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here was a travel guide on Cleveland coining out of Pittsburgh in anticipation of last Sunday's game.  Its interesting to see what visitors recommend

 

On the road with the Steelers: Cleveland

By Gretchen McKay / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette nov 18, 2012

 

CLEVELAND -- Once derided as "the Mistake on the Lake" -- the Cuyahoga River, which runs through the center of town, famously caught fire in 1969 because of its rampant pollution -- Ohio's second largest city is on a serious upswing.

 

A growing foodie destination with a landmark public market and a lively arts community (the Playhouse Square Center is the second-largest performing arts center in the U.S.), there's plenty of fun in store for the weekend traveler. So much, in fact, that Travel and Leisure named it one of America's "favorite cities" in 2009 for affordability and its rockin' music scene: in addition to one of the world's best-known music museums, it boasts a renowned orchestra

 

Read More at: http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/life/travel/on-the-road-with-the-steelers-cleveland-662601/

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  • So I went to visit a friend in Findlay OH over the weekend for the purpose of going to the haunted Mansfield Reformatory Prison on Saturday night. So he's from down near Columbus originally and has on

  • NorthShore64
    NorthShore64

    Saturday May 18th. Biked to Playoff Hockey, lunch at Asian Festival and evening Baseball. Total ~$30      

  • To redirect from the SHW HQ thread, here's a few photos on the busy downtown scene on a hot June Wednesday evening....      

Posted Images

This thread hasn't been updated for a while... So how about a speech from Ari Maron last year that I've never seen:

 

http://www.tedxcle.com/ari-maron/

  • 2 weeks later...

Young lawyers find cost-of-living, amenities, make Cleveland the place to be

 

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Addisah Sherwood has been a Fulbright scholar in Ghana, a Rotary scholar in Jamaica, and worked in New York and California for Skadden Arps, a mega-firm with nearly 1,900 lawyers who span the globe.

 

But when it came to putting down roots, Sherwood and her husband picked Cleveland.

 

http://www.cleveland.com/business/index.ssf/2013/01/young_lawyers_find_cost-of-liv.html#incart_river

Young lawyers find cost-of-living, amenities, make Cleveland the place to be

 

 

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

10 coolest cities in the Midwest

 

Cleveland #2

 

Los Angeles and New York City may be well-regarded as musical hotbeds, but Cleveland does indeed rock. The city’s musical cornerstone is the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, a 150,000-square-foot temple to rock’s most significant players. If you’re looking for a more intimate experience, consider checking out one of the many local live venues, such as Beachland or the Grog Shop.

 

What’s cool: There’s more than just rock ’n’ roll culture at play. The Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland’s brand-new mirrored digs is a lesson in modern art itself, a stunning piece of interesting architecture.

 

http://local.msn.com/travel/escape-and-inspire/slideshow.aspx?cp-documentid=255893633

  • 2 weeks later...

Cleveland's restaurant scene has lessons for other Great Lakes cities, says writer

Most Clevelanders know what a great dining scene we enjoy. But it never hurts to get an outsider's perspective -- and an excellent assessment appeared in Sunday's Buffalo (N.Y.) News. In a story headlined "Chow down on Lake Erie: What can the Buffalo restaurant scene learn from the Cleveland revolution?," food writer Andrew Galarneau provided an incisive take on NE Ohio's culinary successes.

 

http://www.cleveland.com/dining/index.ssf/2013/02/clevelands_restaurant_scene_ha.html#incart_m-rpt-2

^Owl city? That would be VERY hipster.

^Owl city? That would be VERY hipster.

 

yep :)  Funny, I had the same thought.  Kind of similar to cool the name of "Frogtown" in St. Paul Minnesota.

Owl City might be 'too hipster'. We should probably just stick with Ohio City.

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CJN Jews of Interest: Ari Maron

 

 

Bending Cleveland to cosmopolitanism

 

CARLO WOLFF

CJN Staff Reporter

 

Ari Maron – make that his family’s company – is changing Cleveland, refreshing tired neighborhoods with projects designed to be sustainable, pedestrian, entertaining, tasty and tasteful.

 

The facelift Maron spearheads is far more than skin deep. See it in the East Fourth Street neighborhood in downtown Cleveland, in Uptown at University Circle, at Marketplace in Ohio City. These are destinations, converting Cleveland from a city people can’t wait to escape to one people crave.

 

Maron is the public image of MRN Ltd., a firm best known for transforming East Fourth Street from a block of wig emporia and drug dealers to a magnet for foodies, young professionals hungry for city life, and entertainment fans. His partners are Rick, his father and company founder, and his younger brother, Jori. Whether the new look MRN Ltd. is giving Cleveland will spread beyond its current sites seems largely up to Ari Maron, who personifies the adage that where there’s a will, there’s a way – a collaborative, patient way.

