The Grand's calendar runs full year-round — fitness classes daily, weekly card games and crafting groups, monthly chef's dinners, seasonal golf tournaments, and a long list of resident-organized clubs. The official community calendar lives on the residents' portal at livegrandaz.com (members only — log in with your owner credentials). The golf club's public events are listed openly at livegrandaz.com. Below: links into both systems plus a snapshot of what fills the calendar most months.
The official community calendar for The Grand residents lives on the HOA portal at livegrandaz.com. It's powered by FRONTSTEPS (a property management platform) and shows all clubhouse events, fitness classes, club meetings, board meetings, and Architectural Review deadlines.
To access:
Don't have credentials yet? New owners receive them within 7-14 days of closing. If you've lost yours, contact the HOA office or call us — we can walk you through it.
The The Grand Golf Club publishes its tournaments, member-guest events, junior camps, and Grille special dinners openly on their public website. You don't need to be a resident or a member to see what's coming up.
Examples of public events seen on the schedule:
A typical week at The Grand includes:
The full schedule of fitness classes is posted on the residents' portal each week. The activities coordinator (full-time staff position) curates the calendar based on resident interest.
The spa at The Grand is operated by Miller Massage — an independent provider booking appointments through their own scheduling system. Available services typically include massage therapy, facials (Phytomer-based skincare line), and bodywork. Open to residents and the public by appointment.
Booking and information:
The clubhouse social calendar has a strong rhythm of seasonal events:
The The Grand Master Association Board meets monthly. Meetings are open to all owners and the schedule is published on the livegrandaz.com members portal. Agendas usually include:
Board meetings are the primary venue for owners to raise concerns, vote on assessments, and propose rule changes. Attending one or two early in your ownership is one of the fastest ways to understand how the community operates.