(PRNewsfoto/JobsOhio)
COLUMBUS, Ohio, Feb. 17, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Ohio Governor Mike DeWine and Lt. Governor Jon Husted were joined by JobsOhio, The Ohio State University, Nationwide Children s Hospital, Franklin County, the City of Columbus, and state legislators to unveil the Columbus Innovation District. The Columbus Innovation District will bring together globally recognized education and healthcare research institutions to bolster the creation of in-demand jobs and fuel $3 billion in economic impact for Columbus and Ohio over the next 10 years.
The Columbus Innovation District will be a hub for innovation and growth in Ohio, expanding science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) educational opportunities, positioning Ohio to compete nationally for growing tech and healthcare employers.
Columbus Innovation District aims to create 20,000 jobs over next 10 years 10tv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 10tv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Greater Cleveland and Northeast Ohio’s innovation ecosystem is one of the region’s greatest, often underappreciated assets.
I’ve been delighted to participate in recent activities such as the Cleveland Innovation Project (CIP) and the recently awarded Cleveland Innovation District, which have…
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.”