepass |

Homemade soups and stews, specialty sandwiches and entrées with an Emerald Isle influence. Frequent live music. Closed Sun. 139 Pearl St NW, 454-7852, www.flanagansgr.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC ¢ FOUNDERS BREWING CO. — Sip samples and munch on peanuts and popcorn in the spacious new taproom with vaulted ceilings, serpentine bar, lots of windows and a built-in stage that accommodates live music Thu and Sat. Expanded deli menu features sandwiches and light pub fare. Now smoke-free but with (heated) covered porch and outdoor seating. 235 Grandville Ave SW, 776-1195, www.foundersbrewing.com. H, L (11-2 Mon-Fri), 3, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ GP SPORTS — Sports and entertainment venue patterned after ESPN’s Zone and Dave and Buster’s, with interactive sports games, giant video screen and TVs. Menu features createyour-own pizzas, burgers, salads and such. Closed Sun and Mon. Amway Grand Plaza Hotel, 776-6495. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS $ GRAND RAPIDS BREWING CO. — Extensive menu matches the handcrafted brewery beers and natural ales at this refreshing spot. 3689 28th St SE, 285-5970. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $

For further information, sponsorship opportunities, or to sign up as a participating community, call 616.459.3080

HOPCAT — Downtown pub offers crafted brews with close to 50 beers on tap, 150 bottled, full bar, and tasty fare that includes appetizers, salads, sandwiches and entrées from meatloaf to mussels, all aimed at complementing the brews. Open daily. 25 Ionia Ave SW, 451-4677, www. hopcatgr.com. H, L (Sat-Sun), D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ HUB’S INN — Sandwiches, burgers, wet burritos and thin-crust pizza are on the menu. Closed Sun. 1645 Leonard St NW, 453-3571. H, L, D, C ¢ INTERSECTION CAFÉ — Roomy location offers unique takes on old favorites. Creative sandwich wraps and paninis, great burgers, interesting quesadilla selections, soups, salads, appetizers, flatbread pizza, even vegetarian options. Full bar. 133 Grandville Ave SW, 459-0977. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢

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4450 Cascade Rd SE, Ste 200 Grand Rapids, MI 49546

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J GARDELLA’S TAVERN — The massive antique bar is matched by the gargantuan menu ranging from homemade chips to the build-your-own burger. Three floors of seating. Open Sun for Griffins games, other arena events. 11 Ionia Ave SW, 459-8824, www.jgardellastavern.com. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS ¢ KEGLER’S — The bar in AMS Lanes serves chicken, pizzas, burgers, munchies and appetizers, sandwiches and weekly specials. Features karaoke Fri and Sat. 3500 Lake Eastbrook Blvd SE, 949-7650. H, L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE, DS $ KOPPER TOP — Real raw copper tops the bar and tables lend a Louisiana pub feeling to this staple with a long-standing tradition of seasonal decorations. Entrées with homemade taste and surprising selections from an eager kitchen. No

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backstagepass | Destinations & Experiences

