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{{Pagebanner|Lumpytrout page banner cleveland wikivoyage.jpg|disambig=yes}}
'''Cleveland''', [[Ohio]] is a beautiful, vibrant city on the shores of Lake Erie. It's not just a great place to live, but there are many great reasons to visit it, too!
{{printDistricts}}

'''Cleveland''' is a culturally diverse city on the shores of Lake Erie, one of the [[Great Lakes]], in [[Cuyahoga County]], [[Ohio]], [[United States|USA]]. Recreational, cultural and educational opportunities are abundant throughout [[Northeast Ohio]]. You'll find world-class museums and cultural events, professional sports and amusement parks, and the most golf courses per capita in the [[United States]]. ''Places Rated Almanac'' ranks the area second in recreational options out of 354 US metro areas. This region ranks fifth in the nation in number of major cultural resources per one million residents.

==Districts==

The following are districts of the city of Cleveland. For the Cleveland Metropolitan area see [[Cuyahoga County]].

{{Regionlist
| regionmap=Cleveland Wikivoyage map PNG.png
| regionmaptext=Districts of Cleveland
| regionmapsize=300px

| region1name=[[Cleveland/Downtown|Downtown]]
| region1color=#d56d76
| region1items=
| region1description=The downtown district includes the area at the heart of the city around the mouth of the Cuyahoga River, including the Flats, Terminal Tower, the Warehouse District, Playhouse Square, the East 4th neighborhood, North Coast Harbor, and the sports arenas.

| region2name=[[Cleveland/East Side|East Side]]
| region2color=#d7a35a
| region2items=
| region2description=The East Side is the portion of the city to the east of the river, including the city's world-class cultural and arts complex, and contains the following neighborhoods: University Circle, Buckeye-Shaker Square, Central, Collinwood, Corlett, Euclid-Green, Fairfax, Forest Hills, Glenville, Goodrich-Kirtland Park, Hough, Kinsman, Lee Harvard/Seville-Miles, Mount Pleasant, Nottingham, Slavic Village, St. Clair-Superior, Union-Miles Park, Little Italy, and Woodland Hills.

| region3name=[[Cleveland/West Side|West Side]]
| region3color=#d5dc76
| region3items=
| region3description=The West Side is the portion of the city to the west of the river, including the West Side Market and the airport, and contains the following neighborhoods: Brooklyn Centre, Clark-Fulton, Detroit-Shoreway, Cudell, Edgewater, Ohio City, Old Brooklyn, Stockyards, Tremont, West Boulevard, and the four neighborhoods colloquially known as West Park: Kamm's Corners, Jefferson, Puritas-Longmead, and Hopkins.

}}


==Understand==
==Understand==
[[File:Cleveland from lakefront.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Cleveland from lakefront.]]
[[File:Rock-and-roll-hall-of-fame-sunset.jpg|thumb|300px|Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum]]


Cleveland is named after Moses Cleaveland, a veteran of the American War of Independence and distant relative of U.S. President [[Presidents of the United States#22+24. Cleveland|Grover Cleveland]], who surveyed the area and founded the city in 1796.
Cleveland is the urban center of '''Northeast Ohio''', the 14th largest consolidated metropolitan area in the United States. Throughout the twentieth century, Cleveland was ranked as one of the 10 largest cities in the U.S., but like most U.S. cities, began to lose population to suburban areas in the 1960s and 1970s. Unfortunately, Cleveland received a bad reputation in the 1970s due to a series of unfortunate events, most notably the Cuyahoga River catching fire. Okay, it didn't ''actually'' catch fire. Some debris floating on top did. Still, the name-calling continues ("Mistake On The Lake" is a perennial favorite). However, in the mid-1980s, Cleveland earned the nickname the '''Comeback City''' as the urban core experienced a dramatic revitalization process that continues today.


Cleveland is the urban center of [[Northeast Ohio]], with 363,000 people in 2020. It is the center of the 15th largest combined metropolitan area in the United States. From 1890 until 1970, Cleveland was ranked as one of the 10 largest cities in the U.S. Like most U.S. cities, Cleveland began to lose population to suburban areas in the 1960s and 1970s. However, in the mid-1980s, Cleveland earned the nickname the "Comeback City" as the urban core experienced a dramatic revitalization process that continues today. As its "comeback" has continued, the ''official'' moniker is now the ''New American City'' as Cleveland has rightfully earned the reputation as a model of effective public-private partnership for urban planning.
Like other cities in the "rust belt", Cleveland has endured growing pains as it makes its transition from a manufacturing-based economy. While Cleveland earned the reputation as the "Silicon Valley of the Industrial Age", it also developed economic prowess in the fields of health care, law, finance, insurance, real estate development, and professional services. Cleveland is not only home to early innovations in technology (such as automotive and aeronautical components, steel, petroleum, rail, shipping, electrical lighting and telecommunications), but has made some of the most profound contributions to modern medicine (blood transfusions, heart-lung machines, heart transplants, use of anesthetics during surgery and many more).


