Travel Trip Ideas Around the Midwest Unique Midwest Light Displays to See This Winter Buses, trains and very few automobiles—check out these out-of-the-ordinary holiday lights displays. By Kelsey Schagemann Kelsey Schagemann Kelsey Schagemann is a freelance writer whose articles for Midwest Living typically focus on the vibrant people and places shaping the Chicagoland region. If you want intel on the best spots in the Windy City for coffee, donuts or tacos, Kelsey's your gal. (Even better if you're interested in bike routes that incorporate all three—and she'll throw in some snazzy independent bookstores, too).In addition to travel content, Kelsey specializes in feature articles for higher education clients across the country. Kelsey is a proud graduate of Kenyon College (BA in English) and the University of Illinois at Chicago (MA in English). Midwest Living's Editorial Guidelines Updated on November 14, 2023 As dusk descends on a chilly evening in East Troy, Wisconsin, the village square dances with lights. They climb the facades of buildings, snake around tree trunks and curve into tunnels. Iron lanterns frame the town's bookshop and (real) snowflakes float down, adding to the magic of this quaint holiday scene. Though it may sound like an old-fashioned Christmas, this downtown is rooted firmly in the 21st century. Here, you control the town's holiday lights displays using technology—a phone app and handheld devices shaped like candy canes. Participants flick the lights on and off, spiral them across buildings and send them spinning in a loop. "It can be an emotional experience," says Vanessa Lenz, executive director of the East Troy Area Chamber of Commerce. "My mother-in-law was crying, because it really transports you." Like a light show controlled by a toddler, our search for holiday lights experiences zigzagged away from traditional offerings. Because while we love a classic drive-through display, we love it even more when a town or business adds their own sparkle. Open-air bus ride, anyone? Wandering Dragonfly East Troy Lights, East Troy, Wisconsin In this village of 4,000 residents, community is the word of the season. "We knew from day one that we couldn't accomplish anything without working together," says Vanessa Lenz. College and high school students built the mini computers that enable visitors to control the East Troy Lights interactively. Younger students wrote the programming for the (noninteractive) evening light shows. And it takes volunteers more than two weeks to install displays and string thousands of lights, climbing ladders to make the downtown square shine. Great Places to See Midwest Holiday Lights Bob Stefko Anheuser-Busch Brewery Lights, St. Louis Embrace holiday cheer in more ways than one at Anheuser-Busch's annual Brewery Lights event. The company headquarters glitters with more than a million lights. Walk through the spectacle and book an additional igloo or firepit package to stay awhile. If you're up for more, head 140 miles west to Warm Springs Ranch, where the famous Budweiser Clydesdales are raised in Central Missouri. The horses reside on more than 300 acres, and during the holiday season, visitors embark on DIY tours of the light-festooned facilities and grounds. Courtesy of Boyne Mountain Resort Lights in the Sky, Boyne Falls, Michigan SkyBridge Michigan, the world's longest timber-towered suspension bridge, enchants with Lights in the Sky, a new-in-2023 installation of more than 150,000 twinkling lights, running from late November through the end of March. SkyBridge, which opened in fall 2022 at Boyne Mountain Resort, is 1,200 feet long and 118 feet high, spanning the peaks of McLouth and Disciples Ridge above Boyne Valley. Walk across the bridge surrounded by festive lights, or enjoy other holiday activities at Boyne Mountain—including live entertainment, chairlift rides, pictures with Santa and the annual Holiday Open House (Dec. 16, 2023). All Is Bright Tour, Inver Grove Heights, Minnesota It's not a one-horse open sleigh, but Twin Cities Sightseeing Tours offers the next best option: an open-air bus adventure. Santa pilots the 13-seater to residential lights displays throughout the St. Paul suburb of Inver Grove Heights. Sing along to a holiday playlist, layer with blankets and don't forget your travel mug—we recommend a hot toddy or spiked cocoa—to take the edge off the chill. For those feeling less hardy, the company offers a similar experience in a traditional enclosed bus. Great Midwest Winter Weekend Escapes Carly Komar/Northbound Studio Memory Lane Train, Comstock Park, Michigan Twenty-five years ago, Bill Schrader gathered a handful of fellow veterans to build a holiday lights display on the parking lot of a baseball stadium in western Michigan's Grand Rapids' metro area. Armed with generators and extension cords, the crew created an instant tradition. Today, the Christmas Lite Show comes together with the help of more than 30 veterans (and a few nonmilitary folks) and eight semitrailers of lights. While visitors typically drive through the exhibit, the open-sided Memory Lane Train adds an extra sprinkle of magic. The wheeled train takes riders on a 2-mile loop under shimmering archways and alongside snowmen, baby dinosaurs, an American flag—and some 2 million other brightly glowing lights. Holiday Lights Segway Tour, Chicago With iconic window displays on State Street, a bedazzled Christmas tree in Millennium Park and gleaming glass ornaments at Daley Plaza's Christkindlmarket, Chicago glitters in December. See more of the city—on wheels—with Absolutely Chicago's Holiday Lights Segway Tour. "Chicago feels magical when it is illuminated with millions of lights, so we developed a tour to showcase it," says Brittany Cortina of Absolutely Chicago Segway Tours. "We made getting to and from the best holiday attractions part of the celebration." 15 of the Best Outdoor Winter Activities and Festivals Around the Midwest Nancy Jimenez World of Winter, Grand Rapids, Michigan Chase lights into the new year at World of Winter, a free, two-month celebration of outdoor art and activities that launches January 12, 2024, in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The installations come from artists all over the world. 15 Great Midwest Holiday Destinations Was this page helpful? 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