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Опубликовано: August 30, 2020 в 11:12 am

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Dexter KinderCare | Daycare, Preschool & Early Education in Dexter, MI

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Dexter KinderCare

Welcome to Dexter KinderCare

Welcome to Dexter KinderCare on Dexter Ann Harbor Road near Eaton Court! KinderCare classrooms are designed around your child’s unique needs, and our curriculum is built from the latest research in early childhood development. It’s our mission from the moment you walk into our center that you feel welcomed and a part of our KinderCare family. Everyone belongs in our KinderCare family!

Our classrooms are places to thrive! 
In our safe and healthy classrooms, your child will be engaged in learning experiences that meet them where they are, both socially and academically. With fun daily activities, passionate teachers, and great friends, a lifetime of confidence starts here. Contact the center director to learn more about our child care options and schedule a tour! 

  • Dexter KinderCare Programs
  • Our Teachers
  • Family Stories
  • FAQs

AMERICA’S MOST ACCREDITED

We’re so proud!

Nationally only 10% of daycares are accredited – nearly 100% of our learning centers are. That’s a big difference,
and that means KinderCare kids are getting the very best. Here’s why.

SCHOOL-READY

What Learning Looks Like

Our talented early-childhood teachers set kids down the path toward becoming lifelong learners in a positive, safe, and nurturing environment.

Dexter KinderCare Programs

Infant Programs (6 weeks–1 year)

Leaving your baby in someone else’s care is a big step. Everyone at our
centers—most importantly, our naturally gifted infant teachers—will work with
you to make sure the transition goes smoothly. When you step into our infant
classroom, you’ll see how much we want your infant to feel safe, loved, and
ready to explore their world.

Toddler Programs (1–2 Years)

Everything in our toddler classroom is designed for little explorers. That’s
because a lot is going on at this age. When your child is wandering all over the
place, that means they’re learning and discovering new things every day. We’ll
help them explore their interests (and find new ones!) as they play and learn.

Discovery Preschool Programs (2–3 Years)

This age is filled with so much wonder and curiosity. That’s why we offer a ton
of books and toys and bring artwork down to kids eye level. Children in
discovery preschool also begin to learn how we all work together in a
classroom. Simple math and science, pretend play, and group play help them
get used to a more structured school setting.

Preschool Programs (3–4 Years)

This age is all about expression, when kids really start to form their own ideas
about what they want to play and how they want to create. Every day in our
preschool classroom, your child will explore science experiments, create
artwork, and play pretend—all the skills needed for their big next step:
kindergarten!

Prekindergarten Programs (4–5 Years)

When you walk into one of our pre-K classrooms, you’ll see artwork and
writing displayed around the room. Labels are everywhere to help kids connect
letters with words. You’ll also see pictures on the walls that reflect the families
in our community. Your child will also deepen their knowledge in language,
math, science, Spanish, and social skills.

Before- and After-School Programs (5–12 Years)

You can count on us to provide reliable care for your school-ager while you’re
at work, with safe transportation from our center to your child’s school and
back! Whether your child wants to start a drama club, build a volcano, or
create a comic book, they will have a place to follow their dreams. Your child
will start and end the day with a whole lot of fun!

Our Teachers

We’re the only company in early childhood education to select teachers based on natural talent. Being a great educator isn’t enough though.
KinderCare teachers are also amazing listeners, nurturers, boo-boo fixers, and smile-makers. Put more simply,
we love our teachers and your child will, too.

Meet just a few of our amazing KinderCare teachers!

A KINDERCARE TEACHER WITH

An Artist’s Heart

“My classroom is full of art!” says Mary Annthipie-Bane, an award-winning early childhood educator at KinderCare. Art and creative expression, she says, help children discover who they really are.

We put our best-in-class teachers in a best-in-class workplace. We’re so proud to have been named one of Gallup’s 37 winners of the Great Workplace Award.
When you put great teachers in an engaging center, your children will experience
an amazing place to learn and grow.

Family Stories


Share Your Story


If you have a story about your experience at KinderCare,

please share your story with us
.

Who Are KinderCare Families?

They hail from hundreds of cities across the country from countless backgrounds, and proudly represent every walk in life. What our families have in common,
though, is the want to give their children the best start in life. We are so proud to be their partner in parenting.

Hear from just a few of our amazing KinderCare families.

A Globe-Trotting Family Finds A

Home in Houston

Four young children, four different passports, two languages, two full-time jobs…oh, and a few triathlons thrown in for good measure.
Meet the globe-trotting Colettas—a family on the go.

Frequently Asked Questions

What accreditations does KinderCare have?

We are your trusted caregiver. Our centers are state-licensed and regularly inspected to make sure everything meets or exceeds standards, including child-to-teacher ratios and safe facilities. Our centers aren’t just licensed—most are accredited, too! Find out more.

Do you offer part-time schedules at Dexter KinderCare?

Everybody’s schedule is different. We’re happy to offer quality, affordable part-time and full-time childcare. Drop-in care may also be available. Reach out to your Center Director to learn more.

How does naptime work at Dexter KinderCare?

Our teachers meet every child’s needs during naptime. Our teachers know how to get babies to nap. In fact, they are pros at getting children of any age to nap. Visit our article on “10 Ways We Help Kids Get a Great Daycare Nap” to learn more.

Do you support alternative diets?

We strive to be as inclusive as possible. To that point, we provide a vegetarian option at mealtime, take care to not serve common allergens and can adapt menus based on your child’s food sensitivities. If your child has additional needs, we’ll work with you to figure out a plan.

Are meals included in tuition? Can I choose to send my child with lunch?

We provide nutritious meals and snacks developed by a registered dietician to meet the needs of rapidly growing bodies and minds. If your child has special dietary requirements and you would prefer to bring in their lunch, please make arrangements with the center director.

Does my child need to be potty-trained?

Every child begins toilet learning at a different age. Until your child shows an interest in toilet learning, we’ll provide diaper changes on an as-needed basis. When your child shows an interest, we’ll discuss how to work together to encourage toilet learning.

Untitled Document

EDUCATION
EDUCACION

There are many opportunities for education geared toward and including the Latino population as they make their way into a new educational system.  The Ann Arbor Public School district, as of 2004, accounted for 16,274 total enrolled students, 20 elementary schools, 6 junior high schools, and 5 senior high schools.  The privileged students of this district enjoy a 16:1 student to teacher ratio with major emphasis on “early childhood education, mathematics, science, and technology” and also employs the ESL program for students transitioning into the English Language [1].   The city of Ann Arbor is well known as home to the prestigious University of Michigan and the University’s esteemed library is consistently ranked among the top ten libraries in the entire nation.  There are many Daycare services available to working parents which provide an early start on education and discovery for young and often bilingual children.

 

The following is a list of places offering English as a second language (ESL) programs and classes:

The Stone School, part of the Ann Arbor pubilc school system offers classes to adults 20 years or older. The classes meet five days a week for a total of 15 weeks. Classes begin in September and Janurary. Registration for these session takes approximately two hours and a green card or passport must be provided. The ESL classes offered at Stone School are free.

The ESL Center provides a collection of language exercises, grammar games, dictionaries, and many other tools that facilitate the learning process. The website provides links to a variety of local and state rescources such as the Michigan state department and an entertainment guide for the area.

