is located on
Windmill Island. The city is perhaps best known for its
Dutch heritage, which serves not only as a part of the city's cultural identity, but the local economy as well: the Tulip Time Festival in May and various Dutch-themed attractions augment the nearby Lake Michigan shoreline in attracting thousands of tourists annually. Over 28% of the population identified as being of Dutch descent. The Holland Museum contains exhibits about the city's history. Another, the Cappon House Museum, was built in 1874 and is a historic
museum that once housed the first mayor of Holland, Dutch immigrant Isaac Cappon. The Settlers House Museum, a building that survived the great fire, contains furnishings and relics from the 19th century. Holland's downtown is listed in the
National Register of Historic Places. The "Snowmelt Project" established pipes transporting warm water from the nearby power plant to travel underneath downtown with the purpose of clearing the streets and sidewalks in the downtown area of any snow.
De Zwaan, an original 250-year-old Dutch windmill, is situated on
Windmill Island, a municipal park. Its height is with sails. Holland boasts an annual Fiesta, organized by Latin Americans United for Progress, usually on the Saturday closest to May 5 (
Cinco de Mayo). Holland is also host to the annual
Tulipanes Latino Art & Film Festival, which is held to celebrate the Latino contribution to the culture.
Religion Holland is known as the "City of Churches". There are around 140 churches in the greater Holland area, many of which are with the
Reformed Church in America and
Christian Reformed Church in North America denominations. The city is the home to the church that started the trend of the "
What Would Jesus Do?" bracelets in 1989.
Tourism Each May, Holland hosts an annual
Tulip Time Festival.
Tulip planting and the festival began in 1930 when 250,000 tulips were planted for the event. Currently six million tulips are used throughout the city. Tulips are planted along many city streets, in city parks and outside municipal buildings as well as at
tourist attractions like Dutch Village, the city-owned Windmill Island Gardens, and at a large tulip
farm named Veldheer Tulip Gardens. It is normally held the second week of May, during the tulip blooming season. Cruise ships such as the Yorktown from the Great Lakes Cruising Company make Holland a port of call. About one million tourists visit Tulip Time each year, for which the community finds innovative ways to enhance self-funded projects. The Tulip Time Festival has attracted big-name acts in recent years such as:
Christina Aguilera in 2000,
O-Town in 2001,
the Verve Pipe in 2004, and
Jars of Clay in 2006.
Ed McMahon visited Tulip Time in 2007 along with
Bobby Vinton. Comedian
Bill Cosby headlined the 2014 Tulip Time Festival. Comedian
Jay Leno performed the festival in 2018. Holland is located on
Lake Macatawa, near the shores of
Lake Michigan. Scattered along the shoreline are many public beach accesses including Tunnel Park and the widely popular
Holland State Park. Across the channel from the State Park is the
Holland Harbor Light, known as "Big Red". Smaller beaches along Lake Michigan are present but not well marked. Public accesses are frequent along dead-end streets bordering the shoreline. The city's primary shopping district is centered along 8th Street, the city's main street downtown. The 8th Street business district features a thermal snow-melting system which uses cooling water from the local electric plant. In 1988, the city rebuilt the entire street and sidewalk system, installing the thermal pipes underneath. The system will melt up to an inch an hour down to 15°.
Art • Holland Area Arts Council
Music • Holland Chorale, Holland's auditioned chorus, presenting a full concert season of fine choral music • Holland Symphony Orchestra, professional symphony orchestra conducted by Maestro Johannes Müller-Stosch ==Sports==