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Cleveland and its surrounding areas contain one of the country's
best-kept secrets on many fronts. Housing is affordable, the area is rich with great
recreation and entertainment venues, education and training institutions are top-notch,
and the economy is replete with great career opportunities. This work in progress section is designed to
give you some information about Cleveland. We will be adding more information on a
regular basis.
The Population
The population in the City of Cleveland is nearly
500,000 making it the 33rd largest city in the country. It is the 7th fastest-growing
downtown area in the country and the fastest-growing one among Midwestern cities with
more than 5,000 people living in downtown Cleveland. Over 1.3 million people reside in
Cuyahoga County. Counties surrounding Cuyahoga include: Ashtabula, Geauga, Lake, Lorain and Medina.
Economy and Careers
The Greater Cleveland area is the largest economic area in Ohio
and home to the 15th largest consumer market in the U.S. Fortune magazine
ranked Greater Cleveland as the sixth best
location in North America to conduct business thanks to the backbone of five
major industries forming the foundation of economic strength in the region.
These industries are health and medicine, science and engineering, biotechnology
and biomedical, manufacturing and education. Greater Cleveland is headquarters to
113 companies with revenues of $100 million or more, including twelve companies on
Fortune’s 2001 list of the top 500 U.S. corporations. Cleveland is ranked eleventh
in the number of Fortune 500 headquarters. The Fortune 2001 list also reveals that
more than 37% of the top 500 companies are present in Greater Cleveland through
corporate headquarters or major divisions, subsidiaries and sales offices, not to
mention the more than 150 international companies who have a presence in the area.
Living in Cleveland
The great thing about working in Cleveland is there are three
metropolitan areas ranking in the nation’s Top-20 markets to choose from:
Greater Cleveland,
Metropolitan Akron
and Canton/Stark County. You will find that the cost of living
in northeastern Ohio compares favorably with other metropolitan areas and is much
lower than New York, Boston, Washington DC, San Diego, Philadelphia, Los Angeles,
and Chicago. In fact, residents in the Cleveland area have enjoyed a lower average
monthly mortgage payment than residents in 18 other leading major metropolitan areas
of the nation.
Cleveland offers a variety of diverse locations from sophisticated
urban settings in Shaker Heights,
Brecksville, and
Westlake,
to rural landscape in Mentor,
Avon Lake and
Brunswick. Do you like snow?
Then you’ll love eastside living where the
"Lake Effect" off of Lake Erie can bring a foot and half more snow during winter storms. Westside living offers
compact neighborhoods and turn-of-the-century charm. Inland areas offer everything
from new housing to homes of every style ranging from horse farms to high rises.
You’ll love finding neighborhoods offering trendy retail centers and quaint antique
stores or sandy beaches and thick forests in your backyard. Or, perhaps you like
downtown living in an artsy loft in the renovated downtown district. Whatever your
desire, you’ll find it in the neighborhoods and border counties of Cleveland.
If you’re wondering about education, Cleveland is home to
23 colleges and universities that offer outstanding
graduate and undergraduate programs complemented by a strong network of community
colleges providing a vast array of job training programs. There is
Case Western Reserve University,
Cleveland State University, and John Carroll University,
to name just a few.
Arts and Entertainment in Cleveland
If you are an arts and culture aficionado, don’t miss
University Circle, home to various museums and cultural
institutions, including the Cleveland Museum of
Art, Western Reserve Historical Society,
Cleveland Museum of Natural History,
Cleveland Botanical Garden and the
African American Museum.
You can experience first-class performing arts with Broadway productions and opera at
Playhouse Square Center or a show at
the Cleveland Play House or
Carousel Dinner Theatre in nearby Akron.
Does music strike a chord with you? Then work your way through
the more than 300 nightclubs, bars, lounges and concert venues offering live jazz,
blues and good ol’ rock and roll. Visit “the house that Rock built” and experience
the music and stories of inducted rock and roll legends at the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame and Museum. But, best of all for
classical fans, Cleveland is home to the world-renowned
Cleveland Orchestra with Franz Welser-Most as music director. During the symphony season, the orchestra
plays at downtown Severance Hall and
during the summer months at
Blossom Music Center. In addition
to the symphony concerts, Blossom also hosts rock and music concerts throughout the summer.
For those who have their sea legs, don’t miss the
U.S.S. Cod, the last remaining WWII submarine
left completely in its original condition and the
Steamship William G. Mather Museum. Then follow up your tours with a relaxing
dinner cruise leaving
The Flats aboard either the Nautica Queen
or Goodtime III.
And for kids of all ages, the
Great Lakes Science Center gets fun down to a science with interactive
exhibits and a six-story OMNIMAX Theater, or visit the
NASA Glenn Research Center. If your kids are feeling adventurous, take a walk on
the wild side at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo and RainForest,
or satisfy their thrills with some of the world’s tallest and fastest roller coasters
at Six Flags Worlds of Adventure and
Cedar Point.
Sports and Outdoor Activitiesin Cleveland
Cleveland is in the big leagues when it comes to its sports teams. The NFL
Cleveland Browns football, Cleveland Indians
baseball, NBA Cleveland Cavaliers
and WNBA Cleveland Rockers basketball are
all housed in new, state-of-the-art arenas and stadiums.
The Q Arena, Jacobs Field
and Cleveland
Browns Stadium are all exciting places to root for Cleveland’s favorite teams! And don’t forget to enjoy
AHL Cleveland Barons hockey and
CSU Vikings college basketball.
Got to catch fish? Cleveland’s prime location on the southern shore
of Lake Erie, one of the five Great Lakes,
means it is home to some of the best sport fishing in the world including walleye, perch and bass
fishing. Traveling inland, fly fisherman can cast for steelhead trout, salmon and bass
in the Chagrin, Rocky and Cuyahoga Rivers.
However, if you’re not hooked on fish, outdoor enthusiasts
can try swimming, boating, parasailing, scuba diving, jet skiing and canoeing at
Edgewater State Park
or Headlands Beach State
Park. You will also enjoy the fourteen
Cleveland Metroparks Reservations,
or a ride on the
Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad through the
Cuyahoga Valley National Park. Together these parks offer 52,000 acres of rest
and relaxation. You can’t beat the 22-mile towpath for biking, running and walking
stretches along the Cuyahoga River and the historic Ohio & Erie Canal, south to
Akron.
Acknowledgments
Thank you
Greater Cleveland Partnership, the
Convention and Visitors Bureau and the
City of Cleveland for providing statistical data information and
links, as well as many other local resources about the city of Cleveland.
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