lunch Sat, closed Sun. 638 Stocking Ave NW, 459-2001. L, D, C, 3, V, MC, AE ¢ LOGAN’S ALLEY — Free popcorn complements a premium-libation special in these cozy digs. From two Reubens (turkey and Swiss, corned beef) to a garden burger, the 18-item sandwich-and-appetizer menu even lists pizza rolls. Seasonal deck seating. Open daily. 916 Michigan St NE, 458-1612, www.logansalley.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ MOJO’S — Lively dueling piano bar and restaurant open for dinner at 5 pm Wed-Sat, with starters, pastas, sandwiches, salads and reasonably priced entrées. Late night “munchy menu” features fried favorites, including dill pickles. RSVP for dinner early, show starts at 7 pm Fri/Sat, 8 pm Wed/Thu. DJ, dancing, pool tables, VIP Room and flat-screen TVs on the 2nd floor. 180 Monroe Ave NW, 776-9000. H, D (Wed-Sat), C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ NATIONAL PASTIME — Pleasantly accoutered sports bar with good food, nine TV screens and fun atmosphere. Large selection of menu items from munchies and Mexican to burgers and meals. 432 Remembrance Rd NW, 988-1130. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ NEW HOLLAND BREWING CO. — Munchies, salads, pizza and sandwiches augment a wide array of handcrafted beer at this comfortable, smokefree brewery. “15-minute” lunch menu. Beer and wine only. Closed Sun. 66 E 8th St, Holland. (616) 355-6422, www.newhollandbrew.com. H, L, D, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ NITE CAP BAR & GRILL — Roomy and bright with outdoor patio, pool tables, video games, big-screen TVs, Keno and karaoke Thu-Sat evenings. Daily drink specials. Check out the soups, salads, sandwiches, subs, flame-broiled burgers, Mexican selections and dinners. 801 W Fulton St, 451-4243. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢ O’TOOLE’S PUBLIC HOUSE — Pub grub includes appetizers, sandwiches and burgers served on a mountain of fries. Open daily. 448 Bridge St NW, 742-6095, www.otoolesgr.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ PUB 43 — Cozy atmosphere is especially popular with area artists and the gay crowd. More than a dozen TVs, fully stocked bar with usual bar fare from burgers and chicken tenders to more upscale items like sweet potato fries and spinach dip. Jukebox; occasional live entertainment. Open daily at 3 pm. 43 S Division Ave, 458-2205. H, D, C, V, MC ¢-$ .QUEEN’S PUB SPORTS BAR — Adjacent to Bombay Cuisine, featuring English pub grub, a full bar and lots of beer on tap, with big-screen TVs, a pool table, dart boards and wireless connections. 1420-1424 Lake Dr SE, 456-7055. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$ QUINN AND TUITE’S IRISH PUB — One of the largest selections of Irish whiskies in the area and Guinness on tap. Traditional Irish music,

Celtic rock, and open mic Fri eves, live bands Sat. Typical bar fare includes burgers, brats, sandwiches, munchies. 1535 Plainfield Ave NE, 363-8380. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢-$ RIVER CITY SLIMS — Mississippi Delta food with live blues, dancing, pool tables and happy hour Wed-Fri. Closed Sun-Tue except for special events. 243 Commerce SW, 776-1000. www.rivercityslims.com. H, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS $-$$ ROCKY’S BAR & GRILL — Art Deco bar, whitewashed brick walls, pool table. Offers burgers, appetizers, fried fish baskets, sandwiches and more. Kitchen open late; check for evening entertainment. Open daily, Sun at 5 pm with $1 beer specials. 633 Ottawa Ave NW, 356-2346. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢-$ SAZERAC LOUNGE — New Orleans-style lounge featuring bar food with a Cajun bent. Live entertainment Sat nights. 1418 Plainfield Ave NE, 451-0010. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE $ SHAMROCK BAR & GRILL — Small but interesting menu offers tasty choices such as coconut shrimp and house-made tortilla soup in addition to burgers and steak. Nice children’s menu. Open daily. 2501 Wilson Ave NW, 7353888. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢-$ TAPHOUSE LOUNGE — Renovated historic surroundings with dozens of beers on tap and a menu that runs the gamut from appetizers, soups, salads and sandwiches to entrées such as ribs, perch & chips and NY steak. This sports bar now offers the Atrium cigar lounge. Open daily until 2 am. 8 Ionia Ave SW, 7743338. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS, DC $ TEAZERS BAR & GRILLE — Offers burgers and pasta entrées, sandwiches, salads and Southwestern bites, as well as a kids menu. Look for live music on the stage. Open daily. 819 Ottawa Ave NW, 459-2481. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE ¢-$ WEST SIDE BAR — No-frills neighborhood tavern with a bar-food menu that includes the auspicious Hog Burger, a half-pound burger made fresh daily and stacked with a choice of ham or bacon and all the fixings. Live entertainment weekends. 1568 Broadway NW, 459-1240. H, L, D, C, V, MC ¢ .WINCHESTER — New American tavern in reclaimed century-old space with beautifully crafted wooden architectural accents. Affordably priced, from-scratch, locally sourced menu aimed at reinventing bar food: unique salads, soups and signature sandwiches like the Cuban Reuben, Chimichurri chicken sandwich and slow-cooked, hand-pulled barbecue pork sandwich. Other creative offerings: green chili-rubbed mahi-mahi fish tacos, beef cheek gnocchi, pork carnitas, empanadas, mac & cheese and chicken wings with garlic, black pepper and bleu cheese crumbles. Smoke-free with adjacent shuffleboard court-patio. 648 Wealthy St SE, 451-4969. www.winchestergr. com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE, DS ¢-$

Louis Benton STEAKHOUSE

TIMES are TOUGH Your Steaks Shouldn’t Be!

