Posted January 31, 200817 yr I was just looking through old maps and stuff I saved from past years and thought I'd share it (if you are at all interested). These really aren't photos so it doesn't belong in any of the photo sections and hey, they are cities and perhaps they lead to discussion. Bah! Area Code (2006) 567? That's just lazy. Columbus Arena District Master Plan Urbanized Area of Ohio Metropolitan Areas (1000 people/sq mi) Scroll --------------> For an even bigger map: http://www.urbanohio.com/ChrisPics/OhioUrbanizedMap.png Cin-Day Land...when ColDay was the original UncleRando. Those were the days... Cincyimages' Cincinnati Neighborhoods Map. He did the damn thing with this one! Cincinnati Topography Map - Again, the days of ColDayRando. Dayton Neighborhoods Map - Fairview represent! And for even bigger: http://www.urbanohio.com/ChrisPics/Data/DaytonNeighborhoods2.bmp PD's Take On Ohio - Love the blatant b!tchslap of Southwest Ohio. Good ole' state rivalry. Ohio MSA County List Ohio Housing Density Map (2006) For the BIG map: http://www.urbanohio.com/ChrisPics/Data/OhioUrbanizedMap.gif Ohio Topopgrahical Map The Ohio Crescent If you have any random maps, might as well post them here. "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
February 1, 200817 yr Nice stuff...I'll throw some stuff up here a little bit later. when ColDay was the original UncleRando. Those were the days... Never heard truer words in my life...it is good being UncleRando.
February 1, 200817 yr Cincy Map illustrating the impact of a proposed sex offender legislation: A map highlighting the Glenway Avenue business district through Green Township (Cincy):
February 1, 200817 yr The two that struck me were the topography and the "5 Ohios" graphics, mainly because they both show that where I grew up is on the cusp of two regions. The "5 Ohios" shows that my hometown is the northernmost point of Appalachia (the northern "notch" of Columbiana County, formerly a township of Mahoning County). And the topgraphy map shows the line of demarcation between the rolling hills and the Appalachian foothills. There's definitely a cultural difference as well. clevelandskyscrapers.com Cleveland Skyscrapers on Instagram
February 1, 200817 yr Random maps- these I have. Here are a couple I have posted over the years. U clickz on dem 4 teh big verzhuns. A population density map styled to look like one of those night lights pictures. Inter-county commuting patterns, probably from the 2000 census, but I forget at this point. I may have made a nicer version of this, but honestly I forget that too.
February 1, 200817 yr Inter-county commuting patterns, probably from the 2000 census, but I forget at this point. I may have made a nicer version of this, but honestly I forget that too. Nice, that's pretty cool.
February 1, 200817 yr great idea for a thread! the commuting patterns map was very interesting. the western reserve greater cleveland population "flight" 2000-2005. goodbye ne ohio, hello columbus and arizona! :| http://www.cleveland.com/pdgraphics/interactive/neoohiomigration/map/m10000.html
February 1, 200817 yr Yeah it annoys me that there's so many Cleveland sports fans in Columbus instead of Reds and Bengals fans. Cincinnati is closer to Columbus but a lot of Clevelanders moved to Columbus so what are you gonna do?
February 1, 200817 yr i know, but there would be no columbus (as we know it) without cleveland's rustbelt woes.
February 1, 200817 yr Cincinnati had rustbelt woes. They're just too conservative to leave the region. Or maybe they went to Indy lol
February 1, 200817 yr Cincinnati had rustbelt woes. They're just too conservative to leave the region. Or maybe they went to Indy lol Cincinnati's rustbelt woes were a drop in the bucket compared to Cleveland's.
February 1, 200817 yr 1940's Cleveland & Cincinnati Maps (pre-interstate). More here: http://www.urbanohio.com/forum2/index.php/topic,11537.0.html
February 1, 200817 yr That curved white trail around Cincinnati is where the ancient Ohio river ran (before the ice age). It is now the lower valley of the Little Miami, Norwood trench and the lower Mill Creek
February 20, 200817 yr More: Urbanized areas: "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
February 20, 200817 yr ^ Are all of these from the same altitude? Yes, they are to scale. "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
February 20, 200817 yr All these maps are great. However, the Plain Dealer's description of Southwestern Ohio is absurd: "Southern accents and attitudes flavor this conservative region just across the Ohio River from Kentucky. Although hurt by a stagnant economy, people here remain the state's most loyal Republicans." I've been working in the South for nearly five years now, and the accents down here versus those from Southwestern Ohio aren't close to a match. While the state's most loyal Republicans may be from SW Ohio, its most effective ones (at least regarding the nation political stage) are those Reagan and Bush Democrats who vote in the Northeast. They are the ones who end up giving the White House to the GOP every time they win. The description of of Northeastern Ohio is also ridiculous: "Unions, ethnic politics and black activism created Ohio's only liberal political tradition." I guess Ohio was founded in 1932, not 1803. Have the editors of The Plain Dealer never heard of the Civil War? Salmon P. Chase and U.S. Grant accomplished more for liberal politics than most people in history, let alone Ohio (and to ignore consideration of the accomplishments of Canton's William McKinley in favor of some more recently active greasy Cleveland Democrats is also shameful).
February 20, 200817 yr ^ Ditto ... 1.) If you take someone that I knew from Mississippi/Tenn and bring them to Cincy, they feel like they're in New England, no joke. 2.) I do not notice an accent in Clevelanders. Notice, I said I. There'll be a difference between accents from let's say Florence, KY and Cleveland, but not West Chester/Mason and Cleveland. The same goes for Dayton.
