Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Council of Smaller Enterprises, known as COSE, is a division of the Greater Cleveland Partnership and an organization that coordinates the activities of, and provides resources and advocacy for small businesses in the Greater Cleveland area. It is the largest regional small business group in the United States. [1]
The tower would have been built on top of the 1957 structure. When the Cleveland Press folded on June 17, 1982, the North Point Plan did too. Construction of a more modest North Point I began in 1983, [3] and the Cleveland Press building was demolished. It was completed in 1985. North Point II (North Point Tower) was added in 1990.
At its previous eastern terminus at Ontario Avenue, SR 10 turns east and follows Ontario and Orange Avenues (US 422, SR 8, SR 14, SR 43, SR 87) east, turns southeast along a small part of I-77 (Willow Freeway), then exits at the interchange with I-490 (Troy Lee James Highway) heading east along the Opportunity Corridor and north along 105th Street.
(The Center Square) – A trade association that promotes small businesses around Ohio and the country wants to highlight the impact of small businesses on their community as the holiday shopping ...
The Opportunity Corridor is a linear project in Cleveland, Ohio, with a boulevard that connects Interstate 77 (I-77) and I-490 to the University Circle neighborhood. "The purpose of the project is to improve the roadway network within a historically under-served, economically depressed area within the City of Cleveland."
The Frank J. Lausche State Office Building is a 1979-erected 204-foot-tall, 15-story high-rise in downtown Cleveland on the corner of West Superior and Prospect Avenue on the city's Tower City Center complex. [1] It sits in front of the 2002-built Carl B. Stokes United States Courthouse.
Named after Cleveland's 49th mayor, United States Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare and Federal appeals judge Anthony J. Celebrezze, the Federal Building is typical of the modern, commercial office buildings of the 1960s. It displays strength in design through a purity and rich variety of materials.
The AECOM Building, [1] formerly known as the Penton Media Building, and the Bond Court Building, [2] is a commercial high-rise building in Cleveland, Ohio. The building rises 253 feet (77 m) in Downtown Cleveland. [3] It contains 21 floors, and was completed in 1972. [4]