Despite the common perception that Cleveland is an industrial town, just beyond the automotive and steel plants, a clean and beautiful downtown rises at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River on the southern shore of Lake Erie (often marveled over by visitors who are surprised you can't see the other side, i.e., Canada). Like other cities in the so-called "rust belt", Cleveland has endured growing pains as it makes its transition from a manufacturing-based economy. While Cleveland continues to play a leading role in building the U.S. industrial base, it has also developed economic prowess in the fields of health care, law, finance, insurance, real estate development, and professional services. In fact, Cleveland's economy frequently ranks amongst the most diverse and most dynamic in the USA.
What non-locals don't often realize is that Cleveland's long history of industrial wealth has left it chock full of cultural riches as well as the beginnings of a "sustainable city" movement. For decades, the city has boasted of a "Big Five" orchestra ([http://www.clevelandorch.com/ The Cleveland Orchestra]), the second largest performing arts center in the U.S. ([http://www.playhousesquare.com/ Playhouse Square Center]), a world-renowned art museum ([http://www.clemusart.com/ The Cleveland Museum of Art]), the nation's first health museum ([http://www.healthmuseum.org/ HealthSpace Cleveland]), ([http://www.nasa.gov/ the NASA Glenn Research Center]) and a number of other first-rate attractions. During its "comeback" years, Cleveland has added [http://www.rockhall.com/ the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum], [http://www.greatscience.com/ the Great Lakes Science Center] and four new sports facilities in the downtown area for its professional baseball (Indians), basketball (Cavaliers) and football (Browns) teams as well as the Cleveland State University Vikings basketball team. To complete the "Hall of Fame Cycle", tourists can plan visits to the Rock Hall, [http://www.invent.org/ Inventure Place] (the National Inventors Hall of Fame in Akron) and [http://www.profootballhof.com/ the Pro Football Hall of Fame] (in Canton).


Cleveland's long history of industrial wealth has left it chock full of cultural riches as well as the beginnings of a "sustainable city" movement. Serving as a global model for urban rebirth, Cleveland has been named one of the top 10 international visitor hotspots by ''Travel and Leisure'' magazine.
Despite the perception that Cleveland is an industrial town, just beyond the automotive and steel plants, a clean and beautiful downtown sits at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River on the southern shore of Lake Erie (often marvelled over by visitors who are surprised you can't see the other side, i.e., Canada).


==Get in==
===Climate===
{{Climate
| units = Imperial
| janhigh = 34
| febhigh = 36
| marhigh = 46
| aprhigh = 58
| mayhigh = 69
| junhigh = 79
| julhigh = 83
| aughigh = 81
| sephigh = 74
| octhigh = 63
| novhigh = 50
| dechigh = 38
| janlow = 19
| feblow = 21
| marlow = 28
| aprlow = 38
| maylow = 48
| junlow = 58
| jullow = 62
| auglow = 61
| seplow = 54
| octlow = 44
| novlow = 35
| declow = 25
| janprecip = 2.6
| febprecip = 2.3
| marprecip = 3
| aprprecip = 3.4
| mayprecip = 3.5
| junprecip = 3.5
| julprecip = 3.6
| augprecip = 3.4
| sepprecip = 3.2
| octprecip = 2.6
| novprecip = 3.2
| decprecip = 2.9
| description = {{ForecastNOAA|Cleveland|41.50446|-81.69056}}
}}
Cleveland experiences four seasons, with vibrant spring blossoms, hot humid summers, colorful autumns, and frigid winters.
*July, on average, is the warmest month with a mean temperature of 71.9 °F (22.2 °C); however, Cleveland summers often experience temperatures in the high 80s to low 90s °F (low 30s °C) with relatively high humidity.
*January, on average, is the coldest month with a mean temperature of 25.7 °F (−3.5 °C). Cleveland winters are cold, but the city usually experiences just a handful of heavy snowfalls, but does have the occasional windchill factor below 0 °F (-18 °C). Also, Cleveland gets lake effect snow from mid-November until the surface of Lake Erie freezes, typically by early February. This is snowfall due to Cleveland's position on the southern shore of Lake Erie, at the point where the shoreline shifts from an east-west direction to a northeast-southwest orientation. The East Side primarily experiences lake effect snow. Cleveland's snow belt, which receives substantially more snowfall than the West Side, begins on the East Side of the city (spreading southward from the Lake for up to {{mi|10}} in Greater Cleveland) and stretches northeast along the I-90 corridor past [[Buffalo]] as far as [[Syracuse (New York)|Syracuse]].
*Due to its proximity to Lake Erie, autumn in Cleveland has some enjoyable weather of the year. Some years, high {{F|60}} weather can be enjoyed through [[Halloween]], without the humidity of the summer months.