 

http://www.clevelandjewishnews.com/features/community/article_32bba884-6c8a-11e2-93be-001a4bcf887a.html

I've been waiting a long time for a list like this. Pound for pound Northeast Ohio has had an amazing list of influential talent. I think Patricia Heaton is way too high up. And Michael Stanley and Les Roberts? Not sure they belong at all. Anyhow props to the Plain Dealer for a pretty good job.

 

Cleveland's Top 100 celebrities countdown: The Top 20 is revealed, with Paul Newman and Bob Hope atop the list

 

By Plain Dealer staff

on February 17, 2013

 

We love lists. We love celebrities. Most of all, we love Cleveland. So you can just imagine the happy stew we have here with a list of the top 100 Cleveland arts and entertainment celebrities.

 

Pulling together the list was neither quick nor simple. A clutch of features department editors started flirting with the notion about a year ago. Everyone thought it was a capital idea, but no one took charge until November.

 

Then, we learned just how many challenges there could be with this kind of project. How should we define Northeast Ohio? What makes a celebrity? What disciplines should we include/exclude? Can nominees be dead or alive? Who should participate on the jury?

 

http://www.cleveland.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2013/02/clevelands_top_100_celebrities_4.html#incart_2box

don king?

  • 4 months later...

CJN Jews of Interest: Ari Maron

 

 

Bending Cleveland to cosmopolitanism

 

CARLO WOLFF

CJN Staff Reporter

 

Ari Maron make that his familys company is changing Cleveland, refreshing tired neighborhoods with projects designed to be sustainable, pedestrian, entertaining, tasty and tasteful.

 

The facelift Maron spearheads is far more than skin deep. See it in the East Fourth Street neighborhood in downtown Cleveland, in Uptown at University Circle, at Marketplace in Ohio City. These are destinations, converting Cleveland from a city people cant wait to escape to one people crave.

 

Maron is the public image of MRN Ltd., a firm best known for transforming East Fourth Street from a block of wig emporia and drug dealers to a magnet for foodies, young professionals hungry for city life, and entertainment fans. His partners are Rick, his father and company founder, and his younger brother, Jori. Whether the new look MRN Ltd. is giving Cleveland will spread beyond its current sites seems largely up to Ari Maron, who personifies the adage that where theres a will, theres a way a collaborative, patient way.

 

http://www.clevelandjewishnews.com/features/community/article_32bba884-6c8a-11e2-93be-001a4bcf887a.html

 

Maron's clearly a young developer who "gets it" about maintaining and enhancing urban street presence and walkability... Maybe he needs to school K&D about such concepts.

Happy 217th Birthday, Cleveland!

 

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Sign of the times!

 

Really awesome story on Cleveland from our neighbors to the north. From a few months ago, but just stumbled across it today.

 

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/travel/destinations/why-you-should-be-hot-for-cleveland/article10629211/

 

Why you should be hot for Cleveland

DOUGLAS TRATTNER

CLEVELAND — Special to The Globe and Mail

Published Monday, Apr. 01 2013, 5:50 PM EDT

Last updated Tuesday, Apr. 02 2013, 11:30 AM EDT

 

...For the first time in recent history, the inner city and neighbourhoods such as Ohio City, Tremont and Detroit Shoreway are growing faster than the suburbs that surround it. Population in the downtown, home to grand 20th-century architecture, has doubled in the past 10 years, thanks largely to an influx of young professionals.

 

More than almost any other activity, Clevelanders love to eat out, and the dining scene here continues to attract more than its fair share of attention. Michael Symon, a Food Network celebrity and co-host of ABC’s The Chew, continues to cast a favourable light on his hometown’s restaurants. Reporting for the Buffalo News, food writer Andrew Galarneau wondered why Buffalo’s own cuisine pales in comparison to that of its Rust Belt sister to the west. “How did Cleveland get so awesome?” he wrote.

 

...

 

Driving all that tourism is more than $2-billion of downtown development, which includes a $350-million casino, a $465-million convention centre and a $33-million aquarium. In the fine arts department, the renowned Cleveland Museum of Art is wrapping up an eight-year, $350-million expansion and renovation, while the Museum of Contemporary Art just opened the doors to its $27-million showstopper.

 

...

 

Folks might still be telling jokes about Cleveland. The difference is that these days, the residents are too busy having fun to wait around for the punch line.

