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Residential skyscrapers in Columbus, Ohio (5 P) Pages in category "Residential buildings in Columbus, Ohio" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
Olentangy Commons is a planned development residential area [25] [failed verification] which is located in northwest Columbus, Ohio. The nearby areas surrounding the original 65-acre (263,045 square meters) site of the Olentangy Commons Apartments have been developed into commercial and residential neighborhoods.
In the meantime, the Columbus metropolitan area population grew by 10.6 percent from 2000 to 2010. [4] A master plan for the Arena District area called for substantial construction around Nationwide Arena and the nearby Huntington Park. One component of this plan was for residential development to the south and along the Scioto River. Between ...
Columbus Buggy Company built its first production sites in the area and continued to expand them until the company moved its production to Dublin Road in 1906. [4] By the 1910s it was a light manufacturing hub home to Pabst Brewing Co. , Ohio Casket Co., Stuart Lamneck Co. and the Columbus Auto Brass Co.
Northland is a residential and commercial area in northeast Columbus, Ohio.The area is served by the Northland Community Council, which oversees land east of Worthington, roughly north of Morse Road, south of I-270, and west of New Albany, including the neighborhood Forest Park and the independent village of Minerva Park.
The lot commonly known as "Rainbow Park" is located on the southeast corner of Oak Street and Kelton Avenue. The parcel (010-138164) is zoned R3, H35 (residential) [21] and is private property. Prior to 2002, the property was owned by Columbus & Southern Ohio Electric Company. [22]
The Hilltop area includes 67,781 residents and 25,344 households in 2010 with a population density of 4,183.7 people per square mile. The planning area was slightly older than the city as a whole with a median age of 34 years (the city was 31 years).
The Franklinton Floodwall, completed in 2004, is 7 miles long, cost $134 million, and is able to protect the area to crests of up to 30.9 ft. The wall's completion released the area from being considered a floodplain, as well as releasing the previous building restrictions that often prevented development in the past.