Posted February 23, 20178 yr These photos were taken Sunday, Feb 19. Rehab across from Findlay Market: Henry & Race St.: Streetcar car barn: Streetcar passengers: Race & Findlay St.: Streetcar maintenance facility...currently there are just five streetcars but this property is designed to be expanded to store up to twelve: Short section of Pleasant St. looking south toward Findlay Market: Rehab on Elm St.: A new brewery is planned for this building: Findlay Market: Recently closed furniture store: Rehab on Elm just north of Liberty: I'm guessing that a stairwell will be built in this space: Jim Uber's recent 6~ unit rehab: South side of 15th St.: Sea of parking behind new Towne Properties homes: The new homes on the ends of these strips have windows on three sides, but the ones in the middle are very dark inside: Elm at 15th St.: Behind the 15th St. houses: More 2-car garages and balconies: Back of the Chicago-style house with the bay windows facing Elm: These two also face Elm St.: 8th & Main: The doomed Dennison Hotel: New hotel at The Banks: This space was originally to be sold off for high-priced town homes...instead it looks like Cranley gave it to the hotel to park airport shuttle vans: Almost-open new garage: New Radius @The Banks apartments: Race St. extended further south, approaching the bridge that was fully funded in 1994 but never built:
February 24, 20178 yr Ding ding! "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
March 24, 20178 yr Back of the Chicago-style house with the bay windows facing Elm: Cincinnatians need to learn a term, Greystone - any old building with an Indiana limestone facade. All of these buildings are called that in Chicago. The quarries that the stone is mined from is in South Central Indiana too, which would have been cheaper to transport to Cincinnati even... As I've brought up before, Cincinnati actually has one that was built most likely before most in Chicago with a more NYC look to it (though NYCs would be brown due to different types of rock in the area) that is literally called "Brownstone Apartments" https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5c/OTR-Italianate-brownstone.jpg Actual brownstone for comparison: https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/03/8b/43/038b437a654ac521ff496faf516b5507.jpg Older Chicago greystones: https://photos.zillowstatic.com/p_f/IS2r167m7bs1wl0000000000.jpg Found this as well: http://www.curbed.com/2016/6/2/11833698/brownstone-greystone-chicago-new-york-city
Create an account or sign in to comment