The Koby Language Center located in Ann Arbor provides comprehensive English as a second language programs. In addition to regular ESL programs, the Koby center also offers intensive tracks of both academic and business english programs. Personalized English lessons can also be arranged on the individual or group level. The programs are offered in 4 week terms and class size is limited to 12 students. The facilities include a computer lab for computer assisted language learning.

Washtenaw Community College also offers an ESL program. The program is designed for adults and can be taken as an intensive track or on a one-at-a-time basis (non-intensive track). A placement test aids in determining each individuals proficiency level prior to class enrollment. In order to enroll in the program prospective students must apply to the college and then, once accepted, make an appointment for the ESL orientation.

 

The following list provides a variety of child-care options:

Pound House Children’s Center – 710 S. Forest, (734)-998-8440

Pound House provides both preschool and extended afternoon care for children ages 2 1/2 – 5. The program features a teacher to student ratio of 1:4. The cost of the program is $914 a month for regular hours (8am-5:30pm) and $508 a month for half day. There is a summer program available. Priority is given to University of Michigan employees and students.

Perry Nursery School of Ann Arbor – 3770 Packard, (734)-677-8130

The Perry Nursery School offers day care, preschool, and kindergarten for children ages 2 1/2 – 6 years of age. The program is available to low-income, single-parent families only. The program features a teacher to student ratio of 1:8. Costs are determined based on income.

Little Lamb Nursery and Kindergarten – 2794 Packard, (734)-971-4811

The Little Lamb Nursery and Kindergarten offers childcare for ages 6 weeks to 12 years. It also offers preschool and kindergarten for ages 2 1/2 – 5. Little Lamb is affiliated with Seventh-Day Adventist Church but provides non-denominational teaching. The program features a teacher to child ratio of 1:4-1:12. Costs are $175 a week for ages 2 1/2 and up and $210 a week for infants. Part-time and summer care is available.

Gretchen’s House VII – 1580 Dhu Varren, (734)-821-2800

Gretchen’s House VII offers child-care, full-day kindergarten, and before and after school care for children 3 months to 12 years. Full and part-time programs are available for preschool and kindergarten. The program boasts a teacher to child ratio of 1:3-1:10. Costs range from $162-$1432 a month, summer programs are available.

Community Day Care and Preschool – 1611 Westminster Place, (734)-761-7101

Community Day Care and Preschool houses both a preschool, regular school, and k-care programs. Parents must apply for admission, forms are located on the website. Also provided on the website is a sample daily schedule for both the preschool and the regular school. K-care is a kindergarten program in which children are encouraged to explore their environment in ways that are meaningful to them. They offer tuition on a sliding scale based on income, however, spots are limited.

Ann Arbor KinderCare –  2300 South Huron Parkway, (734)-971-6626

Ann Arbor KinderCare features Hooked on Phonics programs as well as infant, toddler, and preschool programs. KinderCare offers before and after school care. Children ages 6 weeks to 12 years are welcome. The center is open from 6:30am until 6:00pm Monday through Friday. To get information about tuition and openings, parents must complete an online information request form available on the website.

The following is a list of libraries in the area:

Ann Arbor Public Libraries – 343 South Fifth Avenue, (734) 327-4200

Ann Arbor public library provides free services to all residents living within the Ann Arbor school district and to others living outside that district for a fee. The library system holds over 425,000 materials – books, DVDs, compact discs, magazines, audio books and more. The library offers print and electronic reference resources, Internet access through the Library’s fiber-optic connection, state-of-the-art Wi-fi service, computer and Internet training, library exhibits, and several different events that take place throughout the year. There are three branches: Mallets Creek (3090 East Eisenhower Parkway (734) 327-5122 Ann Arbor, MI  48108-1913), West Branch (2713 Plymouth Road (734) 327-4588 Ann Arbor, MI 48105-2427), and Northeast Branch (2503 Jackson Avenue (734) 327-4200 Ann Arbor, MI 48103-3818.)

Washtenaw County Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled – 4135 Washtenaw, (734) 973–4350

The Washtenaw County Library for the blind and physically disabled provides free services for residents of Washtenaw, Jackson, and Livingston counties who are unable to read standard print materials. Books and magazines on cassettes and in Braille and large print are available by postage-free mail. Staff can assist with selections and answer requests. Reading machines available for on-site use. Free computer training by appointment. Book club. Mon.–Fri. 8:30 a.m.–5 p.m CITE

Chelsea District Library – 221 S. Main Street Chelsea, MI, (734) 475-8732

The mission of the Chelsea District Library is to provide equal access to quality resources that serve the lifelong cultural, educational and informational needs and interests of all people. The library offers accurate and diverse sources of information in a spacious, attractive, state-of-the-art facility with an excellent collection of books, periodicals, videos, DVD, CDs, audio-books, and online and CD-ROM databases. The library is open during the school year between 10am-9pm from Monday-Friday, 10-5 on Saturday and 1-5pm on Sunday. 

Dexter District Library – 8040 Fourth Street Dexter, MI, (734) 426-4477

The Dexter District Library offers services for patrons of all ages, including specialized services for younger children. The Dexter District Library provides a wealth of popular reading materials and reference materials for adults. The Dexter District Library is a member of The Library Network, a cooperative of over 55 member libraries in the Southeast Michigan area. Through membership, the Dexter District Library has access to the collections of other member libraries. The Dexter library has specialized services available for children including story time. In addition, we also have a collection of young adult favorites, such as Pokemon, The Magic Treehouse, The Babysitter’s Club and Goosebumps!

Ypsilanti District Library – 5577 Whittaker Road Ypsilanti, MI 48197, (734) 482-4110

Ypsilanti District Library offers a wide range of opportunities for people who wish to make a contribution to YDL through donations, sponsorships and partnerships. The staff at the YDL has put together a list of Internet search engines. If you have a search engine that you would like to share, please feel free to contact us. The Ypsilanti District Library provides access to a wide variety of databases, including full text magazine and newspaper databases and resources that concern specific subject areas such as business, health, education, computers, genealogy, and literature. All are available from within the library, and most can be accessed by YDL cardholders from outside the library as well.

 

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Ann Arbor KinderCare 2300 S Huron Pkwy, Ann Arbor, MI 48104

Hours

Regular Hours

Mon – Fri:
Sat – Sun Closed

Places Near Ann Arbor with Day Care Centers & Nurseries

  • Ypsilanti (9 miles)
  • Willow Run (10 miles)
  • Saline (12 miles)
  • Rawsonville (13 miles)
  • York (15 miles)

More Types of Child Care Services in Ann Arbor

Child Support CollectionsFoster Care AgenciesDiaper Service

More Info

Schedule a tour of your local KinderCare today!

