You’re going where? Going to Ann Arbor
A- SQUARED, as locals call it, is a city on the cusp, like a student ready to graduate from classroom to cubicle. The mellow cousin to bigger, burlier Detroit - 50 miles to the east - Ann Arbor is the birthplace of Students for a Democratic Society and home of the annual Hash Bash. The Michigan burg’s blend of old- school and new, small-town and city, makes for constant contrasts. Not far from a stretch of solar-powered parking meters, chickens strut about the front yard of an old house with timber framework. Its lawn, awash in tiny blue squills, ends where new condominium construction begins. On a nearby corner, parents and toddlers line up outside an ice- cream shop where the flavours include blackberry Riesling, Vietnamese cinnamon and basil vanilla. While they wait, a caped man pedals past on a BMX bicycle, drumsticks in hand, beating a rhythm on the handlebars and singing “Give Peace a Chance.” Here, in the home of one of the country’s topranked public universities, just visiting is a double major in the classics and modernism.
Ann Arbor is the birthplace of Students for a Democratic Society and home of the annual Hash Bash.
Go
• In late May and early June, Nichols Arboretum bursts into a swoon-worthy display of 300 peony plants. The annual pastel pageant - first opened to the public in 1927 - is North America’s largest public display of heirloom peonies. Visitors circulate among the ruffled blooms with a sort of reverence, appearing to bow as they bend to breathe in the sweet scent. Although the sprawling University of Michigan medical complex is close by, a visit to this 100-plus- acre tract of meadow, prairie, woods and gardens seems a natural prescription for good health.
• The Argo Canoe Livery offers the chance to fulfil my physicaleducation requirement, which is necessary after a weekend course of cafes, bars and bakeries. In season, the livery rents canoes, kayaks, rafts, tubes and standup paddleboards for use in the Huron River and Argo Pond. Hiking the linear, 22-acre park brings glimpses of wildflowers, waterfowl and happily wet dogs.
• The Ark lobby smells of popcorn and its hallways are a photographic gallery of greats who have played this intimate club that evokes Ann Arbor’s folkie roots. We sit just 10 feet from the stage for the Ben Daniels Band. ( Ben is the son of actor Jeff Daniels, who lives and runs a regional theater company 22 miles west in Chelsea.) “Welcome to the best listening room in North America,” a staffer says as the house lights go down. Ken Yates opens the show, which includes an easy backand-forth with the audience. Since 1965 (and through three locations), this non-profit house - supported by members, donors and volunteers - has welcomed the likes of Pete Seeger, Joan Baez and Arlo Guthrie.
• Steps away from the Gothic beauty of the UM Law Quadrangle and Frisbee-tossing students are the bronze doors of the pillared main entrance to the UM Museum of Art. The museum, which underwent a major expansion and restoration in 2009, is one of the oldest university collections in the country. Among its wideranging holdings is a significant collection of Central African pieces. In the airy Grand Hall, I’m struck by a large-format painting that hangs in poignant contrast to the surrounding context of higher learning. “The Attack on an Emigrant Train,” an 1856 work by Charles Ferdinand Wimar, depicts a violent clash between Native Americans and pioneers - a stillrelevant history lesson in oil.
Eat • Spencer owners Abby Olitzky, a San Francisco native, and Steve Hall, a local, offer a seasonal menu and a small wine-andcheese pantry that is like a highquality home kitchen. Arriving between lunch and dinner, we opted for chardonnay and a shared ploughman’s lunch board of cheese and charcuterie. I make a note to return for the more substantial menu items, such as rainbow trout with fennel salsa verde and chrysanthemum panna cotta. In summer months, Spencer supplies takeout picnic baskets. • The parking lot of Knight’s Steakhouse begins filling up before 5pm. The Knight family’s food business dates to the 1952 opening of a small Ann Arbor market, which still operates in its original location. The steakhouse interior reflects the year it opened (1984), and oversize photographs depicting UM sports venues leave no doubt that you’re in “Go Blue” territory. Old- school is the rule, and seeing cottage cheese on the menu as a side dish is somehow deeply comforting. As I crunch an iceberg wedge with chopped bacon and blue cheese, I admire passing plates of steaks and French- dip sandwiches - along with Knight’s trademark stiff drinks. • The Last Word Bar’s cultivated air of mystery begins with the lack of a sign. Only a subtle wall plaque and red entry door mark the spot. The dark, below- streetlevel interior also lends a cloak of privacy. I’m a wine drinker, but a concoction called the Heist - gin, amaro, fresh lemon and honey syrup - was refreshing after a day of wandering. The food here is an unexpected treat. The tapenade trio and harissa-spiced lamb sliders are a sophisticated departure from typical bar fare. Look for live house jazz on Thursday nights.
Shop
• Jazz sets a cool vibe while about two- dozen shoppers - from backpackers to graybeards - flip through albums at Encore Records. Amid the customer questions about this or that recording, I overhear a conversation about the Oxford comma. This space has been a record shop since the 1960s and has operated under the name of Encore since the late ‘ 80s. Rolling Stone magazine named it a top-25 US record store in 2010; parts of “Standing in the Shadows of Motown” were filmed here. Groups playing Ann Arbor stop by - most recently, the Jayhawks.
• I’m admiring the sock display at Sam’s when a man walks in and runs his hand along a pair of pinwale corduroy Levi’s and says with a hint of reverence, “They still make these?” Sales clerk Lauren Hauser says people mostly come in for the jeans, including classic 501 Levi’s. A wide selection of Converse All Stars (Chucks) is also a draw. Sam’s, in business since 1946, wears its throwback status proudly. Beside a display case of Swiss Army knives and Timex watches, Hauser mans an old- school cash register. “We even have US$ 2 bills,” she says, “because we still have a slot for that.”
Stay
• Mathematical equations scrawled in chalk on lobby columns briefly give me solvingfor-X flashbacks at The Graduate Ann Arbor Hotel, where the Midwestern university decor is anything but minimal. In appearance, academics are part of the equation. Look up, and there is bookshelf-patterned wallpaper on the ceiling. Walls at check-in are panelled in wooden yardsticks. Inside the main-floor Allen Rumsey Supper Club (named for Ann Arbor’s founders), an intimate eightseat bar invites conversation, and we find ourselves chatting about the US Olympic ski team. Sports is an apt topic here, where vintage athletic photos include a Michigan-uniformed Gerald Ford, who graduated from Wolverines football MVP to vice president and president of the United States.
Explore
• Ann Arbor is a regular on annual lists of most-livable US cities, publicity that makes residents protective of neighbourhoods such as the Old West Side, which has German roots dating to the 1840s and is designated a National Historic District.
Its near- downtown streets are a front-porch world of brightly painted wood siding and diverse architecture (from Victorian and Stick style to American Picturesque). The Washtenaw Dairy, founded in 1934, is a corner hot spot for ice cream, newspapers and doughnuts. ( It delivers.) We take our treats to a corner booth beneath a TV tuned to “Good Times” and watch locals - from toddlers to old-timers - gab over some hand- scooped hardpack. — WPBloomberg