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This 2024 installment features a robust lineup of over 50 participating restaurants, each offering $26, $36 and $46 three-course prix fixe menus.
Grand Traverse County (/ ˈ t r æ v ər s / TRAV-ərss) is a county located in the U.S. state of Michigan.As of the 2020 census, the population was 95,238, making it the largest county in Northern Michigan. [2]
In 1892, an extension of the Chicago and West Michigan Railway from Traverse City to Petoskey was built through Acme. [8] Acme's post office closed on February 15, 1933. However, it was reestablished on February 1, 1952. [9] In 1986, the tallest building in Grand Traverse County, the tower at the Grand Traverse Resort & Spa, opened in Acme. [10]
Traverse City State Park, with about 250 campsites, is located east of the city, and features a beach on the East Bay arm of Grand Traverse Bay. The Boardman River Nature Center is the interpretive center and management headquarters for the Grand Traverse Natural Education Reserve, a 505-acre local park and natural area.
Grand Traverse Mall is an enclosed shopping mall serving Traverse City, Michigan, located in Garfield Township. Opened in 1992, the mall features four anchor stores: JCPenney, Target, Dunham's Sports, and Macy's. It is managed by Brookfield Properties, the successor of its original developer General Growth Properties.
It was constructed in 1928 as a private house, the Stickney Summer House, and renovated into the restaurant in the late 1950s; it now houses the Mission Table and Jolly Pumpkin Restaurants. The site overlooks the waters of Bowers Harbor, an inlet of Grand Traverse Bay. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2011. [1]
Grand Traverse may refer to any of the following topics related to the state of Michigan, United States: Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians , a Native American tribe Grand Traverse Bay , a bay of Lake Michigan in the Lower Peninsula
Traverse City: The Perry Hannah House was designed in 1891 by Grand Rapids architect W. G. Robinson for lumber baron Perry Hannah, a lumber baron known as the "father of Traverse City." It is now used as the Reynolds-Jonkhoff Funeral Home; the firm maintains the house in outstanding condition. 8: Hedden Hall: Hedden Hall