General Info
Ann Arbor KinderCare located at 2300 S Huron Pkwy in Ann Arbor, MI is designed with your child’s fun, health, safety, and childhood education in mind.
Email
Email Business
Services/Products
Before and After School Care
Discovery Pre-School
Infant Programs
Participating Child Care Aware Center
Pre-Kindergarten
Pre-School
Summer Programs
Toddler Programs
Brands
Champions, KinderCare® Learning Centers
Payment method
check, discover
Location
1/4 mile S of Washtenaw
Neighborhood
South Ann Arbor
Languages
Arabic, English, French, German, Spanish
Other Link

https://www.kindercare.com/our-centers/ann-arbor/mi/301165

Categories

Day Care Centers & Nurseries, Child Care, Educational Services, Nursery Schools, Preschools & Kindergarten, Schools

Other Information

Services: Dentists

Specialties: Enrichment Programs: Cooking, Enrichment Programs: Music, Enrichment Programs: Phonics

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Phone: (734) 971-6626

Address: 2300 S Huron Pkwy, Ann Arbor, MI 48104

Website: https://www.kindercare.com/our-centers/ann-arbor/mi/301165

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Daycares near 1432 Washtenaw Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48104

Ann Arbor KinderCare 2300 S Huron Pkwy, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Childtime of Ann Arbor 4220 Plymouth Rd, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 Preschool
Dexter KinderCare 7220 Dexter Ann Arbor Rd, Dexter, MI 48130 Center
Everbrook Academy of Ann Arbor 2380 Oak Valley Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Moon Road KinderCare 7151 E Michigan Ave, Saline, MI 48176 Center
Aa Open School ESP Mack School 920 Miller Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Abbot ESP 2670 Sequoia Parkway, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Adventure Center 2111 Golfside, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Allen Creek Preschool 2350 Miller Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Allen Esp and Preschool Allen E S 2560 Towner Boulevard, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Always Unique Childcare,LTD. 9690 E. M-36, Whitmore Lake, MI 48189 Center
Angell ESP 1608 S University, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Angels Watching Over Us 1300 Prospect Rd, Ypsilanti, MI 48198 Preschool
Ann Arbor Christian School 5500 Whitmore Lake Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 Preschool
Ann Arbor Hills Child Development Center Old Bader School 2775 Bedford, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Ann Arbor Nursery 517 E. Washington, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Ann Arbor Preschool and Family Center 2775 Boardwalk, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Ann Arbor YMCA Child Care 400 W. Washington, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Annie’s Children Center – Saline 211 Monroe, Saline, MI 48176 Preschool
Annie’s Children’s Center – Oakwood 3220 Oakwood, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Annie’s Children’s Center – Park 5350 Park Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Annie’s Children’s Center Downtown 216 Beakes Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Bach ESP 600 W Jefferson, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Bates Elementary School Center 2704 Baker Road, Dexter, MI 48130 Preschool
Bemis Farms 77 Bemis Road, Saline, MI 48176 Preschool
Bemis Farms 2 – Childs 7300 Bemis Road, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Bosworth Preschool & Readiness Center 603 Longshore Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 Preschool
Bottles-N-Backpacks Child Development Center 2440 Clark Rd. , Ypsilanti, MI 48198 Preschool
Bryant ESP 2150 Santa Rosa Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Center
Burns Park ESP 1414 Wells, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Center
Carpenter ESP 4250 Central Boulevard, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Center
Central Academy 2459 S Industrial, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Children’s Creative Learning Center 5939 Saline Ann Arbor Rd., Saline, MI 48176 Preschool
Childrens Creative Center 1600 Pauline Boulevard, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Christian Montessori School of Ann Arbor 5225 Jackson Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Community Day Care Preschool Center 1611 Westminster, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Community SACC – AALC 3980 Research Park Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48108 Preschool
Community SACC – Burns Park Burns Park School 1414 Wells, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Center
Community SACC – Good Shepard 2145 Independence Blvd. , Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Center
Community SACC – Lawton 2250 South Seventh, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Center
Cornerstone Extended Day Care and AKCP 7480 Dan Hoey Road, Dexter, MI 48130 Center
Creekside Intermediate School Center 2615 Baker Rd., Dexter, MI 48130 Center
Daycroft Montessori Elementary 1095 Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Center
Daycroft Montessori Primary 100 E Oakbrook, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Dexter Community Education Preschool 3060 Kensington Street, Dexter, MI 48130 Preschool
Dexter Cooperative Nursery 7643 W Huron River Drive, Dexter, MI 48130 Preschool
Dicken ESP 2135 Runnymede, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Center
Discovery Center of Ann Arbor 775 S. Maple Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Dorothy’s Discovery Daycare II 7265 Merritt Rd, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Doughty Montessori School 416 S Ashley, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Eastern Washtenaw Muticultural Academy 5550 Platt Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48108 Preschool
Eberwhite ESP 800 Soule Boulevard, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Emerson School Child Care 5425 Scio Church Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Center
Emu Children’s Institute 103 Rackham Bldg., Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Erickson Elementary 1427 Levona, Ypsilanti, MI 48198 Center
Estabrook Elementary 1555 West Cross, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Center
First United Methodist Coop Nursery 120 S. State Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Fuller Hill Child Care Center 5251 Mcauley Dr., Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Generations Together 2801 Baker Road, Dexter, MI 48130 Preschool
Gingerbread House 1600 Textile Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48108 Preschool
Glacier Way Westside Co-op Nursery 900 S. Seventh Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Go Like The Wind Montessori School 3540 Dixboro Lane, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 Preschool
Grandmas Daycare and Preschool 2125 South Congress, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Green House Montessori School 3613 Green Brier Blvd., Ann Arbor, MI 48105 Preschool
Gretchen’s House – Dhu Varren 1580 Dhu Varren, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 Preschool
Gretchen’s House – Mount Pleasant 721 Mount Pleasant, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Gretchen’s House – Oak Valley 2340 Oak Valley Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Gretchen’s House – Stadium 1745 W. Stadium Boulevard, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Gretchen’s House – Traver 2625 Traver Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 Preschool
Gretchen’s House – Wisd Wash Int Sch Dist1819 Wagner Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Gretchen’s House Mount Vernon 700 Mount Vernon, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Gretchens House – Stadium 1735 W. Stadium Boulevard, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Haisley ESP 825 Duncan, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
High – Scope Demonstration Preschool 206 E Forest, Ypsilanti, MI 48198 Preschool
Honey Creek Community School 1735 S. Wagner Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Center
Humpty Dumpty Day Care I 1300 Washtenaw Road, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Humpty Dumpty Day Care II 1212 Washtenaw Road, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Huron Valley Catholic School 1300 N. Prospect Road, Ypsilanti, MI 48198 Preschool
It’s A Small World 8318 Carpenter Rd., Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Jellybean Daycare & Preschool 120 W. Willis, Saline, MI 48176 Preschool
Jewish Community Early Childhood Center 2935 Birch Hollow Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48108 Preschool
Joyland Learning Center 6420 Textile Road, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Jus Us Kidz 211 East Michigan Ave., Ypsilanti, MI 48198 Preschool
Just Us Club High Point 1735 S Wagner Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
K C Child Care Center – Whittaker 5435 Whittaker, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Kaleidoscope Child Care Center 1515 S. Harris Road, Ypsilanti, MI 48198 Preschool
Kids Garden 2626 Packard, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
King Care 3800 Waldenwood, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 Preschool
King Esp 3800 Waldenwood Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 Preschool
Kozy Heart 5443 Lohr Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48108 Preschool
Lakewood Esp 344 Gralake, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Lawton Esp 2250 S. Seventh, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Lil’ Saints Preschool 1200 N. Ann Arbor Street, Saline, MI 48176 Preschool
Lincoln Child Care Center 8635 Stony Creek, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 Preschool
Little Angels Preschool and Day Care 2801 Boardwalk, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Preschool
Little Blue Preschool 113 Eighth Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Little Folks Corner 4850 Dexter Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Preschool
Little Lamb Nursery & Kindergarten 2794 Packard Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48108 Preschool
Little Peoples University 2946 St Aubin, Ann Arbor, MI 48108 Preschool
Little Star 7265 Saline-ann Arbor Rd, Saline, MI 48176 Preschool