===Read===
*''Showplace of America: Cleveland's Euclid Avenue'' - once considered among the most beautiful and wealthy corridors in the world, read about the tightly knit community where Corporate America was born (including the likes of John D. Rockefeller).
*''The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History'' - the rich history of Cleveland includes the story of the industrial revolution, the roots of a vibrant arts and cultural mecca, and description of the proto-typical 'melting pot' of America. This is a thick book, but answers just about any question that arises - perhaps plan a stop at a Cleveland or Cuyahoga County Public Library.

===Visitor information===
*{{listing | type=listing
| name=Cleveland Visitors Center | alt=CLE+ Visitors Center | url=https://www.thisiscleveland.com/locations/cleveland-visitors-center | email=cleconcierge@destinationcle.org
| address=334 Euclid Ave | lat=41.49951 | long=-81.69068 | directions=corner of Euclid and E. 4th Street
| phone=+1 216 875-6680 | tollfree=
| hours=Tu-Sa 10AM-6PM | price=
| hoursextra=
| lastedit=2022-11-11
| content=
}}

==Get in==
===By plane===
===By plane===
[[File:Cleveland Hopkins International Airport Terminal.jpg|thumb|Cleveland Hopkins International Airport]]
* '''Cleveland Hopkins Airport''', ''CLE''. Cleveland's main airport is located on the west side of the city. The airport is served by most of the major domestic airlines, and it is a hub for Continental Airlines as well.
* {{go
| name=Cleveland Hopkins International Airport | alt={{IATA|CLE}} | url=https://www.clevelandairport.com/ | email=
| address= | lat=41.411072 | long=-81.838392 | directions=
| phone=+1 216-265-6030 | tollfree=
| hours= | price=$2.50
| wikipedia=Cleveland Hopkins International Airport | image=CLE ATCT and Sun.JPG | wikidata=Q1100795
| lastedit=2019-07-11
| content={{mi|13}} southwest of Downtown. The RTA Red Line Rapid Transit provides frequent and fast rail service from the airport to downtown.
}}
* {{go
| name=Burke Lakefront Airport | alt={{IATA|BKL}} | url=https://www.burkeairport.com/ | email=
| address=1501 N Marginal Rd | lat=41.511534 | long=-81.689995 | directions=
| phone= | tollfree=
| hours= | price=
| wikipedia=Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport | image=KBKL ATC 01.jpg | wikidata=Q1657006
| lastedit=2019-07-11
| content=A small airport downtown right on the shore of Lake Erie that handles private jet, business, and general aviation traffic. Ultimate Air Shuttle offers twice daily flights to Cincinnati from Burke.
}}
* {{listing | type=go
| name=Akron-Canton Airport | alt={{IATA|CAK}} | url=https://www.akroncantonairport.com/ | email=
| address= | lat=40.914933 | long=-81.436229 | directions=
| phone= | tollfree=
| hours= | price=
| wikipedia=Akron–Canton Airport | wikidata=Q954097
| lastedit=2019-07-11
| content={{mi|50}} south of Cleveland in [[Akron]]. Served by most major U.S. airlines.
}}
* {{go
| name=Cuyahoga County Airport | alt={{IATA|CGF}} | url=http://publicworks.cuyahogacounty.us/en-US/County-Airport.aspx | email=
| address= | lat=41.566624 | long=-81.489003 | directions=In northeastern Cuyahoga County.
| phone= | tollfree=
| hours= | price=
| wikipedia=Cuyahoga County Airport | image=CGF TOWER.JPG | wikidata=Q1655461
| lastedit=2019-07-11
| content=Serves private planes as a [[General aviation]] airport.
}}


