Foto de Rock Angel
Hoteles en Imlay
Opciones de cancelación gratuita si cambias de planes
Llévate recompensas por cada noche de tu estancia
Ahorra más con los precios para miembros
Consulta los precios para estas fechas
Esta noche
Mañana
Este fin de semana
Próximo fin de semana
¿Dónde te alojarás en Imlay?
Principales lugares de interés de Imlay
Todo lo que necesitas saber sobre Imlay
La zona que rodea a Imlay cuenta con atractivos como Monumento a la montaña Thunder o Área recreativa estatal de Rye Patch.

Foto de Ann Sair
Foto gratuita de Ann Sair
Lee las opiniones de los huéspedes sobre sus hoteles preferidos de Imlay
Preguntas frecuentes
Descubre más destinos
- Hoteles cerca de aeropuertos en los alrededores
- Ciudades cercanas
- Principales ciudades en Estados Unidos
- Hoteles de Nueva York
- Hoteles de Las Vegas
- Hoteles de Orlando
- Hoteles de Chicago
- Hoteles de San Francisco
- Hoteles de Los Ángeles
- Hoteles de San Diego
- Hoteles de Miami
- Hoteles de Houston
- Hoteles de Boston
- Hoteles de Pigeon Forge
- Hoteles de Nashville
- Hoteles de Gatlinburg
- Hoteles de Atlanta
- Hoteles de San Antonio
- Hoteles de Austin
- Hoteles de Nueva Orleans
- Hoteles de Honolulú
- Hoteles de Dallas
- Hoteles de Anaheim
![The?Thunder Mountain Monument?is a series ofoutsider art?sculptures and architectural forms which were assembled by Frank Van Zant starting in 1969 upon his arrival in?Imlay, Nevada; it is located on a shoulder of?I-80. A WWII veteran from Oklahoma, Frank Van Zant had served with the?7th Armoured Division,[1]?fighting in several campaigns, and been badly burned in a tank battle outside ofLeipzig, Germany.[2]?A self-identified?Creek Indian,[3]he took the?Native American?name Rolling Mountain Thunder after experiencing an?epiphany, and took on the twin but related tasks of both building shelters from the presumed coming apocalypse, and making a?de facto?spiritual haven for spiritual seekers of the?hippie?era. (There is no Thunder Mountain in the vicinity.)The site contains three stone and cement buildings and over 200 cement sculptures variously depicting Native Americans and their protective spirits, massacres, and purported injustices. Thunder Mountain Monument (or Park) is replete with found objects (such as, but not limited to, car hoods, dolls' heads, typewriters, and gas pumps), many of which are incorporated into the buildings themselves; one framework forms a large handle so the Great Spirit could take the building away after Thunder's death.He was long subjected to harassment by the local townspeople, and his site was partially destroyed by arson in 1983, the same year he was named Nevada's Artist of the Year; a heavy cigarette smoker, Rolling Mountain Thunder committed suicide by shooting himself in the head in 1989. His uniquely wrought environment was neglected and subject to vandalism until it was declared a Nevada State Historic Site in the 1990s; it is now under the care of his grown children under the aegis of a State of Nevada Historic Site Restoration Project, and is partially open to the public for self-guided tours.[4]Frank Van Zant has been the subject of two short documentaries.[5] Wikipedia](https://images.trvl-media.com/place/6053763/47a95973-a5b1-4b92-92ff-98f511d0bbd0.jpg?impolicy=resizecrop&rw=1920&ra=fit&ch=480)