Posted May 14, 200916 yr Does anyone have a map of the Cincinnati NBDs? I found a listing on the City's site, but nothing displayed graphically. http://www.cincinnati-oh.gov/cdap/downloads/cdap_pdf33499.pdf
May 14, 200916 yr Oh they're everywhere online. Let me see if I can find one. Wait, just a map of the business districts? The neighborhood maps themselves are easy to find.
May 14, 200916 yr Here is a recent map I made, with certain NBDs highlighted, but in black on the map is the NBD definitions I used for my thesis. Sorry all of them aren't specifically called out, but it wasn't the point of the map here. Also, here is where the Cincinnati NBDs are defined for NBDIP purposes: http://city-egov.cincinnati-oh.gov/Webtop/ws/council/public/child/Blob/22713.pdf;jsessionid=4DC308DB23BADE857136ACFD5D8D3383?rpp=-10&m=3&w=doc_no%3D'200800552'
May 26, 200916 yr I love California. It has a real country town vibe to it, maybe the only place in the city where you can pretend you're out in the middle of nowhere. Until you hit Riverstar park and Coney island that is.
May 26, 200916 yr I love California. It has a real country town vibe to it, maybe the only place in the city where you can pretend you're out in the middle of nowhere. Until you hit Riverstar park and Coney island that is. Agreed. :)
May 26, 200916 yr The one area Cincinnati did a good job annexing was along the river. We missed a lot of places up the Mill Creek Valley, but the city controls a large percentage of the riverfront in Hamilton Cty.
May 26, 200916 yr The one area Cincinnati did a good job annexing was along the river. We missed a lot of places up the Mill Creek Valley, but the city controls a large percentage of the riverfront in Hamilton Cty. Yep. That's going to be huge for Cincy in the years to come.
May 26, 200916 yr i dk, california is quiet, but my in-laws live in mt. washington and it seems pretty out there from the rest of cinci too (and more tied to suburbia). isn't that odd strip to the west along the river the true outlier? i've been all over cinci, except i've never been over there before. what's to do over there? is that where the ferry is? anyway, good idea to grab up that riverfront land!
May 27, 200916 yr ^Not too much to do. All industry and flood plains. The Cabana, Jim & Jacks, and Drews are a few bars/restaurants that dot the river from Sedamsville to Anderson Ferry. If you ever have a free couple of hours, take Rt 50 from Cincy to the Indy line. It's a whole different world. Saylor Park has a certain charm that has always struck me as one of the cities best kept secrets (architecturally speaking). The big stately river town houses give out that Tom Sawyer/Huck Finn vibe/era. Victorian en masse, I do believe! There's no real NBD's though.
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