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The Grand Rapids metropolitan area is a triangular shaped region in West Michigan, anchored by the cities of Grand Rapids, Muskegon, and Holland. It includes eight counties and has a population of over 1.4 million people.
Learn about the 83 counties in the U.S. state of Michigan, their boundaries, names, origins, populations, and areas. Find links to census information, maps, and etymologies of each county.
West Michigan is a term for a region in the U.S. state of Michigan's Lower Peninsula, generally along the Lake Michigan shoreline. It has no official definition, but it includes cities like Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, and Holland, and it has various geography, culture, and economy features.
[9] [10] Through this area, the highway parallels a line of the Marquette Rail that runs north from Grand Rapids. [11] West of the county line, M-37 meets and merges with M-46 along Apple Avenue. The two highways separate at a roundabout junction where M-37 turns north on Newaygo Road. M-37 passes Half Moon Lake and through Bailey.
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on fr.wikipedia.org Modèle:Géolocalisation/Grand Rapids; Usage on ko.wikipedia.org 모듈:Location map/data/Michigan Grand Rapids
M-44 Connector, or Conn. M-44, is a 4.185-mile (6.735 km) connector route state trunkline highway running along Plainfield Avenue in the Grand Rapids area. [1] It connects I-96/M-37 near Lamberton Lake with M-44 running along East Beltline Avenue near the Grand River. In between, the highway passes through a commercial area.
Kent County is the fourth most populous county in Michigan, with its county seat in Grand Rapids. It is named for James Kent, a New York jurist and legal scholar, and has a rich history of fur trade, agriculture, and manufacturing.
Learn about the history and route of US 16, a former principal road in Michigan that was replaced by freeways and decommissioned in 1962. The web page covers the sections from Muskegon to Detroit, including Grand River Avenue, I-96, and I-196.