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  • From Ford WPC, Dearborn

    79 min

  • From Dearborn Engine and Fuel Tank Plant, Dearborn

    124 min

  • From Parklane Towers, Dearborn

    105 min

  • From Food Court – Fairlane Town Center, Dearborn

    88 min

  • From Henry Ford Fairlane Dialysis, Dearborn

    86 min

  • From ford fairlane plaza towers, Dearborn

    71 min

  • From Henry Ford College, Dearborn

    89 min

  • From Bus Stop – 125 Smartbus connection to 19 DDOT, Detroit

    39 min

  • From Fort Street & Schaefer Hwy, Detroit

    54 min

  • From Fairlane Town Center, Dearborn

    72 min

Bus stations near Kindercare Learning Center in Detroit – Ann Arbor, MI

Bus lines to Kindercare Learning Center in Detroit – Ann Arbor, MI

Line Name Direction
125 Metro Airport North Terminal VIEW

Questions & Answers

  • What are the closest stations to Kindercare Learning Center?

    The closest stations to Kindercare Learning Center are:

    • Eureka Rd + Harrison is 444 yards away, 6 min walk.

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  • Which Bus lines stop near Kindercare Learning Center?

    These Bus lines stop near Kindercare Learning Center: 125.

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  • How far is the bus stop from Kindercare Learning Center in Detroit – Ann Arbor, MI?

    The nearest bus stop to Kindercare Learning Center in Detroit – Ann Arbor, MI is a 6 min walk away.

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  • What’s the nearest bus stop to Kindercare Learning Center in Detroit – Ann Arbor, MI?

    The Eureka Rd + Harrison stop is the nearest one to Kindercare Learning Center in Detroit – Ann Arbor, MI.

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  • What time is the first Bus to Kindercare Learning Center in Detroit – Ann Arbor, MI?

    The 125 is the first Bus that goes to Kindercare Learning Center in Detroit – Ann Arbor, MI. It stops nearby at 5:26 AM.

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  • What time is the last Bus to Kindercare Learning Center in Detroit – Ann Arbor, MI?

    The 125 is the last Bus that goes to Kindercare Learning Center in Detroit – Ann Arbor, MI. It stops nearby at 11:27 PM.

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  • How much is the Bus fare to Kindercare Learning Center?

    The Bus fare to Kindercare Learning Center costs about $2. 00.

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Ann Arbor – Other Cities – National Research University Higher School of Economics

Oleg Alexandrovich Zamulin:

I would like to tell you about the American city of Ann Arbor, located in Michigan. But in the course of my story, from time to time I will compare this city with another, which also played a big role in my life and seems to me something similar to Ann Arbor, despite the geographical and cultural remoteness of these cities from each other – with Akademgorodok near Novosibirsk. I have lived in both of these cities for many years, and they seem to me the best environment to live in, especially if you work in the academic field.

I grew up in Akademgorodok and studied at school, although I was born in St. Petersburg: my father is from Siberia, and my mother is from St. Petersburg. After graduating from school, I went to America, where I studied first at the small Grinnell College in the town of the same name in Iowa, and then at the graduate school of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. And when I moved to Ann Arbor, where I lived for the next five years, this city very much reminded me of my native Akademgorodok.

I am writing about Akademgorodok (or simply Gorodok, as its residents call it for short) as a separate city, although formally it is part of Novosibirsk. Nevertheless, the inhabitants of Gorodok have little association with Novosibirsk: a completely common expression for them is “to go to Novosibirsk” or simply “to go to the city”. The town was built in 19The 50s as an attempt to move science to Siberia (as it turned out later, very successful), and from the very beginning the idea was to isolate it from the large industrial Novosibirsk, while leaving it in its agglomeration. Therefore, Akademgorodok was built about 25 kilometers south of Novosibirsk, and getting to it in Soviet times was a big adventure due to the badly functioning public transport.

Perhaps I did not have time to fully feel the whole academic life in Akademgorodok, because after school I no longer lived there, did not study and did not work. Nevertheless, I grew up in a community of scientists, and therefore absorbed this culture. Academgorodok is a completely unique atmosphere. A city built around a large number of research institutes and a university that is still one of the best in the country. Accordingly, I lived in this environment: both of my parents were employees of research institutes. My father was engaged in computer science, was a doctor of science, head of a laboratory at the Institute of Informatics Systems, and later headed a department at the Faculty of Information Technology of Novosibirsk State University. Mom still works at the Institute of Catalysis. Previously, she was a researcher, later she changed her occupation, and now she does a lot of work on organizing various conferences. I grew up with the firm conviction that I would also become a programmer, mathematician or something like that. For a long time I could not imagine working outside the scientific environment, since I did not see anything else around me. Since childhood, I considered the degree of candidate of sciences as a completed education. But when at the end of 19In the 80s, new times came, I realized that being a programmer was no longer interesting, and at the age of thirteen I decided that I wanted to become an economist, although I didn’t really imagine what that meant. And then, in connection with the numerous school exchanges that took place at that time between the USSR and the USA, the opportunity came up to enter an American college, and after school I immediately went to study in America. At that time, I didn’t have a clear plan of what to do with American education, but I was driven primarily by the same desire to learn and comprehend, which was instilled in me by the intellectual environment of Akademgorodok. I only knew that I was going to America for nine years, the goal is to get a PhD (my understanding of a completed education) and then return to Russia. And everything that I had to study in college, and then in graduate school, I looked from this point of view: how will I apply it when I return to Russia. I was not at all sure then that I would stay in the academic field – I thought about consulting, and about many other areas where I could work – but I knew for sure that I would return. During my stay in the USA, my plans for the future gradually became more concrete. Exactly nine years later, I defended my dissertation at the University of Michigan, after which, with a sense of mission accomplished, I went to the nearest transagency and asked for a one-way ticket to Moscow.

Why did I go to America, if the idea of ​​staying there did not occur to me either before leaving there, or during my stay there, or after returning? Again, I was driven by the desire to study, and I wanted to study the mysterious science of economics – and I intuitively understood that it was pointless to do this in Russia: neither the HSE nor the NES had yet existed. But I also understood that I would have to study not only at the desk – it would be necessary to delve into the alternative life and state structure of America, to learn to understand its advantages and disadvantages. In general, my parents and I made a decision, and I do not regret it. I think that living abroad for a few years and looking at the world from a different perspective is an invaluable experience in itself, not to mention the fact that I managed to get a truly first-class education.

In America, my first cities were the metropolis of Minneapolis (where I lived during my school exchange years, and then often visited during university holidays) and the very small town of Grinnell, where I studied undergraduate studies (with a break for a semester trip to Bonn, which also made an indelible impression on me. But I will not dwell on them, but will immediately move on to the main character of my story – the city of Ann Arbor, where I entered graduate school after graduating from college.

