Midtown apartment plan might spur relocation of historic Euclid Avenue mansion
Cleveland City Planning Commission
The Allen-Sullivan House, at 7218 Euclid Ave. in Cleveland s Midtown neighborhood, has been vacant and deteriorating for two decades. It sits on the northern end of a broader site that s now earmarked for an apartment development.
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Cleveland City Planning Commission
Renderings show how Signet s planned buildings, designed by City Architecture, would reference the brick factories and sawtooth-roofed industrial structures that once populated Midtown.
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Cleveland City Planning Commission
A rendering shows how an apartment building would replace the Allen-Sullivan House, changing the look and feel of the site s frontage along Euclid Avenue.
Channel3000.com
February 2, 2021 8:57 AM Natalie Campisi - Forbes Advisor
Posted:
Updated:
February 4, 2021 6:47 AM
One of the main reasons people buy a home is to build wealth. The common line is: “Why pay someone else’s mortgage and contribute to their equity (via rent) when you can spend the same amount of money or less and reap the rewards?”
But, if you’re in a pricey area, that wealth can quickly get eaten up by a mortgage that resembles a tapeworm constantly sucking up funds as your bank account shrinks. This is what’s bluntly referred to as being “house poor.”
Change: The only constant in life
Bill Sims Contributing columnist
Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rogers was on defense, but not from opposing linemen. Not only was he answering questions from the press about the outcome of the game after Tampa Bay beat the Packers for a trip to the Super Bowl, but also questions about his future, and speculation he might be looking to go to another team. That line of questioning led him to proffer the following sentiment for the sports writers to chew on: “(Folks) change is the only constant in this business.”
My father, Al Sims, had a similar line when I asked him once about a magazine he subscribed to called Change. While it was focused mostly on higher education (he was executive vice president of College Boards at the time), he was insistent that change was the never-ending variable in life. Father-to-son message: Learn to adapt, stay ahead of the curve, or get sidelined in the eddies of life. So, what does this constant called chan
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine Week in Review (For the week ending Jan. 29, 2021)
Information submitted Gov. Mike DeWine
OHIO – Throughout the week, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine and Lt. Governor Jon Husted provided updates on Ohio s response to the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as other state initiatives
On Monday, Governor DeWine issued the following statement regarding the news that United States Senator Rob Portman would not seek re-election:
“Senator Portman has worked tirelessly on behalf of Ohioans during his two terms in the United States Senate. Senator Portman has been a key partner on helping Ohio with federal COVID-19 relief and other pandemic-related issues. Senator Portman and I have had similar policy priorities to help Ohio families, from tackling the Opioid crisis and the scourge of human trafficking to protecting Lake Erie and Ohio’s other natural wonders. Fran and I wish Rob and Jane and their family the best in their future endeavors.”
Cleveland Innovation District is part of broader bid for economic reinvention
Kent State University CUDC
An overview map produced for the innovation district effort in Cleveland s Midtown neighborhood shows how four of the five institutions in the JobsOhio partnership touch the Health-Tech corridor. The MetroHealth System is further west, but its focus on understanding and addressing health disparities is deeply relevant to the neighborhoods along the corridor.
A $565 million research and education partnership unveiled last week with the goal of creating 20,000 jobs and billions of dollars of economic impact in Cleveland over a decade is a major milestone in a broader push to reposition the region for growth.