Cleveland

Edgewater view of Downtown Cleveland

Cleveland: growing faster than the national average, and shrinking

Sometimes living in Cleveland is a walk in the park. And Census data shows more adults are choosing to live here as its economy is producing more output per capita than the average among 106 of America’s largest cities studied in a recent analysis. And Clevelanders’ wealth grew by $2.1 billion between 2017 and 2019 but dipped during the pandemic

Read More

Cleveland: growing faster than the national average, and shrinking Read More »

Flats-East-Bank-vision

New Flats East Bank tower to be shorter, groundbreaking delayed

In addition to a spate of high-rise developments on the horizon, there are also new low- to mid-rise developments just around the corner, too. One of them is a project that was originally proposed to be a mid- to high-rise building.
Instead, a mixed-use building representing the first salvo for the second half of the Flats East Bank development will be reduced from 11 or 12 stories down to seven or eight stories. And, as NEOtrans learned this week, its construction timeline will be pushed back by about five or six months.

Read More

New Flats East Bank tower to be shorter, groundbreaking delayed Read More »

Work starts on Via Sana on West 25th near MetroHealth

Construction is beginning on the first of three buildings that will comprise a $60-million mixed-use project in Cleveland’s Clark-Fulton neighborhood. The building is being developed by The NRP Group, The MetroHealth System and CCH Development Corp. — a public-private partnership that will strengthen and revitalize the west side neighborhood by filling a need for high-quality housing.

Read More

Work starts on Via Sana on West 25th near MetroHealth Read More »

First new multi-family housing in a century planned on Clark Ave.

Clark Avenue is one of those strange streets in Cleveland with an odd mix of buildings.
It has a lot of older structures. On the sidewalks are storefronts and taverns topped by a few apartments. There’s a scattering of light industrial buildings from the 1800s and early 1900s. And then there’s all those newer single-use buildings — mostly fast-food restaurants and small-box stores — set back behind lots of pavement and empty parking spaces.

Read More

First new multi-family housing in a century planned on Clark Ave. Read More »

Scroll to Top