Greater Lansing Convention and Visitors Bureau 1223 Turner St. Suite 200 Lansing, MI 48906 (517) 487-6800
Population 127321
 Time Zone Eastern
 Latitude/Longitude 42.74° /-84.55°
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The state capital has a small-town feeling with big-city sophistication. Together with East Lansing (the home of Michigan State University), Lansing enjoys a thriving performing arts scene, numerous golf courses, and a minor league baseball team called the Lugnuts. The Lansing area is also an industrial center with plants owned by major corporations including General Motors.
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Prime among Lansing's governmental attractions is the magnificent State
Capitol. Completed in 1879, the building has been faithfully restored to its
original Victorian grandeur. Tours take visitors through public areas
including the House and Senate galleries. Two blocks away, the impressively
modern Michigan Library and Historical Center (opened in 1989) encompasses
the state archives as well as the Michigan
Historical Museum. Among its four levels of exhibits, the museum lets
visitors walk through a copper mine and inspect a relief map of Michigan
that is three stories tall. The Michigan
Women's Historical Center and Hall of Fame celebrates the state's
notable women and their contributions to the state and the nation. Named for
the founder of the Oldsmobile Auto Company, the R.E.
Olds Transportation Museum has an outstanding collection of Oldsmobile
cars, including the first model ever built. Other types of vehicles --
bicycles, trucks, an airplane -- that at one time or another were built in
Lansing are also on display.
Discovery and learning are closely linked at the Impression 5 Science
Center. The museum features hands-on exhibits that introduce both adults and
youngsters to the physical and natural sciences. A bit more off-beat, the
Michigan Museum of Surveying offers a fascinating look at this specialized
field. Exhibits trace the development of surveying from its origins to the
modern use of digital equipment.
The campus of Michigan State University in East
Lansing is packed with worthwhile museums as well as happy stops for the
sports fan. Be sure to visit the Kresge Art Museum, where exhibits span the
globe and the history of man. The collections include African, ancient
Egyptian, Asian and Islamic arts as well as European, early American and
contemporary works. The MSU Museum has natural history exhibits -- dioramas,
dinosaurs, and much more -- on three floors. Star shows are presented at
Abrams Planetarium on the weekends.
Wharton Center for Performing Arts on the MSU campus offers Broadway
touring productions, top name jazz, classical and pop music performers, plus
special events and family shows. The Wharton encompasses the 2,500-seat
Great Hall and the 600-seat Pasant Theatre.
Baseball fans can attend Midwest League games played by the Lansing
Lugnuts, a Class A affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays. The Lugnuts play at
modern Oldsmobile Park, which opened in 1996 and boasts 10,000 seats and 26
luxury suites.
There may be some zoos that are larger, but few that are more beautiful
than Lansing's Potter
Park Zoo. Located in a large wooded park alongside the slow moving Red
Cedar River, the zoo houses more than 400 animals in natural habitats. You
could also spend an afternoon at the Fenner Nature Center walking through
maple forests and oak groves, past pine plantations and ponds. The center
has over 100 acres of greenery and five miles of nature trails. For more
outdoor exploration a little bit further east, Meridian Historical Village
in Okemos preserves a compendium of historic buildings relocated from other
rural areas. This look back to earlier times offers rarities such as a
tollgate house and a real log cabin.
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