I walked the streets and I literally smelled like a university.

I came to Ann Arbor in the spring of 1996, first for a couple of days, just to look at the city, to get my bearings, to make the final decision about whether I would study here in graduate school. I walked the streets – and I literally smelled like a university. This is the effect of the proportionality of the city and the university: the university occupies such a large part of a small city, and also a central one, that it is often difficult to understand whether you are walking around the city or around the university. Everywhere people are clearly connected with the university: from all sides echoes of conversations on scientific topics reach you. Even fast food is called Einstein Bagels.

Ann Arbor was and remains a very famous and remarkable place for Russian humanitarian culture, especially for Slavists. However, I myself learned about this a little later than my arrival there. Entering graduate school, on the advice of my professor-mentor at the college, I compiled a list of good universities, applied to them, and then chose the best of those that accepted me. Geographical preferences played a very small role in this choice – it was more important for me to enter a good university. I knew very little about Ann Arbor, but when I had already entered and began to study, I also learned that Joseph Brodsky lived there, and that one of the first Russian-language editions of my favorite book Doctor Zhivago was published there. A lot of Russian literature was published by the Ardis publishing house. Moreover, there was such a funny moment. When – between Grinnell and Michigan – I lived in the summer of 1996 years old in Novosibirsk, my father held a traditional conference on informatics at his institute, and for one of the banquets he invited honored guests to our home. Upon learning that I had enrolled at the University of Michigan and that I was due to go there in a month, a Danish professor told me that he thought Ann Arbor was the most culturally rich campus in America. By that time I was not yet familiar with Ann Arbor, so I could not at all somehow respond to his words. After five years of living there, I understood well what that professor was talking about, although, of course, I can’t judge the absolute cultural superiority of Ann Arbor, since there are many beautiful university campuses in America. But the highly intellectual atmosphere of small Ann Arbor strongly reminded me of my native Akademgorodok, and I felt at home again. The organization of the city was painfully familiar: a population of about 100 thousand inhabitants (plus 35 thousand students), two university campuses, research institutes affiliated with the university, research offices of various companies, city parks (the city is very green) – all this created such an atmosphere , in which I really wanted to do science, I wanted to write a dissertation.

The university is huge, and, of course, Slavic studies, which I have already mentioned, are far from being the only strong and by no means the most important direction there, although the history of the University of Michigan began with the humanities: before other departments, the College of Literature and Arts was founded. The city grew around the university, and the engineering, medical and law schools became the center of life of the university shortly after its foundation. The toponyms of the central campus to this day keep the memory of how the university was organized more than a hundred years ago: there are still Western Engineering Hall and Eastern Engineering Hall, although the last engineer walked on these buildings many decades ago. The School of Engineering, once located on the central campus, has grown so much that a new, north campus has had to be built for it. One of the oldest faculties of the University of Michigan is medical, and here we cannot but mention the university clinic located in Ann Arbor. It is a truly cyclopean hospital in its size, a city within a city, and a huge number of various specialists work in its countless departments. However, when you get there for some of your medical needs, it turns out that the main building is just the tip of the iceberg, in fact, there are many more buildings belonging to the clinic scattered around the city, also quite large in size, and in each of these places – hundreds of medical workers. And although my graduate health insurance suggested that I could only seek medical attention at the University of Michigan Hospital, the size of the clinic, the variety of medical specialties represented in it, and the number of staff immediately dispelled my concerns about insurance conditions. However, it takes remarkable perseverance to break into this clinic: an outpost of therapists will be erected between patients and it, to whom it is necessary to turn for referrals to specific specialists and who see it as their sacred goal to burden doctors with visits to patients as little as possible. But if you manage to overdo such a Cerberus therapist and you get to a real doctor, then your problem will be found and solved in a matter of minutes. I have seen this from my own experience.

The city itself stimulates an active cultural and intellectual life: various public events, performances, lectures by famous people, seminars, conferences, concerts, performances. This is an integral part of university life. Although Ann Arbor itself is a small city and does not have its own famous theaters, nevertheless, famous musicians and artists often came to us on tour, including from Russia. I went to concerts of both Evgeny Kissin and Paco de Lucia. Famous performers, wonderful musicians were invited to Ann Arbor, whose concerts we went with friends with pleasure. Even Russian bards were frequent guests at our home concerts: I was at the performances of Lanzberg, Turiyansky, Dulov, Sukhanov at the house of my friends. I met a lot of interesting people in Ann Arbor. Firstly, these were the professors with whom I worked, and secondly, these are graduate students with whom I happened to study in parallel (not necessarily economists). It so happened that my main social circle was Russian-speaking graduate students. I had a lot of friends from Fiztekh – I spent most of my free time with them. They studied, of course, mainly in engineering programs. But there were friends from the Moscow Aviation Institute, from the Institute of Steel and Alloys, and from NSU. A good friend of mine was Artemy Magun, now Dean of the Department of Political Science and Sociology at the European University at St. Petersburg, and then a PhD student in the Department of Political Science at the University of Michigan. We had a tradition with friends: on Fridays we played volleyball with them, after which we went to the home of NES graduate Dima Davydov (it was he who told me about NES, later my first job, and it was thanks to him that I stayed in the academic world), ate fried potatoes and sang bard songs in chorus with the guitar until late. As usual in the intelligentsia of Russian techies, there is always a good guitarist in the company who knows by heart everything Okudzhava, Vizbor, Shcherbakov and so on. I knew this since childhood, because my parents and their friends always spent time in exactly the same way, and there was such a guitarist in the company of my parents in Akademgorodok, and in my own group of friends in Ann Arbor.

However, we tried to diversify our cultural apartment life and kitchen gatherings with Dima and his wife Sasha with poetry evenings and other themed evenings. For example, at some point in my third year we had a Pasternak evening. To do this, instead of a dissertation, I studied for a long time all the biographies of Pasternak that I found in the university library, studied his poems, and then at the same familiar kitchen table made a report based on what I had read, flavoring it with good Australian wine. Then, in hot pursuit, Anna Akhmatova’s evening was held in the same format, and the third topic was French wines, but here I was no longer the speaker.

Ann Arbor is a typical “one-story America”: most people live in private houses located quite far from the center in quiet areas.

Again, Ann Arbor reminds me of Akademgorodok. In Akademgorodok itself, there were no theaters either – to go to the theater you had to go to Novosibirsk, to the Opera and Ballet Theater or to drama theaters. Nevertheless, in Akademgorodok we often went on tour with famous people coming from other cities and countries. Even before I was born, at 1968, Alexander Galich performed as part of his only official concert in the USSR in the House of Scientists of Akademgorodok. When he sang his famous song in memory of Pasternak, the whole audience stood up, paused, and only after that did the applause go. My English teacher, who took her class to this concert, told us 20 years later that she didn’t know if she should have returned to school after this act, or if it was better to immediately write a statement “of her own free will.” One way or another, outstanding actors and musicians like to come to places with a highly intellectual environment, and Akademgorodok and Ann Arbor were full of this.