Buy One Entrée Get One Free

$25 maximum value. Not valid with any other offer or coupon. Limit one coupon per two guests. Excludes Holidays. 20% gratuity added prior to discount. No split plates.

Expires 11/30/09

Downtown Grand Rapids FREE VALET PARKING Reservations Suggested 616.454.7455 www.LouisBenton.com City Guide 2009-10 Grand Rapids 105

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backstagepass |

Z’S — Sports-themed eatery known for its ribs. Soup-salad-sandwich lunches. Forty-three-foot bar, two big-screen TVs and 13 smaller screens show all the scores. Carry-out service. 168 Louis Campau Promenade NW, 454-3141, www. zsbar.com. H, L, D, C, V, MC, AE $

Coffeehouses

76 COFFEEHOUSE — Full assortment of fair trade/organic coffee drinks, bagels, muffins and Danish. Free Wi-Fi. Open daily til 4 am. Accepts cash or check. Smoking is welcome. Seasonal outdoor seating. 1507 Wealthy St SE, 301-2226, www.myspace.com/76coffee. BAGEL BEANERY — All locations are cozy and comfortable, baking a variety of bagels and serving great breakfast and deli sandwiches. Vegetarian options, soups, salads and specialty coffees. Catering, kids meals. No smoking. Free Wi-Fi. Outdoor seating available. 455 Michigan St NE, 235-7500; 2845 Breton Rd SE, 245-4220; 5316 Clyde Park Ave SW, Wyoming, 249-9500, www.bagelbeanery.com.

61 East 7th Street Holland MI 49423 616.796.2100 cityf latshotel.com

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Grand Rapids - 183 condos - Ren Zone & NEZ $139,900 to $391,500 Historic Union High School features Rooftop Pool, Jacuzzi, Private Decks, Fitness Center, Club House, Game Room and Spectacular Penthouse views. NEZ until 2019, Ren Zone until 2012.

CAPPUCCINO JO’S — Large storefront location of this ’50s-style coffeehouse provides lots of light. Pastries, muffins, bagels and donuts with room for smoking and nonsmoking clientele. Open daily. Free Wi-Fi. 5015 S Division Ave, Wyoming, 249-0875.

www.unionsquaregr.com | 616-98-UNION

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.COFFEE GALLERY – Spring Lake’s coffeehouseart gallery combo features a multitude of coffee specialty drinks along with light fare in art gallery surroundings. 17750 Fruitport Rd, Spring Lake, (616) 850-9500.

192 of 235 SOLD

Grand Rapids - 235 condos - CRA Zone from $114,900 to $439,900

Historic furniture factory overlooking Grand River. Pool, Jacuzzi, Clubhouse, Balconies, Rooftop Decks, Salon, Fitness Center, Coffee Shop, Restaurant/Bar.

www.boardwalkgr.com | 616-988-6466

BITTER END — Full array of specialty coffee drinks, bagels, muffins, pastries and deli sandwiches in atmosphere of a 1930s-era French café. Free Wi-Fi. Open 24/7. No smoking. 752 W Fulton St, 451-6061. CAFÉ24SEVEN — Formerly Noshville Café, now under new ownership. Besides all the usual coffee delights, nibble on deli bagel sandwiches, pastries and other baked goods. Huge array of smoothies and Italian and French sodas also available. Open 24/7. 2763 44th St SW, Wyoming, 531-8720.

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Keeping West Michigan looking great for 60 years!

BIGGBY’S — East Lansing-based chain now in nine states renamed itself from Beaner’s. Scones, cinnamon rolls, muffins, cookies and Wi-Fi in comfy surroundings. Seasonal outdoor seating. There are more than a dozen locations in West Michigan. See store locator at www. biggby.com.

Same Day Service Monday - Saturday 30 Locations to Serve You Best

616-957-4000 w w w. s h e l d o n d r y c l e a n e r s . c o m

COMMON GROUND COFFEE SHOP — Pastries, bagels and cheesecake share the menu with specialty coffee drinks, Italian sodas and more. Sandwiches available from the next-door Schnitz Deli. Seasonal outdoor seating, poetry readings, youthful evening clientele. Smoking room. Local artists showcased. Free Wi-Fi. 1319 E Fulton St, 459-2999. FERRIS COFFEE AND NUT CO. — Has recently added