 

urban-oriented families: as school choices increase, so too does the number of parents choosing city

 

 

When my wife and I became pregnant with our first child, I felt as though there was a ticking time bomb over my head. As much as we enjoyed our townhouse in the city, we knew that we would run out bedrooms if we decided to grow our family. And then there was the question of schools, a sheer cliff of anxiety looming on the not-too-distant horizon.

 

When our townhouse started to feel cramped with a walking toddler and a second on the way, we poked around the leafy neighborhoods of Shaker Heights. While charming, the curvy streets reminded me of a suburban Bermuda Triangle. The homes were stately yet dated, and the drone of leaf blowers filled the air. It wasn’t for us.

 

http://freshwatercleveland.com/features/urbanorientedlife080113.aspx

urban-oriented families: as school choices increase, so too does the number of parents choosing city

 

 

When my wife and I became pregnant with our first child, I felt as though there was a ticking time bomb over my head. As much as we enjoyed our townhouse in the city, we knew that we would run out bedrooms if we decided to grow our family. And then there was the question of schools, a sheer cliff of anxiety looming on the not-too-distant horizon.

 

When our townhouse started to feel cramped with a walking toddler and a second on the way, we poked around the leafy neighborhoods of Shaker Heights. While charming, the curvy streets reminded me of a suburban Bermuda Triangle. The homes were stately yet dated, and the drone of leaf blowers filled the air. It wasn’t for us.

 

http://freshwatercleveland.com/features/urbanorientedlife080113.aspx

 

I smell an urbanohio family in the story!

If You Build It, They Will Come: How Cleveland Lured Young Professionals Downtown

 

largest_zps565f1f03.jpg

 

When the Maron family decided to redevelop an entire city block in downtown Cleveland, the area was so blighted no restaurateur would lease space there. A decade later, the East Fourth neighborhood is home to Food Network personalities, a House of Blues, and free Saturday yoga classes. Café-style seating spills into the pedestrian-only street. Apartments on the block are fully leased, and a 100-unit building under construction across the street has already reached full capacity.

 

The success of East Fourth Street in once-struggling Cleveland was something few people would have anticipated 20 years ago. It took years of collaboration between developers, businesses, local institutions, and government, but today downtown Cleveland is taking off—and giving the old Rust Belt city a future. There wasn't a market for urban living in Cleveland until developers like the Marons built places where young professionals would want to be.

 

"Employers are looking for fresh, vibrant urban environments," says Chris Warren, the city's chief of regional development. "Cleveland needs to compete." Until recently, Cleveland was on the sidelines. The city's population has dropped by one-third since 1950. Although Cleveland includes two neighborhoods that are among Ohio's top five employment centers, tax revenues from incomes go primarily to the suburbs where most employees live. As recently as 2011, about one-third of city residents lived in poverty.

 

http://www.theatlanticcities.com/jobs-and-economy/2013/08/if-you-build-it-they-will-come-how-cleveland-lured-young-professionals-downtown/6406/

that charming cap!

 

null_zps1d366b98.jpg

 

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Sure, it's nationally recognized. Just like the Cleveland Museum of Paintings, Sculptures and Such and Such

Sure, it's nationally recognized. Just like the Cleveland Museum of Paintings, Sculptures and Such and Such

LOL.  You hot mess!

25 Reasons Why Cleveland Is The Best

Cleveland is the best city on the planet. Your argument is invalid.

 

http://www.buzzfeed.com/itslynnotline/25-reasons-why-cleveland-is-the-best-dfpl

 

the Cleveland Symphony?  WTH?

this is actually common, not that it's any excuse. The Philadelphia and Minnesota Orchestras, among a few others, don't use the word "symphony." A few weeks ago Mariah Carey sang with the NY Philharmonic in Central Park and referred to them as the "New York City Philharmonic." okay, never mind, bad example, it was Mariah Carey. And I had to look up who the hell Ted Mosby is--sorry I did, but was just as happy that I don't have a TV right now. WTF is his relationship to Cleveland?

I *heart*  "Michael Simon"!!

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Author

Best part of the article IMO

Additionally, the band makes impromptu appearances on neighborhood streets. “It’s always a joy to see people come out on their porches to enjoy the sound and awesome sight,” Clark said. “We have about seven different cadences that we play.”

 

Pride of Glenville Marching band will step out in March on Washington annivesary event

 

CLEVELAND, Ohio - A drum line of community spirit will set the beat in the nation’s capital Saturday morning as the Pride of Glenville Marching Band joins activities marking the 50th anniversary of the civil rights March on Washington in 1963.

 

“What a wonderful opportunity this is to be there and join in this historic march. All I can say is WOW!” said Pastor Andrew D. Clark Sr., of Trinity Outreach Ministries Church of God in Cleveland, who founded the band last year.....