February 20, 200817 yr This thread should be stickied. It would be great to consistently add onto ... and since this is an urban discussion board, I think it'd make since to.
February 20, 200817 yr ^ Ditto ... 1.) If you take someone that I knew from Mississippi/Tenn and bring them to Cincy, they feel like they're in New England, no joke. 2.) I do not notice an accent in Clevelanders. Notice, I said I. There'll be a difference between accents from let's say Florence, KY and Cleveland, but not West Chester/Mason and Cleveland. The same goes for Dayton. I notice an accent in Cincinnati - it's the most subtle of twangy drawls; mind you most people I know from Cincy are from the Beechmont/New Richmond area so that may have something to do with my perception. clevelandskyscrapers.com Cleveland Skyscrapers on Instagram
February 20, 200817 yr mind you most people I know from Cincy are from the Beechmont/New Richmond area so that may have something to do with my perception. ... yeah, that very well could be it. ;) I don't know, I just feel like if there was a difference, wouldn't I be able to notice it?
February 20, 200817 yr People in Atlanta and Baton Rouge have consistently referred to me as a Yankee and/or Northerner. In Baton Rouge I was actually told that I was one of those tight necked business folk from up North. This is because I choose to wear a dress shirt and tie everyday (no tie on casual Friday). I'm sorry, I just like to look good. :wink2:
February 20, 200817 yr 1.) If you take someone that I knew from Mississippi/Tenn and bring them to Cincy, they feel like they're in New England, no joke. 2.) I do not notice an accent in Clevelanders. Notice, I said I. There'll be a difference between accents from let's say Florence, KY and Cleveland, but not West Chester/Mason and Cleveland. The same goes for Dayton. I actually never noticed a difference in accents in Florence as compared to Dayton. I lived there for 4 years and commuted 2 or 3 times per week back to Dayton for friends and family and couldn't notice any difference at all. Opinions? More: Urbanized areas: I had no idea that Pittsburgh was that fragmented. Is that from sprawl or land topography? Ohio MSA County List I thought Dayton had picked up Darke County as part of the MSA?
February 21, 200817 yr Greenville is its own Micropolitan Area. "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
February 21, 200817 yr Why are Cincinnati and Covington not in the same MSA or at least the same CMSA?
February 21, 200817 yr i would assume different because that are in different states? someone please correct me
February 21, 200817 yr Why are Cincinnati and Covington not in the same MSA or at least the same CMSA? They're in the same MSA; it's just that the map ColDay posted doesn't include Kentucky. MSAs have changed from those shown on the map, though. Springfield (Clark County), for example, is now a separate MSA from Dayton, though they're together in a broader CSA. And maybe Preble County was added to Dayton? I think they may have changed the way MSAs are defined. It was a couple of years after the last census.
February 21, 200817 yr Yes, it is just an Ohio map. Youngstown and Toledo both have included areas in other states as well.
October 7, 200816 yr People in Atlanta and Baton Rouge have consistently referred to me as a Yankee and/or Northerner. LOL! I told you that would happen. Hehe.
October 7, 200816 yr ^^ It looks like Cuyahoga County has made up for a lot of the losses. What is the net gain for the state? p.s. Please don't make me go over to cleveland.com to find out.
October 7, 200816 yr What's up with Franklin county?? Aren't they growing in population? That's scary, that's real scary.
October 7, 200816 yr ^^ It looks like Cuyahoga County has made up for a lot of the losses. What is the net gain for the state? p.s. Please don't make me go over to cleveland.com to find out. This is why I personally believe that there are more residents of Cleveland/Cuyahoga county than the census states. Off topic, yes? But I do believe somethign is not right. Something just doesn't add up.
October 7, 200816 yr What's up with Franklin county?? Aren't they growing in population? It could be that in 2004, Columbus (and Dayton) already had a large turnout for the election so there wouldn't be a need for "a lot of new registered voters." "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
October 7, 200816 yr ^^ It looks like Cuyahoga County has made up for a lot of the losses. What is the net gain for the state? p.s. Please don't make me go over to cleveland.com to find out. This is why I personally believe that there are more residents of Cleveland/Cuyahoga county than the census states. Off topic, yes? But I do believe somethign is not right. Something just doesn't add up. Do you think the new voting registration process had anything to do with it?
October 7, 200816 yr What's up with Franklin county?? Aren't they growing in population? It could be that in 2004, Columbus (and Dayton) already had a large turnout for the election so there wouldn't be a need for "a lot of new registered voters." No, but it's not for new registrations, it's for total number of voters. Here's the story with the county by county numbers: http://www.cleveland.com/datacentral/index.ssf/2008/10/ohio_voter_registration_surges.html
October 7, 200816 yr What's up with Franklin county?? Aren't they growing in population? It could be that in 2004, Columbus (and Dayton) already had a large turnout for the election so there wouldn't be a need for "a lot of new registered voters." No, but it's not for new registrations, it's for total number of voters. Here's the story with the county by county numbers: http://www.cleveland.com/datacentral/index.ssf/2008/10/ohio_voter_registration_surges.html 2004 1,005,807 2008 1,093,943 ______________ 88,136 8.8% One has to register to vote so how could they not be new registrations?
October 7, 200816 yr ^^ I just thought he was thinking the graph was depicting the net difference OF the new registered voters from 2004, instead of the total number. Either way, how is Franklin county down?
October 7, 200816 yr My guess is that a lot of OSU kids have decided to register in their home counties this time around. I would have no way of confirming that, though.
October 8, 200816 yr Whoops, read it wrong. "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
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