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backstagepass | Destinations & Experiences

a Café facility offering breakfast and light lunch in the Plaza Towers on West Fulton, with work from local artists on exhibit. Seasonal outdoor seating. Both locations feature a variety of gourmet coffees from around the world, gourmet nut selections, wide variety of sweets. Creative gift baskets and an array of coffee and nut associated paraphernalia available at Winter Ave location. 235 W Fulton St, 227 Winter Ave NW, 459-6257, www.ferriscoffee.com. FRENZ COFFEE HOUSE — Now in Rockford; besides tea and coffee specialties, menu offers soups, salads and wrap sandwiches. Closed Sun. Musicians play on Thur and Fri. Free Wi-Fi. Dedicated customers who are local artists can display and sell their photography or paintings. 4 E Bridge St, Rockford, 863-8750, www.frenz coffeehouse.com. INDULGENCE COFFEE HOUSE — Cascade spot offers all manner of coffee indulgences, teas, baked goods, soups, salads, sandwiches and shopping opportunities. Free Wi-Fi with purchase of coffee. Local artists’ work exhibited. 6755 Cascade Rd SE (near Family Fare), 285-0653. IT’S A GRIND — Offers its own blends of beans, full-range of specialty coffees and teas. Houses Urban Mill Café. Hearty breads and bakery treats made from scratch. Open daily. Great gift baskets. 629 Michigan St NE, 855-1526, www.itsagrind.com. JP’S — Good selection of bakery items. Free Wi-Fi. Outdoor seating. Local artists sell their work here; art changes monthly. 57 E Eighth St, Holland, 396-5465, www.jpscoffee.com. JW’S — Art gallery meets coffeehouse with monthly rotation of local artists’ works. Specializing in light, health-conscious lunch fare, in addition to every coffee drink under the sun. Closed Sun. Free Wi-Fi. 850 Forest Hill Ave SE, 285-1695. KAVA HOUSE — Nice selection of bakery items and java served in bowl-sized cups. Eastown spot has plenty of seating (outdoors, too). Smoking room. Local artists’ work displayed. Full bakery includes homemade pizzas, spinach pies, sausage rolls and soup. Locally famous for their scones. 1445 Lake Dr SE, 451-8600. KAVA HOUSE BY GEORGE — Separately owned store in Gainesville Township offers bakery items and light lunch fare like wraps and seasonally inspired soups and chili. Full array of coffees and coffee specialties. Free Wi-Fi; accepts all major credit cards. 6633 Kalamazoo Ave SE, 971-4560. LEMONJELLO’S — Holland coffeehouse that deals in fair trade coffees and espressos with a wide range of specialty coffee drinks, teas, chai, mochas, lattes, bubble drinks, frozen options and more. Also serving a variety of sweet treats and pastries in bright, colorful surroundings. Live musical entertainment; free wifi. Open daily until midnight. 61 E. 9th Street, Holland, (616) 928-0699, www.lemonjellos.com.

LOCAL MOCHA — Downtown location offers coffee specialties and smoothies as well as grilled breakfast and lunch sandwiches. Closed Sun. Monthly exhibits by local artists. 96 Monroe Center, 459-0082, www.localmochagr.com. MADCAP COFFEE COMPANY — Downtown’s newest coffee shop that roasts its beans onsite in small batches, available wholesale or retail. Pastries and artistically presented coffee specialty drinks from certified baristas. Urbane ambiance with local artwork on display; free Wi-Fi; periodic live music. Open daily. 90 Monroe Center, 421-8399, www.madcapcoffee.com. MARGE’S DONUT DEN — Homespun coffee shop and bakery offers 60 varieties of fresh-baked donuts, muffins and cookies from pinksmocked servers. Popular for more than 30 years. Pianists perform occasionally for a free donut. 1751 28th St SW, 532-7413, www.marges donutden.com. MIXTAPE CAFE — Formerly The Euclid with alternative rock and other diversions beginning 7 pm Mon-Sat. Especially popular with the under-21 crowd; $5 cover for certain events. Open daily; smoke-free. Serving pizza and a variety of soups. Paintings by local artists showcased. Accepts Discover, Visa, Mastercard. 133 S Division Ave, 356-1926, www.myspace.com/ mixtapecafe. SCHUIL COFFEE & TEA SHOPPE — Besides coffee and tea, this shop offers iced cappuccinos, fruit smoothies, frappes, fresh-squeezed lemonade, muffins, bagels, biscotti and shortbreads. Closed Sun. 3679 29th St SE, Kentwood, 9561881, www.schuilcoffee.com. SESSIONS COFFEE & CAFÉ — In addition to coffee specialties, offers wraps, croissant sandwiches, soups and salads. Open daily. Exhibits local artists’ work. 8233 Byron Center SW, 878-4547. THE SPARROWS — Styled after European cafés, this combination coffee/tea shop and newsstand serves fairly traded products, including local Schuil coffees. Free Wi-Fi. 1035 Wealthy St SE. STARBUCKS — The originator of the coffee craze, the Seattle company has numerous locations throughout West Michigan, including one inside the new Metro Health Village in Wyoming. See store locator at www.starbucks.com. SUSIE’S CAFÉ — Besides coffee drinks and baked goods, enjoy breakfast through lunch, plus sandwiches, homemade soups and burgers from the grill. Also malts, shakes, smoothies and ice cream, with a walk-up window open late in summer months. Open daily. 1120 Knapp St NE, 363-1530. SWEET BEAN COFFEE & ESPRESSO — All the favorite caffeine-based drinks (decaf, too) with smoothies, gelato, sweet snacks, chili and a daily rotating soup. Faves include the Snickers: dark chocolate mocha with caramel and hazelnut, espresso milk and whipped cream. Open 6