My main life, of course, revolved around the Department of Economics, where we held seminars and conferences. There I spent most of my time. But what I liked about Ann Arbor in this sense, as well as Akademgorodok, was that everything was always close. For me, this size of the city is optimal. I have been living in Moscow for 16 years, but I still can’t get used to its size: everything here is too far for me, too uncomfortable, too much time is spent getting from point A to point B. Of course, there is another extreme. I lived in Grinnell for four years. This is a small farming town in Iowa for ten thousand people, in the middle of which, like some kind of foreign body, our college was interspersed. Prestigious, liberal, radically different in culture and composition of people from the surrounding conservative city, which is an American outback, what is called the heartland. There were cornfields all around, everywhere you looked. You could leave the college, walk ten minutes… and cornfields to the horizon. But even for me, who loves small towns, this was already too much. But Akademgorodok and Ann Arbor, which looks like it, are another matter. On the one hand, cities are big enough to be teeming with life, on the other hand, they are small enough to have everything within walking distance. And if not on foot, then any point is easily accessible by public transport or bicycle. Due to the fact that a free university bus runs between the central and northern campuses of the university, the transfer between them takes no more than 15 minutes. I wanted to go somewhere after a lecture at the university – for example, to the same performance – please: all this is a ten minute walk. Cultural life was concentrated in the university area or in the downtown area (also a 10-minute walk). Downtown in cities like Ann Arbor means a place where the houses are three or four stories high, not fifty, like in New York or Chicago. In Ann Arbor, of course, there were several tall buildings – fifteen or twenty stories – but they stood alone, like some kind of local dominant. There were dormitories of this height, some residential buildings near the university, but they did not create the main feeling of the city. The city remained low, green, and everything in it was easily accessible.

It seems to me that the most important thing in any city is that it is pleasant to walk around this city. What bothers me about Moscow (although now, thank God, this has begun to change) is that it is impossible to walk around it. Because of cars, because of narrow sidewalks, because of eclecticism, because of distances. But it’s much more pleasant to walk around small cities, quiet cities: you can feel the atmosphere of this city. For me, as a child, it was possible to go skiing just by leaving the house: the forest was nearby, a two-minute walk away. But at the same time, I must admit that from a tourist point of view, both Akademgorodok and Ann Arbor are of little value. I grew up in Akademgorodok and always thought it was a great place to live. But when I tried to show it to my friends from other cities, I was horrified to understand that they had nothing special to show: for any person who comes to Akademgorodok, this is just a sleeping area. Yes, there is a lot of greenery there, but besides that, Khrushchev houses are just standing in rows – there is, in general, nothing to look at. Yes, there is Maltsev Street, which is unusual for Russia, where cottages of academicians stand in the forest. I always liked to walk along it: you can walk for ten minutes and not a single car will pass by. But as a tourist attraction, few people will be impressed. Academgorodok is not a city for tourists, but for life: the proximity of everything, and clean air, and an intellectual environment, and a lot of greenery, and silence. There is no constant noise, tense rhythm, running around. Like Ann Arbor, the environment is optimal for scientists who often need to sit and think about their research questions. And take a walk in the forest – maybe some smart thought will visit you. It seems to me that such small towns are the best for science and education. It is no coincidence that in America many universities are located not in large cities, but in such suburbs or individual small towns.

I’m talking about similarities between Ann Arbor and Akademgorodok, but of course there are differences. In my case, the differences were at least in the fact that I grew up in Akademgorodok in the Soviet era, and the Soviet Union and America are still quite different countries. Therefore, naturally, the organization of public life was quite different. Even if we take the use of personal vehicles, then in Akademgorodok it was possible to travel by bus, because nothing else was implied, but in Ann Arbor it was quite difficult to get anywhere without a car. Within the campus, of course, it’s easy, but, for example, in my second year, I lived quite far from the campus and traveled to the university by car. Then, however, I moved closer and rode a free university bus, which quickly took me to the right place.

And, of course, the main external difference is the architectural appearance of the city. Ann Arbor is a typical “one-story America”: most people live in private houses located quite far from the center in quiet areas. Cottages were also built in Akademgorodok for the first academicians, with a special street set aside for them – I have already written about this. However, for the most part, Gorodok is a typical Soviet city, where in the old part people live in four- or five-story Khrushchevs, and in the newer part there is already a forest of panel nine-story buildings behind which you can not see the trees. Now the Gorodok is being built up with taller buildings, which causes indignation of many old-timers.

True, for the sake of justice, it must be said that there is something in Ann Arbor that is not at all in Akademgorodok. The central campus of the University of Michigan boasts a real architectural masterpiece: this is the law school building, called the Law Quadrangle because of its shape, colloquially – Law Quad. Law Quad is really very beautiful. On the Internet you can see many photos of this monument of neo-Gothic architecture and the magnificent interiors of the library located in it. One of my university friends admitted that when he has to walk through the inner territory of Law Quad, he chooses the longest possible trajectory in order to enjoy the beauty of its buildings longer.

Of course, speaking of these two cities, it’s hard not to finally compare purely academic aspects: after all, both cities are university cities. And higher education in Russia and in America is built very differently. It is clear that there is a big gap in the level of training of economists between our and American universities, although now it has narrowed, primarily due to such universities as the National Research University Higher School of Economics and NES. But in terms of the level of requirements for a dissertation, we are, unfortunately, still far from the same Michigan, not to mention the top five economic departments. But, it seems to me, the differences in the very approaches to the organization of education are more interesting, and first of all, the differences between undergraduate and graduate / postgraduate studies. The college where I went to taught economics at a much simpler level than at the graduate school at the University of Michigan and even than at the undergraduate level at the Higher School of Economics. And this is a conscious policy. Since undergraduate economics is taught not only to those who go into science or economics in general, it is taught in such a way that it is interesting and useful to everyone. Less theory, more applied aspects and breadth of education, humanitarian aspects. Therefore, for those people who go from undergraduate to graduate school, the first year of study often comes as a shock. Immediately comes a powerful mathematical theory, for which graduate students are not ready. For me, all this was very difficult and unexpected. When I went to graduate school after college, I, as it turned out, had absolutely no idea what economics was in its full form. I realized this only in the first year of graduate school. Postgraduate studies in the United States include two parts – two years of master’s studies, and then the actual research part. These first two years were especially difficult for me, because I was psychologically unprepared for such a mathematical education in economics. At the college where I studied – and it is considered quite prestigious – we were not given many formal models, we taught economics in a much more liberal way. But, as it became clear over time, this also had its own logic, even for those graduates who, like me, went further into science.

This approach helps to form an intuition of economic models and to understand the subject broadly, helps to learn to ask better questions. Actually, in my senior years, I saw that graduate students, who were much better prepared mathematically than others, often coped well with the term paper, but then could not write a dissertation because they did not know how to ask an interesting economically meaningful question. They could solve the task, but could not formulate their own. And this is the most important task facing the graduate student. When I started my dissertation, no one set a task for me – I had to set a task for myself. If a graduate student investigates a question that someone else puts to him, then this is not a graduate student – this is just a performer, a research assistant. Many of my friends never formulated the topic and were forced to leave graduate school after several years of effort. I think it was the humanitarian perspective on economics that I was helped to develop in college that allowed me to eventually formulate an interesting dissertation topic. That is why it is fundamentally important to develop both hemispheres of the brain: to have a general humanitarian understanding of the world and to have technical modeling skills.