===By car===
* '''Burke Lakefront Airport'''. A small airport right on the shore of Lake Erie that handles private jet traffic.
Four two-digit interstate highways serve Cleveland:
* '''Interstate 71''' runs primarily west before heading due south into the suburbs, and most directly connects downtown to '''Cleveland Hopkins International Airport''' (via Ohio 237), the lower west suburbs (via I-480), the southwest suburbs, and eventually the state capital of [[Columbus (Ohio)|Columbus]]. The curved section of I-71 that runs between W 25th Street and I-90/490 is referred to as the '''Metro Curve''', due to its proximity to '''MetroHealth Medical Center'''.
* '''Interstate 77''', shown on maps as the '''Willow Freeway''' is Cleveland's oldest freeway, and heads due south from the Innerbelt along the east side of the Cuyahoga Valley and most directly connects downtown to the south suburbs, southeast suburbs (via I-480), Ohio Turnpike (I-80), and the city of [[Akron]]. The stack interchange at I-480 is sometimes referred to as '''The Cloverleaf''', although the actual cloverleaf is located at the junction of Brecksville Road and Granger Road, which is just west of the later extension of the Willow Freeway.
* '''Interstate 80/Ohio Turnpike''' is a toll road that connects the Greater Cleveland with [[Toledo (Ohio)|Toledo]] to the west, and [[Youngstown (Ohio)|Youngstown]] and [[Pittsburgh]] to the east. Access to the city and its suburbs is from I-90, I-480 Eastbound, I-71, I-77, Ohio 8, and I-480 Westbound.
* '''Interstate 90''' connects the two sides (the terms "East Side" and "West Side" have deep root in defining this region) of Cleveland, and is the northern terminus for I-71 and I-77. I-90 separates from the Ohio Turnpike just west of [[Elyria (Ohio)|Elyria]] and joins with Ohio 2 until Ohio 2 separates at Detroit Road in the west side suburb of Rocky River. I-90 then proceeds to I-71, I-490, and the Jennings Freeway (Ohio 176) in the Tremont neighborhood, and over the Innerbelt Bridge into downtown; from this confluence of freeways, I-90 is known as '''The Innerbelt''', until it again merges with Ohio 2 at '''Dead Man's Curve''' and becomes the '''East Shoreway'''. I-90 once and for all splits from Ohio 2 near the Cuyahoga-Lake County line at the '''Euclid Spur''', which connects to the northern terminus of I-271 and then parallels the lakeshore to [[Erie|Erie, PA]].


Several other freeways also serve the city:
* '''Cuyahoga County Airport''' is located in northeastern Cuyahoga County.
[[File:Shoreway_and_stadium.jpg|thumb|The Shoreway]]


* '''Interstate 271''' runs primarily north and south through the city's east suburbs, forming '''The Outerbelt East''', which connects to I-90 at the end of the Euclid Spur in Lake County and I-71 just north of Medina. I-480 briefly follows I-271, and Ohio 8 connects I-271 to [[Akron]] in the south.
* '''Akron-Canton Airport''', ''CAK''. Visitors could also use this airport which is a 45-minute drive from Cleveland.
* '''Interstate 480''' runs east-west along the southern edge of the City of Cleveland, forming '''The Outerbelt South'''. It is a loop route into the city that both begins and ends at the Ohio Turnpike (I-80). I-480 is also the primary route to access Hopkins Airport from the east suburbs.
* '''Interstate 490''' connects I-71, I-90, and the Jennings Freeway (Ohio 176) on the near west side to I-77 on the near east side just south far enough to bypass much of downtown traffic.
* The '''West Shoreway''', which is also '''Ohio 2''', follows the lakeshore across downtown west from I-90 past the '''Rock and Roll Hall of Fame''' and '''Edgewater Park''' to just short of the west side suburb of [[Lakewood (Ohio)|Lakewood]].
* The '''Jennings Freeway''' (part of '''Ohio 176''') connects I-90/490 to I-480 on the west side of the Cuyahoga Valley. It serves as an effective alternate route to I-71 and I-77 from I-480 to downtown.
* The '''Berea Freeway''' (part of '''Ohio 237''') connects I-71 and I-480 to '''Cleveland Hopkins International Airport''' and the southwest suburb of Berea.
* '''Ohio 2''' connects far east lakeshore suburbs in [[Lake County (Ohio)|Lake County]] to I-90 and I-271 (via the Euclid Spur).
* '''Ohio 10/US 20''' connects [[Oberlin (Ohio)|Oberlin]] in southern [[Lorain County]] to I-480 at its western terminus at the Ohio Turnpike.
* '''US 422''' becomes a freeway at I-271/I-480 and connects to the far southeast suburbs and Warren farther to the east.


