Lansing Michigan: 12 Fun Facts

Greater Lansing, Michigan, Midwest Travel, USA Travel

Most people know Lansing is Michigan’s capital city and has an automotive heritage. But here are some fun details about Lansing that are sure to make you want to visit. In the meantime, these fun facts will come in handy at your next cocktail party, Trivial Pursuit game or Jeopardy challenge. If you live in Lansing, you may even be surprised by some of these.

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1. Centrally Located in Lansing, Michigan

Lansing is centrally located and within 90 minutes of 90% of the state’s population, so Lansing is not only a great place to explore on its own, but it’s also a fantastic base for day trips throughout the southern half of the lower peninsula. That’s a fun fact about Lansing, Michigan you can use to plan a fun day in Michigan. You can make a day trip to Grand Rapids or many west coast beach towns for a fun day at the beach. Detroit is another place to explore with museums and restaurants. The Saginaw, Bay City area is another excellent day trip. Get out your Michigan map and draw a circle of all the places within 90 minutes of Lansing, and you’ll be surprised all of Michigan you can explore with Lansing as a home base.

  • 1938 REO Speedwagon Fire Truck – ADOPTED through Jan 2024 by Chuck and Judy Wooderson 1938 REO Speedwagon Fire Truck
  • 1923 REO Speedwagon Flat Bed

2. Speed Demons

The 1980s band REO Speedwagon got its name and logo from the truck built in Lansing. You can check out a couple of versions of this truck at the RE Olds Transportation Museum, located in downtown Lansing. Another fun fact is it is the only Oldsmobile museum in the world.

Behind yellow “CAUTION” tape, the museum’s rear wall features a tribute to Lansing’s First Responders. The shiny red 1938 REO Speedwagon fire truck is on display. Other REO Speedwagons at the museum include the 1923 REO Speedwagon Flat Bed.

Michigan's State Capitol Building with the Lighted Christmas Tree - the fun fact about Lansing, Michigan is it is the only state capital that isn't also the county seat
Michigan’s State Capitol Building with the Lighted Christmas Tree

3. Capitol Building

Michigan’s state capitol building, located in Lansing, is the only state capitol building designated as a National Historic Landmark. Michigan is also the only state in the union that has a capital that’s not the county seat. Michigan’s capital is Lansing; however, the county seat is in Mason.

While officially Michigan’s Victorian-era capitol building is for government, it is as much an art installment as any art museum. With nine acres of hand-painted ceilings, walls, columns, and woodwork, artistic talents were at work in the construction. Look closely at the walnut woodwork and marble columns; most likely, you won’t be able to notice it’s painted pine and cast iron. Guided tours leave regularly from the Heritage Hall or request the booklet from the Information Desk and take a self-guided tour.

Boji Tower at Night - A fun fact about Lansing, Michigan
Lansing Michigan’s Tallest Building, Boji Tower

4. Tallest Building in Lansing Michigan

Boji Tower, the tallest building in Lansing, Michigan is 345 feet tall and 23 stories. Oldsmobile founder R.E. Olds financed the construction, initially called Olds Tower, completed in 1931. The building became the Michigan National Tower and has since been renamed Boji Tower for the building’s current owners.

5. Rare Black Rhinos

When it opened in 1920 as the Potter Park Zoological Garden, it was the first zoo in Michigan. Today, one of Lansing’s Potter Park Zoo’s primary goals is conservation. You don’t need to travel the world to see endangered species; you can find them at the local zoo.

The World Animal Foundation estimates that today’s worldwide black rhino population is over 6,000. Lansing’s Potter Park Zoo has two of these critically endangered black rhinos, a female, Doppsee and a male, Phineus. The zoo also had a male calf born in 2019, named Jaali, who has since moved to the Living Desert in California in 2021 to have a family of his own.

6. Famous Women from Lansing, Michigan

Another fun fact is, Rosie, the Riveter on the “We Can Do It” poster, promoted women working in manufacturing during World War II. The woman on that poster was Lansing resident Geraldine Doyle. To find out more about Geraldine and other women in Michigan history, visit the Michigan Women’s Historical Center & Hall of Fame. In 1983 the Michigan Women’s Studies Association created the Michigan Women’s Hall of Fame, and in 1987 they opened the Michigan Women’s Historical Center and Hall of Fame. It was the first U. S. museum to focus on women’s achievements, commonly referred to as “Herstory.” Admission is free.

7. Hands-On Science

The five, in Impression 5 Science Center, refers to the five senses and engages families with children from birth to age twelve with active elements accessible to various heights, abilities, and language comprehension. Hold the wand, wave it, and hear the bubble POP! at the Bubble exhibit. Explore the human mouth’s workings and our sense of taste at the Chew on This exhibit. Create a life-size light mosaic and see the color spectrum.

