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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. [citation needed]
Section through railway track and foundation showing the sub-grade. Grading in civil engineering and landscape architectural construction is the work of ensuring a level base, or one with a specified slope, [1] for a construction work such as a foundation, the base course for a road or a railway, or landscape and garden improvements, or surface drainage.
A 22-foot (6.7 m) high canopy walkway in the neighborhood park and history zones would allow pedestrians to access residential areas on north of the park via an arch in the Detroit-Superior Bridge (rather than descending all the way to the riverbank or up onto W. 25th Street). The proposed park design was submitted to the Cleveland Planning ...
Italian Village is located in the north side of Columbus, Ohio just north of Downtown and adjacent to the central business district. [2] The area is bounded by Interstate 670 on the south, Fifth Avenue on the north, North High Street on the west, and the Conrail railroad tracks to the east. [2]
The first known residential area of Columbus lies within the present day neighborhood. The small addition, consisting of three to six blocks, was referred to as "Franklin Park Place". The borders were Franklin Park South (known as Fair Ave) to the north, Bryden Road to the south, the train tracks to the east, and Fairwood Avenue to the west.
The Arena District has five new-construction residential buildings [37] with a total of 770 units ranging from studio-style apartments to four-bedroom units. One of these residential buildings, Buggyworks, was the manufacturing facility of the Columbus Buggy Co.
Westgate is a community within the Hilltop area of Columbus, Ohio.It was partially constructed on land that formerly housed the American Civil War Camp Chase and a Confederate prison.
Green Lawn Cemetery is privately owned by the nonprofit Green Lawn Cemetery Association. [41] The cemetery is one of Ohio's most prominent rural (or "garden") cemeteries. [42] Any member of the public may purchase a plot. As of 2021, Green Lawn Cemetery contained 360 acres (1.5 km 2), making it Ohio's second-largest cemetery. [43]