am weekdays, 7 am Sat, closed Sun. 111 E Main, Zeeland, (616) 772-6450. UNCOMMON GROUNDS — Homey atmosphere where organic and fair trade coffee is brewed in small batches to ensure quality. Live entertainment in the summer and once a month throughout the year. Local art galleries’ work displayed. Free Wi-Fi. Seasonal outdoor seating. 127 Hoffman, Saugatuck, (269) 857-3333, www.uncommongroundscafe.com. .VANILLAS COFFEE TEA CAFÉ — Hidden in the Plainfield Plaza in the former Frenz location, specialties include gourmet coffees, teas, smoothies, pastries, with breakfast and lunch served daily. Special-order bakery for cakes, cookies, cupcakes, etc. Dollar menu offers breakfast burrito, quiche, turkey snack, espresso shot, cookies and more. 3150 Plainfield Ave NE, 447-0080. WEALTHY STREET BAKERY — In addition to outstanding breads, cinnamon rolls and pastries, this reclaimed, roomy location offers excellent sandwiches and a daily soup special. Club, specialty and vegetarian sandwiches available on fresh-baked breads. Local artists hang art. Free Wi-Fi. Closed Sun. 608 Wealthy St SE, 301-2950, www.wealthystreetbakery.com. WEST COAST COFFEE — Big-city atmosphere with plenty of seating, featuring all the specialty coffees, fresh-brewed tea and chai, and a variety of bagels, muffins and biscotti. Try the phenomenal cinnamon-walnut coffee cake. Coffee and teas available in bulk along with coffee-inspired accoutrements. Local artists exhibited. Free Wi-Fi. 55 Monroe Center, 459-9519.

Dining Guide Legend GRAND RAPIDS MAGAZINE has created these symbols to area restaurant amenities as a service to our readers.

H — Handicapped accessible B — Serves breakfast L — Serves lunch D — Serves dinner C — Cocktails 3 — Checks accepted V — Visa MC — MasterCard AE — American Express DC — Diner’s Club DS — Discover Card RSVP — Reservations preferred ¢ — Inexpensive (under $8)* $ — Moderate ($8-$15)* $$ — Expensive (Over $15)* * Prices based on average check for one person. - — Reviewed in this issue ➧ — New listing . — Listing update O — GRM’s 2008 Restaurant of the Year F — GRM’s 2008 Award of Excellence — Chef Profile in this issue Additions, corrections and/or changes must

be submitted for the editors’ consideration by calling Grand Rapids Magazine, 459-4545, or write: The Dining Guide, Grand Rapids Magazine, 549 Ottawa Ave. NW, Grand Rapids, Ml 49503.

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Beer friendly Grand Rapids has a lot of great bars, taverns and microbreweries serving up great beer. Âť pg110

Photography by Michael Buck

By Jon C. Koeze

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The Black Rose

9 Locations Throughout West Michigan!

Fine Food, live Music, Kind Folk

100 Ionia Ave. Grand Rapids, MI 616.456.7673

Waterfront Dining at its Best! ®

904 W. Savidge Spring Lake www.higrandhaven.com 616-846-1370 www.PaneraBread.com

ONLY 29 MINUTES FROM GRAND RAPIDS

2008 Winner

Award of Excellence

-Wine Spectator

Amazing Steaks

& Fresh Seafood

Lunch 11:30 - 4 M-F Dinner 5 - 10 Mon.-Thurs. 5 - 11 Fri.-Sat.