===By car===
===By train===
[[File:CLE_Amtrak_(2018).jpg|thumb|Lakefront Station is next to the lake, right in the core of downtown]]{{See also|Rail travel in the United States}}
Three two-digit Interstate highways serve Cleveland directly. Interstate 71 begins just southwest of downtown and is the major route from downtown Cleveland to the airport. I-71 runs through the southwestern suburbs and eventually connects Cleveland with Columbus. Interstate 77 begins in downtown Cleveland and runs almost due south through the southern suburbs. I-77 sees the least traffic of the three interstates, although it does connect Cleveland to Akron. Interstate 90 connects the two sides of Cleveland, and is the northern terminus for both I-71 and I-77. Running due east/west through the west side suburbs, I-90 turns northeast at the junction with I-71 and I-490, and is known as the Innerbelt through downtown. At the junction with the Shoreway, I-90 makes a 90-degree turn known in the area as "Dead Man's Curve", then continues northeast, entering Lake County at the eastern split with Ohio 2.
*{{listing | type=go
| name=Cleveland Lakefront Station | alt= | url=https://www.amtrak.com/stations/cle | email=
| address=200 Cleveland Memorial Shoreway | lat=41.5057 | long=-81.6965 | directions=
| phone= | tollfree=
| hours=Ticketing and station hours: 9:30PM-1PM daily. The station is closed 1PM-9:30PM | price=
| wikipedia=Cleveland Lakefront Station | image=Cleveland Amtrak.jpg | wikidata=Q4354189
| lastedit=2019-10-20
| content=The station is located on the north end of downtown (near FirstEnergy Stadium).
}}
**{{go|name=Amtrak|alt=|url=https://www.amtrak.com/|email=|address=|lat=|long=|directions=|phone=+1 215-856-7924|tollfree=+1-800-872-7245|hours=|price=|lastedit=2020-12-01|content=Operates trains throughout the [[United States of America]].|wikipedia=Amtrak|wikidata=Q23239}} Most Amtrak routes serving Cleveland arrive and depart in the 1AM-5AM time frame. Routes stopping at Cleveland:
*** '''[https://www.amtrak.com/routes/capitol-limited-train Capitol Limited]''' operates daily between [[Chicago]] and [[Washington, D.C.]] including stops in [[South Bend]], [[Elkhart]], Waterloo, [[Toledo (Ohio)|Toledo]], [[Sandusky]], [[Elyria (Ohio)|Elyria]], Cleveland, [[Alliance (Ohio)|Alliance]], [[Pittsburgh]], [[Connellsville]], [[Cumberland (Maryland)|Cumberland]], [[Martinsburg (West Virginia)|Martinsburg]], [[Harpers Ferry]], and [[Rockville]].
*** '''[https://www.amtrak.com/lake-shore-limited-train Lake Shore Limited]''' operating daily between [[Chicago]] and [[Boston]] or [[New York City]]. It makes stops at most stations along the route, though it does not stop at some of the smallest stations. Trains consist of train cars from both branches between Chicago and Albany ([[Rensselaer (New York)|Rensselaer]]). The trains split into separate branches between Albany (Rensselaer) and both Boston and New York City. Stops between Chicago and Albany (Rensselaer) include [[South Bend]], [[Elkhart]], Waterloo, [[Bryan (Ohio)|Bryan]], [[Toledo (Ohio)|Toledo]], [[Sandusky]], [[Elyria (Ohio)|Elyria]], Cleveland, [[Erie]], Buffalo ([[Cheektowaga|Depew]]), [[Rochester (New York)|Rochester]], [[Syracuse (New York)|Syracuse]], [[Utica]], and [[Schenectady]]. Stops between Albany (Rensselaer) and Boston include [[Pittsfield]], [[Springfield (Massachusetts)|Springfield]], [[Worcester (Massachusetts)|Worcester]], [[Framingham]].

===By bus===

* {{listing | type=go
| name=Barons Bus | alt= | url=https://baronsbus.com/bus-tickets/ | email=
| address=(office) 12800 Brookpark Rd | lat=41.4251 | long=-81.7585 | directions=
| phone= | tollfree=+1-888-378-3823
| hours= | price=
| lastedit=2019-10-25
| content=
}}
* {{listing | type=go
| name=Go Bus | alt=Operated by Barons Bus | url=https://ridegobus.com/ | email=
| address=Greyhound bus station at 1465 Chester Ave | lat=41.503402 | long=-81.68224 | directions=Additional stop at the airport.
| phone= | tollfree=+1-888-95-GOBUS | fax=
| hours= | price=
| content=Travels to Parkersburg through Parma, Broadway Heights, Ankron, Canton, Mt Eaton, New Philadelphia, Newcomerstown, Cambridge, Caldwell and Marietta.
}}
*{{listing
| type=go | name=Greyhound | url=http://www.greyhound.com | email=
| address=(bus station) 1465 Chester Ave | lat=41.503402 | long=-81.682243 | directions=between E 13th and E 17th Sts
| phone=+1 216 781-0520 | tollfree= | fax=
| hours=Station and ticketing hours: 24 hours daily | price=
| content=Greyhound offers passenger bus service from many U.S. cities. Buses arrive and depart from Greyhound's Art Deco station in downtown Cleveland.
}}
*{{listing | type=go
| name=Megabus | alt= | url=http://us.megabus.com | email=
| address=E 22nd St and Prospect Ave | lat=41.499924 | long=-81.674935 | directions=Stephanie Tubbs Jones Transit Center
| phone= | tollfree= | fax=
| hours= | price=
| lastedit=2017-01-11
| content=Low-cost bus company offering service to Cleveland from [[Chicago]] and [[Toledo (Ohio)|Toledo]]
}}

