Two realty developers and a silent investor are setting a new course for an empty former medical office building near the Cleveland Clinic as a multitenant home for biotechnology-oriented ventures.
Marquette Williams’ vision includes training locals in moviemaking trades. Author: Mark Naymik (WKYC) Updated: 12:02 AM EDT May 27, 2021
CLEVELAND Hollywood on the North Coast.
Local film industry leaders have been dreaming about it for decades.
They have made progress toward that goal through the creation of a local film commission and tax credits for moviemakers, which have helped land such big productions as the “Avengers,” “Fast and Furious,” as well as numerous lower budget films including “Judas and Black Messiah.”
But holding back the region from becoming a film and television production hub has been the lack of studio space – and a workforce with experience in the moviemaking trades.
Tech Elevator enters Texas market with the opening of a Dallas campus
Cleveland technology education company Tech Elevator is expanding into another new market.
The company, which last fall was bought by a company now known as Stride, announced in a news release on Thursday, March 11, that it is opening a campus in Dallas.
This will be the ninth campus for Tech Elevator. The others are in Charlotte, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Detroit, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
Tech Elevator describes its focus as helping individuals and companies gain in-demand technology skills for the modern workforce. It said in the release that Dallas was a clear choice for expansion because that city boasts the seventh-largest concentration of high-tech jobs in the U.S., according to the Dallas Regional Chamber, and as such the demand for tech jobs has been skyrocketing.
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.