Reservations Suggested

Downtown Grand Rapids Monroe Center & Ionia

www.LouisBenton.com • 616.454.7455

Sunday Brunch available from 10am to 2pm

Tuscan Table Lunch Buffet Monday – Friday 11:30am to 1:30pm

Real Food | Real Fresh | Real Fast Open daily for breakfast, lunch & dinner Tempting new menu items! 310 Pearl St. NW Grand Rapids, MI 616-235-1342 complimentary parking

CONTACT KARLA AT

(616) 459-4545

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Open to the public

VOTED BEST PIZZA 6 YEARS IN A ROW! PIZZA AND A WHOLE LOT MORE!

400 Ada Dr. SE (in the thornapple village)

676-5400

www.vitalesada.com

Celebrate Outdoor Dining & Award-Winning Cuisine

advertise your restaurant

Here

4100 Thousand Oaks One mile East of E. Beltline on 5 Mile Rd. 616-447-7750 www.thousandoaksgolf.com

www.watermarkcc.com • 616.949.0570 City Guide 2009-10 Grand rapids 109

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Founders Brewing

HOPCAT NOW HAS ITS OWN IN-HOUSE BREWERY! IT TOOK A LONG TIME, BUT WE’VE FINALLY BEEN CLEARED TO

BREW OUR OWN BEER!

PRETTY DAMN GOOD.

HOPCAT WAS RECENTLY RATED

THE #3 BEER BAR ON PLANET EARTH BY BEER ADVOCATE MAGAZINE. H O P C AT. I N S P I R AT I O N THROUGH FERMENTATION.

NOW SERVING SUNDAY BRUNCH NOON-3PM HOURS OF OPERATION: MON - SAT 11:30AM - 2AM, SUNDAY NOON - 2AM WWW.HOPCATGR.COM (616) 451-HOPS (4677), 25 IONIA AVE. (IONIA & WESTON)

G

RanD RaPIDs has a lot of great places to drink beer. A comprehensive list would be too large for this publication and a short list of the “The Best” would be ridiculous. So here are five of my favorites and the reasons for each selection. Compare them to your list or consider adding them once you have paid a visit. Either way, I don’t think you will be disappointed. Founders Brewing, 235 grandville ave. sW I like fresh, flavorful beer and an eclectic selection. Microbreweries usually have both, so I am partial to drinking in these places. Founders features a big beer drinking hall with high ceilings, funky furniture, live music and a friendly wait staff. It sells only its own beer and it’s always fresh. hopCat, 25 Ionia ave. sW There is no bar in Grand Rapids more into beer than HopCat. It features an ever-changing menu of beers from all over, many of them microbrews and small batch, one-of-a-kind beers. HopCat is also a microbrewery. Pickwick tavern, 970 Cherry st. se This is the oldest continually operated tavern in Grand Rapids, now celebrating its 75th anniversary. There is no place more cozy and laid back than this neighborhood gem. Sitting at the bar drinking a Sierra Nevada on tap reminds

you of a time when taverns were public houses where neighbors would socialize in the evening hours. Cottage Bar and Restaurant, 18 La grave ave. se The Cottage and I go way back. It is the oldest bar (as opposed to tavern) in Grand Rapids because the Pickwick did not begin to sell spirits until a few decades ago. The Cottage was one of the first local bars to catch on to the flavors of imports and microbrews during the early 1980s. I think I tasted my first Bell’s beer at this downtown neighborhood establishment.

the Cottage was one of the first local bars to catch on to the flavors of imports and microbrews during the early 1980s. honey Creek Inn, 8025 Cannonsburg Road ne, Cannonsburg This is my pub —the place I go to eat and drink in the evening, many days of the week. There’s a great beer selection, great food and a great staff. It is also a great 20-minute destination for “townies” looking for a friendly place to ingest and imbibe. Contributing editor Jon C. Koeze likes places that offer fresh, flavorful beer and an eclectic selection. He lists his favorites and the reasons for each selection.

photoGraphy by MiChaeL buCk

SO NOW, IN ADDITION TO 48 TAPS AND 150 BOTTLES FROM OTHER BREWERIES AROUND MICHIGAN AND THE WORLD, WE’LL BE SERVING A FEW HOPCAT-BREWED BEERS ON TAP AS WELL. MOST OF THEM ARE

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savor the

view atop

8 E. Bridge Street

CityFlats

Downtown Rockford Overlooking the Rogue River

616.863.8181 www.reds-live.com

Hotel

Inspiration through Fermentation.