Impression 5 engages the whole family to stay together during their visit. In the hands-on Throwing Things exhibit, the entire family explores kinetic and potential energy. While pre-teens perfect their pitching arm, Dad helps the six-year-old build and experiment with paper airplanes. Mom and the three-year-old practice throwing in the Play Space.

Michigan History Center
Michigan Historical Center

8. Ancestral Travel

The Archives of Michigan, located inside the Michigan Library and Historical Center, contains one of the nation’s ten largest genealogy collections. That’s a fun fact about Lansing, Michigan! The Michigan Historical Center also has a museum dedicated to Michigan’s history. While you’re at the archives, be sure to check out the museum where you can’t have a Michigan historical museum without an exhibit about cars. The Michigan History Museum’s exhibition depicts the 1957 Detroit Auto Show, featuring a shiny red Corvette convertible and a beige and white Plymouth Fury.

Here are some more articles about Lansing, Michigan that you’ll want to check out:

9. MSU Cyclotron

The MSU Cyclotron was the world’s first and largest superconducting cyclotron. On November 25, 1981, it smashed its first atom. Nuclear physicists use cyclotrons to recreate the caldrons that exist within stars and result when stars die due to enormous explosions called supernovae. They also make tools like particle beams for cancer therapy.

A fun fact about the Broad Art Museum in East Lansing, Michigan
Broad Art Museum in East Lansing

10. Contemporary Art

The Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum contains no right angles. The accordion-pleated steel and glass of the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum is a contemporary art museum; the building itself is much a work of art as the exhibits inside. The displays regularly rotate, so every visit offers something new. The Broad shows a variety of art forms, including video, film, and live performances. Outdoor sculptures allow you to enjoy the art even when the museum isn’t open. The first Saturday each month is Family Day, where makers can create their art projects. Admission is free.

11. Botanical Garden

Located on Michigan State University’s campus, W. J. Beal Botanical Garden is the nation’s oldest continuously operating botanical garden. Situated on the five-acre grounds, you’ll find more than 5,000 plant species that you can explore for free.

12. Wild Goose Inn

If your visit takes you closer to East Lansing, you’ll want to stay at the Wild Goose Inn. The fun fact about Lansing, Michigan here is that Travel + Leisure named the Wild Goose Inn, one of America’s Top College Hotels. This inn has two buildings, one of which they built in the late 1800s, and is one of the oldest buildings in East Lansing.

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Amy Piper
Author: Amy Piper

While Piper is a lifelong Michigander, she’s had adventures worldwide. Bomb-sniffing dogs chased her in the middle of the night in Bogota (working late), gate agents refused her boarding to Paraguay (wrong visa), and US Marshals announced her seat number on a plane while looking for a murder suspect (she’d traded seats). It’s always an adventure! She even finds exciting activities in her home state of Michigan, where she lives in Lansing with her husband, Ross Dingman, her daughter, Alexis, and two granddaughters.

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8 Comments

  1. Jamie

    Interesting facts about Lansing – most of which I didn’t know so it was fun to read. I enjoyed learninga bout the Women’s historical Center and Hall of Fame, that’s somewhere I’d love to visit.

    Reply
    • Piper

      It’s definitely an interesting place to visit.

      Reply
  2. Michelle

    Who kneW THAT LANSING HAD SUCH AN INTERESTING AND DIVERSE HISTORY. I LOVE READING FACTS ABOUT PLACES. i FEEL LIKE IT REALLY ENHANCES YOUR EXPERIENCE WHEN YOU VISIT.

    Reply
    • Piper

      I agree fun facts really increases you appreciation of a place.

      Reply
  3. Courtney

    Wow! I never knew that Rosie the riveter is based on a real-life person! Super interesting part of history!

    Reply
  4. Ada

    I have family in Grand Rapids, but never made it over to lansing. The only thing I never knew about it was that it was the capitol of Michigan! Maybe I will need to swing by one of these times. I didn’t realize that Rosie the Riverter was a Michigander!

    Reply
  5. Pubali

    A lot of interesting facts of Lansing! I particularly liked the background about Women’s Historical Center and Hall of Fame.

    Reply
  6. Carol Nicholson

    The outside of the Art museum at Michigan State was also featured in the DC comic universe in a movie.

    Reply

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  1. Burgdorf’s Winery: Award-Winning Wine from a Garage - Follow The Piper - […] To find out more about the Greater Lansing area, check out Lansing, Michigan: 12 Fun Facts. […]
  2. Ludington, Michigan: How to Take a Fall Color Tour - Follow The Piper - […] Check out more Michigan content here! […]

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Welcome to Follow the Piper! Discover interesting destinations, and practical planning tips for packing more travel into your everyday life.

Our founder and author, Amy Piper, is a freelance travel writer, blogger, photographer, and author specializing in traveling through a food lens and multi-generational travel. She is a native Michigander who travels through the lens of a food lover and has been to 41 countries and 45 states.

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