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      Attractions

      University of Michigan Stadium

      1201 Main St

      3. 2 km N from the hotel

      Ann Arbor Hands on Museum

      220 E Ann St, Ann Arbor

      5.1 km N from the hotel

      290 Hill Auditorium

      825 N University Ave

      4.5 km n from the hotel

      Matthaei Botanical Gardens

      1800 N Dixboro RD

      12.7 km Ne from the hotel

      Michigan Theater

      603 e liberety St. N from hotel

      Kerrytown District

      407 N 5th Ave

      5.6 km N from hotel

      State Street District

      527 E Liberty St #210

      5.0 km N from hotel

      90 Museum of Michigan0029 University of Art0029 525 S STETE ST

      4.2 km n from the hotel

      Gallup Park

      3000 Fuller RD

      6.6 km NE from the hotel

      Nichore Arboretum

      1610 Washington Heights

      6.6 Km S.

      Briarwood Mall

      100 BRIARWOOD CIR

      1.1 km W from the hotel

      Leslie Science and Nature Center

      1831 Traver RD

      7.7 km N from the hotel

      The Ark

      1831 Traver RD 5. N from the hotel

      The Petting Farm at Domino’s Farms

      3001 EARART RD

      13.2 km n from the hotel

      COBLESTONE FARM

      2781 PACKARD

      2.4 km of the Hotel

      9 Hude MILDS 8801 N Territorial Road

      24.3 km NW from Hotel

      Law Quadrangle

      625 S State St

      4.0 km N from Hotel

      The Creature Conservatory

      4950 Ann Arbor-Saline Rd

      km from Hotel SW4

      Yost Ice Arena

      1116 S State St

      3.4 km N from the hotel

      BAKE! Zingerman’s Bakehouse

      3723 Plaza Drive

      2. 3 km SW from the hotel

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      Decode Ann Arbor

      7.6 km

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      5.1 km

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      Hotel location: 22.5 km E

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      Ann Arbor: How to get around in the city

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          Ann Arbor Attractions

          Contents

          • What to see in Michigan
          • Michigan State Capital Restaurants
          • What hotels can you stay in

              • Sources

          Ann Arbor is a city located in the U.S. state of Michigan and is the county seat of Washtenaw County. According to the 2000 census, the city is the seventh largest city in the state in terms of total population. The population of the city was 115 thousand people. Ann Arbor is widely known as the city in which the main campus of the University of Michigan is located, which was moved here from Detroit in 1837. The city of Ann Arbor is also home to the Detroit Observatory.

          The city was founded in 1824 by land speculators John Allen and Elish Ramsay after they bought 640 acres of oak forest from the state for $800. On May 25, 1824, the Ann Arbor platform was registered here. The name symbolized the toponym that was used at the beginning of the city’s history. There are various opinions about the origin of the name of the city. But the researchers found that the founders of the city named this place after their wives, both of whom were called Ann.

          In the landscape of this city, splendor and arrogance of the streets alternate. The city is adorned with a view of the Burton Memorial Tower and several buildings of the largest University of Michigan.

          Ann Arbor was a Washtenaw County settlement in 1827, and was later converted to a rural settlement in 1833. And the Ann Arbor Land speculator group bought about 40 acres of uncultivated land in the area, which later became part of the city.

          After the university moved here, the history of the city was closely intertwined with the life of the university. This city became a major regional transport hub in 1839.year after the opening of the Michigan Central Railroad. And already in 1878, the railway to the south and north connected Ann Arbor with the city of Toledo and many other cities. In the period between the forties and fifties of the 19th century, many settlers arrived in these places. Most of them were immigrants of English origin. And in 1851, Ann Arbor received the official status of a city. A slight decline in the influx of population occurred during the economic crisis that occurred in 1873. In the early eighties 19century, the population of the city began to grow again due to new immigrants from Russia, Greece, Poland and Italy. At the same time, there was a significant growth in the entire urban industry, in particular milling.

          In 1956, the townspeople voted to unite the adjacent territories into a large urban agglomeration with the same name Ann Arbor.

          In recent years, the densification of urban development has led to a sharp increase in the cost of luxury housing, and increased urban development areas, absorbing the surrounding countryside. On November 4, 2003, the so-called “green belt” plan was approved at a citywide referendum. The city authorities have acquired land next to adjacent areas of promising construction for their conservation. Since then, there have been fierce discussions about the reasonable limits for the growth of the city. Each year, a list is published by various media that ranks the “best places to live” in America. So in 2008, Ann Arbor was ranked 27th out of 100 “America’s Best Small Towns”.

          The location of Ann Arbor is very favorable for growing various crops. Valleys and hills are the main landscape around the large Huron River, and the landscape becomes flat near the river. The height of the nearest hills is about 230 meters. Many city blocks in which the northern building of the university is located. The city airport is located in the southern part of the city.

          Michigan attracts everyone with its beautiful nature. And this cannot be surprising, because this state is the owner of the territory where the Great Lakes are located today. In addition to them, more than twelve thousand different lakes and reservoirs can be counted in the state. In addition, many cities in Michigan are famous for their stunning natural parks, as well as for the forests that surround these cities. But nature is far from the only plus that the Earth has endowed this state with. Here you can also find a lot of interesting sights that will appeal to tourists.

          What to see in Michigan

          New Jersey is an amazing state, where in every city you can find a lot of the most interesting things that can only be in the United States of America. Head to the largest city in the state – Detroit, and there you can visit one of the four major casinos in the city. Also, shopping is very well developed here, so you can buy a lot of different amazing things here.

          In Ann Arbor, you can visit the famous University of Michigan. And here you can find amazingly beautiful nature. After all, the city itself stands on the Huron River, which has practically not been touched by civilization and industry, which is common in Detroit. A beautiful river will allow the tourist to feel alone with nature. Compare with the weather in Minnesota.

          In addition to cities, you can go to the Great Lakes, which attract a large number of tourists from all over the world with their grandeur. Here you can not only contemplate the beautiful nature and breathe in amazingly clean air, but also go in for sailing. And fishing lovers will be able to enjoy and relax while sitting in a boat and riding on the waves of the lake.

          Young children will also be happy to know that the state has a large number of entertainment centers, such as all kinds of zoos, amusement parks and aquariums.

          Michigan State Capital Restaurants

          In Detroit, you can find a fairly large selection of various restaurants and cafes. Here you can find restaurants that cook American cuisine, you can find establishments that specialize in cooking vegetarian cuisine, and many, many others.

          You can find delicious sandwiches as well as various European dishes at Café Cadeux. The cost of lunch in this institution will be about twenty-four dollars. The Green Dot Stables restaurant has also gained a good reputation among Detroit tourists. The restaurant prepares unique American cuisine. Other dishes of European cuisine can also be offered here. The cost of dinner in such an institution can reach twenty-three dollars.

          Sora Jepenis Retron will appeal to those people who cannot live without sushi and any other Japanese food. However, the prices here are quite high. For one lunch, you will have to pay about forty-nine dollars. Delicious steaks can be enjoyed at Michael Simons Rost Restaurant for eighty dollars.

          What hotels can you stay in

          In Michigan, as well as in other US states with a sufficient number of tourists, there cannot be few hotels and hotels. Here you can find hotels of various numbers of stars, and each tourist, depending on his wishes and requirements, will be able to find the hotel that suits his taste.