Online reservations accepted

HopCatGR.com 451-HOPS (4677) . 25 Ionia Ave.

Michigan’s best riverside/fireside dining

#&&3 t &7&/54 t 1"35*&4 t %*/*/( t #&&3

Business luncheons, intimate dinners, appetizers and cocktails. Or, our award winning Sunday brunch. Charley’s Crab is dedicated to ensuring your visit is excellent. Mon - Thurs 11:30 - 10 and Fri 11:30 - 11 Sat 4:30 - 11 (no lunch) Sun Brunch 10 - 3, Dinner 4:30 - 9

61 East 8th Street Holland MI 616.796.2100 www.cityf latshotel.com

The best that Italy has to offer in the heart of Grand Rapids...

4767 Broadmoor, Grand Rapids 616-871-6690 gtgcatering.com

AWARD WINNING

Caters up to 1200 people | Call ahead or dine in Deli for lunch Mon – Fri from 10 AM – 3 PM Salad bar & homemade soups

LUNCH Mon - Fri 11:30-4:00 PM DINNER Mon - Thurs 4:00-10:00 PM Fri 4:00-11:00 PM Sat 5:00-11:00 PM 2162 Wealthy, E. Grand Rapids

63 Market St., Downtown Grand Rapids 616.459.2500 www.muer.com

122 MONROE CENTER, ST NW DOWNTOWN GRAND RAPIDS 616-235-9339 www.trecugini.com

616-451-8611

eatatolives.com

Wi n e r y & Ta s t i n g R o o m

Visit us online at www.grmag.com check out the 2008-09

Restaurant Guide

New deck & expanded seating Fusion bistro cuisine with a family friendly atmosphere Extensive wine and spirits selection

• Winery Direct Discounts • Retail Sales • Tours Available, call for more information • Free Wine Tasting at the Winery or at our Tasting room in downtown Saugatuck.

The Lake Effect Everyone Loves.

6130 - 122nd Ave. Fennville, MI 49408 I-196 exit 34, follow the “winery” signs. Open year around, check our website for hours. 800-432-6265 • winery@fennvalley.com www.fennvalley.com

Pizzeria, Grille & Sports Lounge Where Great Food & Sports Come Together The Biggest Football Shaped Bar in the Area!

OH, THAT SAUCE! SINCE 1978

2630 E.Beltline SE, Grand Rapids 954-2002 4787 Lake Michigan Dr., Walker 735-5520 8256 Broadmoor SE, Caledonia 891-1100 Voted “Best Sports Bar” & “Favorite Happy Hour”

2008-09

Readers Poll

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backstagepass | Destinations & Experiences

Eve at The B.O.B. (Best Nightclub)

Best of GR The results of the 2008-09 Grand Rapids Magazine “Best of GR” Readers Poll prove once again that West Michigan continues to evolve into an astounding urban paradise, with something for eveyone’s style, taste or preference. Coffee/Coffeehouse.................................... Kava House Happy Hour........................................................ Uccello’s Martini.................................................... Bistro Bella Vita Microbrewery................................................... Founder’s Nightclub/Bar..................................................The B.O.B. Sangria...............................................................San Chez Sports Bar.......................................................... Uccello’s Wine List...........................................................Bar Divani

A LA CARTE Bagel..........................................................Bagel Beanery Barbeque...................................................... Sandmann’s Burger............................................................Cottage Bar Burrito............................................................Beltline Bar Chicken Wings.................................. Buffalo Wild Wings Chips & Salsa.................................................Beltline Bar Chocolate Chip Cookie............... Wealthy Street Bakery Doughnuts.................................................. Krispy Kreme Hot Dog............................................................. Yesterdog Pizza...................................................................... Vitale’s Sandwich....................................................... Schnitz Deli Seafood.....................................................................Leo’s Soup............................................................ Panara Bread Steaks............................................................Chop House Sushi...................................................................... Mikado REFRESHMENTS Beer/Wine Merchant......................... Martha’s Vineyard