===By boat===
Many boaters use the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence Seaway and their connection points as a travel route. There are many marinas and public boat ramps available for this purpose. Also, some commercial cruise lines [https://www.cruisethegreatlakes.com/] provide Great Lakes cruises that include Cleveland on the itinerary.


==Get around==
==Get around==
{{Mapframe|41.505456|-81.691447|zoom=14|layer=W|height=500|width=450}}
Cleveland currently has a bus and rail mass transit system operated by the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority, also known as "RTA". The rail portion is officially called the Cleveland Rapid Transit, but is better known as The Rapid. It consists of two light rail lines, known as the Green and Blue Lines, and a heavy rail line, the Red Line. RTA is currently installing a bus rapid transit line, coined the "Silver Line", which will run along Euclid Avenue from downtown to University Circle.[19]
===By car===
Cleveland might be one of the easiest cities in the world to navigate. There are almost no one-way streets, because the city was planned to have "European Avenues" (which resulted in the foresight to make them broad enough for vehicular transportation that couldn't have been imagined in the late 1700s). Traffic is generally not a problem relative to other major U.S. metro areas. Throughout the downtown area, purple signs direct visitors to let you know where you are and what district you are in. The streets that run north-south are numbered, except for Ontario Street (the north-south street bisecting Public Square). Numbered streets are named "West", west of Ontario and "East", east of Ontario. (Broadview Road becomes the primary geographic boundary between 'East' and 'West' addresses to the south of the city.) The major east-west streets are generally named as "avenues".


Finding an address is simple as well. Numbers on north-south streets increase as you head south from Lake Erie, numbers on east-west streets increase as you head away from downtown and coincide with the numbered streets (i.e. 6500 Detroit Ave is located at the corner of Detroit Ave and W 65th St). Odd addresses on north-south streets are for buildings on the east side of the street, and even addresses are on the west side; on the west side of Cleveland, odd addresses on east-west streets are located on the south side of the street, while even addresses are on the north side—the reverse is true for east-west streets on the east side of Cleveland. This addressing scheme continues into most of the suburbs (some exceptions include Berea and Bedford) and even most cities and townships in Lake and Lorain Counties.
==See==


Most of the city is laid out in grids and has very clear signage enabling you to easily know where you are. Throughout the area, signs are thoroughly placed to indicate the route to the nearest major freeway, making the city extremely visitor-friendly!
*'''Cleveland Museum of Art''', 11150 East Boulevard, Ph: (216) 421-7350, [http://www.clevelandart.org/]. A free art museum offering exhibits of everything from Greek and Roman statue to modern art. Closed on Mondays, open Tu, Th, Sa, Su 10AM-5PM, We, Fri 10AM-9PM.
*'''Cleveland Orchestra''', 11001 Euclid Avenue (''Severance Hall''), Ph: (216) 231-7300, [http://www.clevelandorch.com/].
*'''Rock and Roll Hall of Fame''', [http://www.rockhall.org/]. Located on the Lake Erie shoreline, this distinctive building was designed by noted architect I.M. Pei and houses a massive collection of rock and roll memorabilia.
*'''Cleveland Museum of Natural History''' [http://www.cmnh.org/].
*'''Great Lakes Science Center''' [http://www.greatscience.com/].
*'''Museum of Contemporary Art''', [http://www.contemporaryart.org/].
*'''Cleveland Botanical Garden''', [http://www.cbgarden.org/].
*'''Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage''', [http://www.maltzjewishmuseum.org/].
*'''Playhouse Square''' [http://www.playhousesquare.com/].
*'''West Side Market''', [http://www.westsidemarket.com/].
*'''Lake Erie'''. The much improved Great Lake defines Cleveland's north border and provides many opportunities for boating, fishing, swimming and walks.
*'''University Circle''', [http://www.universitycircle.org/]. University Circle is located several miles from downtown and can be reached via Euclid Avenue. The circle itself is a large open area that is often filled with frisbee-tossing college students, but its main attractions are the numerous museums and schools which surround it.
*'''Cuyahoga Valley Towpath''', [http://www.nps.gov/cuva/planavisit/todo/recreation/ohioerie.htm].
*'''The Arcade in Cleveland''', [http://www.clevelandskyscrapers.com/cleveland/arcade.html]. Built in 1890 and designed by John Eisenmann. The construction was financed by John D. Rockefeller, Marcus Hanna and several other wealthy Clevelanders of the day. The cost of the project was approximately $875,000 - today it would be impossible to replicate. The inspiration of the project is said to be the Vittorio Emanuele in Milan, Italy. Although pedestrian arcades exist in several North American cities, few - if any, compare to the grandeur of the Arcade in Cleveland. The Arcade was the first building in Cleveland to be placed on the National Register of Historic Places. The structure features a 5 story high atrium with extensive metal decorative work. The top floor features gargoyles which circle the entire atrium area. The structure includes the famous skylighted atrium as well as two 9-story towers, one each on Euclid Avenue and Superior Avenue.