 

http://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2013/08/pride_of_glenville_marching_ba.html#incart_river_default#incart_hbx#incart_best-of

^I saw the drummers on Channel 5 this morning when the station was reporting on the buses that traveled from Cleveland.

Sugarhill Gang's Master Gee living the Rapper's Delight dream from a home base in Cleveland

 

Guy O'Brien, aka "Master Gee" of the pioneering rap group the Sugarhill Gang, is now a permanent resident of Cleveland. He's a partner in Aroma Country, a national distributor of commercial air fresheners and industrial-grade fragrances with offices and a warehouse at 3829 Hamilton Ave. He still performs, too, primarily with a group called Rapper's Delight featuring Wonder Mike and Master Gee.

 

Print By Michael Norman, Northeast Ohio Media Group

Email the author | Follow on Twitter

on August 27, 2013 at 10:00 AM, updated August 27, 2013 at 10:03 AM

 

http://www.cleveland.com/music/index.ssf/2013/08/sugarhill_gangs_master_gee_liv.html#incart_river_default

 

The American Grandeur of Cleveland

Posted: 08/30/2013 5:59 pm

 

On a recent visit to Cleveland, I found myself so taken by the deep American history and cultural sophistication of this delightful mid-western city that sits on Lake Erie. You can see the past in the historic buildings that speak to another era and then turn a corner to find a sleek structure singing to the future. Cleveland has a character that appreciates its past while embracing the renewal of the future. In 2013, the city has a different kind of American grandeur than it did in its industrial heyday of the early 20th century, but rather than get stuck in the past and not learn the lessons from it, Cleveland has aged well into a modern, global and down-to-earth city. There are many reasons to visit Cleveland, enough to swing the vote right into moving there!

 

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sally-fay/the-american-grandeur-of-_b_3837502.html?utm_hp_ref=travel

I was just about to post that...

Good article. Nice way to get the word out.

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

CLE+  should send a bouquet to Sally Fay (rhyme strictly serendipitous).

CLE+  should send a bouquet to Sally Fay (rhyme strictly serendipitous).

 

From the tone of the article I'd say she got the bouquet first!

Cleveland designer Brian Jasinski is in the running for a Martha Stewart "American Made" award. He's currently got one of the highest number of votes nationwide!! But he could, of course, use additional love from Urban Ohio to push him over the edge :)

 

You can vote for him up to 6 times a day at http://www.marthastewart.com/americanmade/nominee/83041

 

See more about him and his work in this Creative Workforce Fellowship video at

... a massive annual artist support program that's another reason to love the Cleve :)

 

Gary Dumm, one of the muralists here, is one of Cuyahoga County's Creative Workforce Fellows. Check out this video about him and his work:

 

Let's keep funding local artists so they can keep doing stuff like this! :)

A friend was in town from Columbus the other night, arriving at Greyhound on a Baron's bus. I picked him up and he remarked "I don't remember seeing all those big apartment buildings down the street." He was referring to the Langston et al down Chester. Then I pointed over to Reserve Square and noted there's a 20-story Embassy Suites in that cluster getting converted to apartments right now and just beyond that is the East Ohio building, another 20+ story building that's soon to be converted to apartments. As he is a lobbyist, he started asking all kinds of questions as to whether Mayor Jackson was the reason for all this, but I said it's happening all over the country including in Columbus (I was surprised that he was surprised at all the development).

 

Then, as we headed east down Euclid, I pointed out that every building west of East 12th "to that red brick building with the scaffolding all over it (Schofield) was under renovation into apartments, hotels, offices, retail or a combination." We passed the Ameritrust tower and he wondered if that had ever gotten out from under the county corruption scandal, and I noted that was being converted into apartments and some hotel rooms too, with a possible grocery store in the rotunda. As we crossed East 9th, I pointed to my left to the steel girders going up for the county administration building. He asked why that was needed. "To get out of the way of a new 650-room convention center hotel," I said.

 

He was blown away. Better still, there were lots of young people out walking around that evening (Thursday, Sept. 5), even in the "dead section" of Euclid between East 9th and 12th.

 

I love looking at my city through the eyes of a visitor. Helps me appreciate it more.

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

Just saw a couple make the turn from Prospect onto E. 4th.

 

"I like this street....A LOT" said the girl in her Southern accent.

Imagine if we had block after block of an East 4th like environment. Pedestrian only, narrow brick paved streets, mixed used buildings, with the additional aesthetic improvements. Maybe they could do something like that on that massive lot on prospect as an extension of East 4th.

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