Gaia Café

SHOPPING & SERVICES Animal Clinic................... Cascade Hospital for Animals Antique Shop......................................Eastown Antiques Architectural Firm........................... Visbeen Associates Auto Dealership..............................................Fox Motors Auto Repair Service................Community Auto Repair/ Fox Motors (tie) Bank..................................................................Fifth Third Bicycle Shop......................................... Village Bike Shop Bookstore................................... Schuler Books & Music Car Wash.......................................Southland Auto Wash Catering Company....... Applause Banquets & Catering Cell Phone Company............................ Verizon Wireless Children’s Clothing Store.............................Snapdragon Credit Union........................Lake Michigan Credit Union Day Spa................................................................ Design 1 Dry Cleaners....................................... Sheldon Cleaners Florist/Flower Shop..................................Eastern Floral Furniture Store....................................................... Israels Garden Center.......................... Fruitbasket/Flowerland Grocery Store..........................................................Meijer Hair Salon............................................................ Design 1 Home Builder.........................Scott Christopher Homes Hospital................................................ Spectrum Health Hotel................................................ Amway Grand Plaza Interior Design Firm................................... Think Design Jeweler...................................................Juhas & Sullivan Landscaping Company.........................................Rook’s Law Firm...............................................................Varnum Men’s Apparel Store............................................ Daniel’s Pharmacy........................................................Walgreen’s Real Estate Company.........................Greenridge Realty Resale/Consignment Shop............................. Georgie’s Retirement Community................................ Porter Hills

Shoe Store............................................................DSW Sporting Goods Store................................MC Sports Women’s Clothing Store................................ Daniel’s

Photography by michael Buck

PEOPLE/MEDIA Band........................................................... Mid-Life Crisis Bartender....................................... Chris Williams/Leo’s Blogger..................................John Gonzalez/G.R. Press Chef................................................ Bernard Lucas/Leo’s Chiropractor........................................James Elliott, D.C. Dermatologist............................ Robert Lamberts, M.D. Plastic Surgeon.................................John Renucci, M.D. Radio Personality.............................. Tony Gates/WLAV Radio Station........................................................... WLAV Radio Team................. Free Beer and Hot Wings/WGRD TV Personality.................... Suzanne Geha/WOOD-TV8 TV Station....................................................... WOOD-TV8 Weatherperson......................... Bill Steffen/WOOD-TV8 Writer/Columnist.............Tom Rademacher/G.R. Press

2008-09 Readers Poll Results

CUISINE Appetizer Menu ................................................San Chez Bakery . ....................................... Wealthy Street Bakery Breakfast........................................................ Wolfgang’s Brunch.......................................................Charley’s Crab Deli................................................................. Schnitz Deli Desserts.................................................................Arnie’s Diner.......................................................................... Pal’s Ice Cream Parlor.................................... Jersey Junction Kid’s Menu......................................................TGI Friday’s New Restaurant................................ Rockwell/Republic Outdoor/Deck Dining............................................ Rose’s Romantic Dining Atmosphere.......................1913 Room Vegetarian Menu............................................... Gaia Café

GETTING OUT Art Gallery............................ Grand Rapids Art Museum Golf Course.............................................Thousand Oaks Health Club/Fitness Facility................. MVP Sportsplex Karaoke/Open Mic............................................... Cheers Live Theater........................Grand Rapids Civic Theatre Movie Theater...................... Celebration Cinema/IMAX Museum................................................... Public Museum Outdoor Festival............................... Festival of the Arts People Watching............................... Festival of the Arts Place for a Wedding Reception...............Frederik Meijer Gardens Public Park................................................Riverside Park Shopping Mall.......................................... Woodland Mall Sports Team...........................West Michigan Whitecaps Tourist Attraction.....................Frederik Meijer Gardens

112 Grand Rapids City Guide 2009-10

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Our new Chopped Cobb. Every flavor in every bite.

What happens when you take a classic Cobb Salad and chop it? Every delicious ingredient comes together. From the crisp romaine, to the all-natural, antibiotic-free chicken, and everything in between. Applewood-smoked bacon, Gorgonzola, fresh tomatoes and hard-boiled eggs — hand-tossed in our own special herb vinaigrette. Or if you prefer something lighter, try our Strawberry Poppyseed Salad, made with only the ripest strawberries we could find. Summer is the perfect time to enjoy refreshing salads at Panera Bread®, where every detail matters. ©2009 Panera Bread. All Rights Reserved.

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