Cleveland rush hours (7AM-9AM; 4PM-6:30PM in the afternoon) are light compared to many metropolitan areas, with traffic still moving near posted speed limits throughout most of the area. Some places notorious for slow or stop and go traffic are:
==Do==


Morning:
A wide variety of activities await you in Northeast Ohio. Whether you are looking for outdoor fun, culture, the fine arts, history, sports, shopping, clubbing and dining - '''Cleveland ROCKS!'''
* '''I-71 Northbound''' from W 25th St into Downtown and from Bagley Rd to I-480
* '''I-77 Northbound''' from I-490 into Downtown and from the Ohio Turnpike to I-480
* '''I-90 Eastbound''' from W 25th St into Downtown
* '''I-90 Westbound''' from E 55th St into Downtown
* '''I-271 Northbound''' approaching I-480
* '''I-480 Eastbound''' from the Jennings Freeway (Ohio 176) to I-77 and approaching I-271
* '''Jennings Freeway (Ohio 176)''' approaching I-90/490

Afternoon:
* '''I-71 Southbound''' from I-480/Ohio 237 to Bagley Rd
* '''I-77 Southbound''' from downtown to I-490 and from I-480 to Pleasant Valley Rd
* '''I-90 Westbound''' from downtown to the Innerbelt Bridge
* '''I-90 Eastbound''' from downtown to Dead Man's Curve
* '''I-271 Southbound''' approaching I-480
* '''I-480 Westbound''' from W 130th St to I-71/Ohio 237

Road construction can impact travel times at rush hours, and usually occurs only from March to November. Any point in [[Cuyahoga County]] is normally reachable from any other point in the county by car in 45 minutes or less at non-peak driving hours.

===By public transit===
[[File:RTA Green Line train.png|thumb|Waterfront green line]]
[[File:Tower City station (3).jpg|thumb|Tower City RTA station]]
Greater Cleveland is also served by a public bus and rail transit system, operated by the '''[http://www.riderta.com/ Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority]''', also known as "RTA". The rail portion is officially called the Cleveland Rapid Transit, but is known by locals as "The Rapid". It consists of two light rail lines, known as the Green and Blue Lines (which extend to the east side suburbs), and a heavy rail line, the Red Line (which connects Cleveland Hopkins International Airport and the west side suburbs with Tower City Center downtown and continues past University Circle to the inner-ring suburb of East Cleveland.) RTA's Waterfront Line is a short track specifically catering to tourists by connecting Tower City Center to the Flats Entertainment District, Cleveland Browns Stadium, Great Lakes Science Center, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Burke Lakefront Airport.

====Bus====
A bus rapid transit line, called the "Health Line", runs along Euclid Avenue, providing a direct route between Cleveland's primary tourist attractions from downtown to University Circle. A $5 All-Day Pass is good for unlimited rides on the trains and the buses.

===By bicycle===
Greater Cleveland is expanding its bicycle trails and bicycle paths throughout the city. In addition, the city has numerous bicycle shops, mostly located on the near west side
* {{go
| name=Ohio City Cycles | alt= | url=https://ohiocitycycles.org/rentals/ | email=info@ohiocitycycles.org
| address=1840 Columbus Rd | lat=41.48993 | long=-81.70113 | directions=
| phone=+1 216 830-2667 | tollfree=
| hours= | price=
| lastedit=2019-10-20
| content=A non-profit bike co-op. Provides rentals of fitted bikes, bike repair services, and.
}}
* {{go
| name=Bike Cleveland | alt= | url=https://www.bikecleveland.org/ | email=info@bikecleveland.org
| address=3000 Bridge Ave | lat=41.48421 | long=-81.70878 | directions=
| phone=+1 216 245-3101 | tollfree=
| hours= | price=
| lastedit=2019-10-20
| content=A local bicycle advocacy group. Hosts events and provides information about cycling in the area.
}}