          In many hotels in Detroit, even in two-star hotels, you will be offered free Wi-Fi, satellite TVs and much more. Among these two-star hotels, you can stay at the Detroit Regency Hotel.

          Three-star hotels offer better and more versatile services when booking rooms. At the Inn on Ferry Street, in addition to the usual Wi-Fi Internet, you can use a comfortable bathroom, as well as a comfortable hall for guests. A breakfast buffet is also served here every morning.

          Among the four-star hotels, you should choose The Westin Detroit Metropolitan Airport, which, in addition to all the above services, also provides the opportunity to relax in the sauna or get a spa massage.

          The state is quite large by the standards of the United States of America, but there are no five-star hotels here, and the four-star MGM Grand Detroit is the most expensive and largest hotel in the State of New Jersey.

          Sources
          • https://www.first-americans.spb.ru/enn-arbor-raspolozhennyj-v-state-michigan/
          • http://great-travel.ru/usa-states/2091-shtat-michigan-ssha.html

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      University of Michigan – North Campus | Walk 30 min

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      Ann Arbor

      Ann Arbor is the ultimate college town, with cool arts and culture, exciting sports activities and a lively atmosphere

      Ann Arbor is classic American student city: lively, fun and charming. Join the University of Michigan’s vibrant student body, visit world-class museums and galleries on campus, and cheer on the home team at The Big House. Head downtown to shop on Main Street or explore the quirky shops and cobbled streets of historic Kerrytown. Bathe in a friendly Midwestern atmosphere at every turn. Discover amazing food at a variety of restaurants in the city and listen to live music. Wonderful nature will help you relax in an atmosphere of peace.

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      Climate: Ann Arbor – Climate graph, Temperature graph, Climate table

      Ann Arbor are in the northern hemisphere.

      Summer starts here at the end of June and ends in September. There are the months of summer: June, July, August, September.

      The best time to visit are July.

      The month with the highest relative humidity is December (74.00 %). The month with the lowest relative humidity is April (64.52 %).

      The month with the most rainy days is May (12.77 days). The month with the lowest number is February (8.30 days).

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      • climate graph

      • >>Ann Arbor Climate graph
      • >>Ann Arbor temperature graph
      • >> 14 day weather forecast Ann Arbor

      In Ann Arbor, the climate is cold and temperate. The rainfall in Ann Arbor is significant, with precipitation even during the driest month. The climate here is classified as Dfa by the Köppen-Geiger system. The average annual temperature is 9.5 °C in Ann Arbor. The average rainfall per year is 945 mm.


      Climate chart for Ann Arbor

      The driest month is February with 59 mm. In May, the rainfall reaches its peak, with an average of 104 mm |

      Temperature graph Ann Arbor

      The warmest month of the year is July with an average temperature of 22.6 °C. At -4.6 °C on average, January is the coldest month of the year.




      Climate chart for Ann Arbor

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      Medium temperature (°C) minimum temperature (°C) maximum temperature (°C) Precipitation rate (mm) Humidity (%) Rainy days (D) day length (hours)
      January -4. 6 -7.9 -0.4 65 73% 8 4.0
      February -3.6 -7.5 1.3 59 69% 6 5.0
      March 1.6 -2.6 7.1 67 66% 8 7.0
      April 8.4 3.6 14.3 96 65% 8 8.0
      May 15 10.3 20.5 104 66% 10 10.0
      June 20.2 15.6 25.2 97 67% 8 11.0
      July 22.6 17.9 27.5 88 66% 8 11.0
      August 21. 6 17.3 26.3 89 69% 8 10.0
      September 18.1 13.9 23 72 68% 7 8.0
      October 11.2 7.6 15.8 73 70% 7 6.0
      November 4.6 1.5 8.6 70 74% 7 5.0
      December -1.4 -4.2 2 65 74% 8 4.0
      January February March April May June July August September October November December
      Average temperature (°C) -4. 6 -3.6 1.6 8.4 fifteen 20.2 22.6 21.6 18.1 11.2 4.6 -1.4
      minimum temperature (°C) -7.9 -7.5 -2.6 3.6 10.3 15.6 17.9 17.3 13.9 7.6 1.5 -4.2
      maximum temperature (°C) -0.4 1.3 7.1 14.3 20.5 25.2 27.5 26.3 23 15.8 8.6 2
      Precipitation rate (mm) 65 59 67 96 104 97 88 89 72 73 70 65
      Humidity (%) 73% 69% 66% 65% 66% 67% 66% 69% 68% 70% 74% 74%
      Rainy days (D) 8 6 7 8 10 8 8 8 7 6 7 7
      day length (hours) 3. 8 4.9 6.7 8.3 9.6 10.7 11.1 9.6 8.1 6.4 5.1 3.6

      Data: 1991 – 2021 minimum temperature (°C), maximum temperature (°C), Precipitation (mm), Humidity, Rainy days.
      Data: 1999 – 2019: day length

      The difference between the amount of precipitation, between the driest and the wettest month is 45 mm. The change in the average annual temperature is about 27.2 °C. Useful tips about reading the climate table: For each month, you will find data on precipitation (mm), average, maximum and minimum temperatures (in degrees Celsius and Fahrenheit). The value of the first line: (1) January (2) February (3) March (4) April (5) May, (6) June (7) July (8) August (9) September, (10) October (11) November (12) December.



      Ann Arbor in February

      Ann Arbor in March

      Ann Arbor in April

      Ann Arbor in May

      Arbor in June

      Ann Arbor in July

      Ann Arbor in August

      Ann Arbor in September

      Ann Arbor in October

      Ann Arbor in November

      Ann Arbor in December

      Ann Arbor in December0005

      Ann Arbor Sundial

      • average hours of sunshine
      • Total hours of sunshine

      In Ann Arbor, the month with most sunshine per day is July, with an average of 11. 09 hours of sunshine. There are 343.83 hours of sunshine in July.

      The month with least sunshine per day in Ann Arbor is January, with an average of 3.58 hours per day. There are a total of 111.05 hours of sunshine in January.

      In Ann Arbor there are about 2681.79 during the yearhours of sunshine. On average, there are 88.02 hours of sunshine per month.


      Airports near: Ann Arbor

      The nearest airports to Ann Arbor are: Detroit (airport) (DTW) 31.61km, (TOL) 75.39km, (FNT) 78.46km

      You can get to Ann Arbor from these cities by plane: London (LHR), Baltimore (BWI), Paris (CDG), Cleveland (CLE), Green Bay (GRB), Beijing (PEK), Dallas (DFW), San Francisco (SFO), San Antonio (SAT), Frankfurt am Main (FRA), Houston (IAH), New Orleans (MSY), Seattle (SEA), Madison (MSN), Cancun (CUN), Sao Paulo (GRU), Las Vegas (LAS), Pittsburgh (PIT), Charleston (CHS), Nashville (BNA)
      San Juan (SJU), Hartford (BDL), Erie (ERI), New York (LGA), Mexico City (MEX), Orlando (SFB), Nassau (NAS), Salt Lake City (SLC), Phoenix ( PHX), Denver (DEN), Omaha (OMA), Minneapolis (MSP), St.