==See==
[[File:Moon over Cleveland (33388400986).jpg|alt=|thumb|Downtown Cleveland]]
* Most attractions in Cleveland are [[Cleveland/Downtown|Downtown]]. These include the Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, and the Cleveland Botanical Gardens, all in and around the University Circle neighborhood. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame & Museum, Great Lakes Science Center, and the Steamship William G. Mather Maritime Museum, are all on the lakefront.
* '''Churches:''' Particularly visit the '''Tremont''' district in [[Cleveland/West Side|West Side]] (where the movie ''The Deer Hunter'' was filmed) and the '''Church Square''' district along Euclid Avenue between [[Cleveland/Downtown|Downtown]] and University Circle (where you can see a broad sampling of houses of prayer, many of which are used by their second or third generations of faith). There are also several monumental churches in near east side suburbs of Cleveland Heights and Shaker Heights along Cedar Road, Fairmount and Shaker Boulevards.

==Do==
===Sports===
===Sports===
Enjoy a game with the ''world's best sports fans''. Cleveland is home to the second longest span of sold out baseball games (5 consecutive seasons in the late 1990s), the largest American League baseball attendance (72,086 on 8/9/1981) and the birthplace of Monday Night Football (9/21/1970). But given its storied sports past coupled with its weathered but dedicated fan base (ESPN named Cleveland the "Most Tortured Sports City"), terms like ''The Drive'', ''The Fumble'', ''The Shot'', ''The Move'', ''The Decision'', ''2 More Outs'' will ring in the ears of Cleveland sports fans for generations to come. After the Cavaliers finally ended the city's half-century long championship drought in 2016, ''The Block'' will also ring in fans' ears, but with a far happier note. Win or lose, Clevelanders (obviously) just love sports.
Enjoy a game with the ''world's best sports fans'' and ESPN named Cleveland as the "Most Tortured Sports City".


[[File:Progressive Field.JPG|thumb|300px|Progressive Field - Home of the Cleveland Guardians]]
*'''Football'''. NFL: Cleveland Browns, [http://clevelandbrowns.com/].
*'''Baseball'''. MLB: Cleveland Indians, [http://www.indians.com/].
*'''Basketball'''. NBA: Cleveland Cavaliers, [http://www.nba.com/cavs/].
*'''Hockey'''. AHL: Cleveland Barons, [http://www.clevelandbarons.net/].
*'''Soccer'''. MISL: Cleveland Force, [http://www.clevelandforce.com/].
*'''College'''. Horizon League: Cleveland State University, [http://www.csuvikings.com/].


===Outdoors===
===Outdoors===
*[[File:Cleveland Harbor RR Hall oof Fame.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Cleveland Harbor/Rock & Roll Hall of Fame]] '''No "mistake" about it! - Lake Erie'''. The shallowest and warmest Great Lake (with the most vibrant fishery) defines Cleveland's northern border and provides many opportunities for boating, fishing, swimming and walks. Cleveland boasts '''more miles of shoreline than any other city in the world''', providing enjoyment from before Memorial Day to past Labor Day for boaters, fishermen and beach bums. Sailers, boaters, waverunners and jet skiers enjoy the lake with marinas, piers and boat launches available all along America's '''North Coast'''. Fishing is popular more than three seasons of the year with healthy populations of Walleye and Perch in Lake Erie. In the late fall and early winter, anglers pursue steelhead trout in the many rivers feeding Lake Erie up through Northeast Ohio and into Pennsylvania and Western New York.
* Historically nicknamed the '''"Forest City"''' (due to a famous description of a highly sophisticated society amid a heavily forested environment in Alexis DeTocqueville's "Democracy in America" (1831)), Cleveland is a great place for outdoor activities. ''USA Today'' ranked Cleveland among the 10 best big cities for hiking. If you think Cleveland is just a "rust belt" city, get out to the nearest '''[http://www.clemetparks.com/ Cleveland Metropark]'''. The parks form an '''Emerald Necklace''' around the Cleveland metropolitan area, so no matter which direction you go from downtown, you're headed toward a park. Biking, horseback riding, jogging and rollerblading are easily accommodated by the miles of trails (paved and unpaved) encircling Cuyahoga County. In the winter, visitors can cross country ski these same trails. Sitting upon the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains, Cleveland also provides downhill skiers with slopes throughout the area.
[[File:Cleveland S of river.jpg|right|thumb|300px|The Cuyahoga River winds through the city to feed Lake Erie. This once highly polluted river inspired the American environmental movement, and its restoration is a symbol of the city's recovery.]]


*'''A river winds through it.''' Boaters, rowing crews, canoers and kayakers enjoy the diverse scenery along the Cuyahoga (a Mohawk Native American term, meaning "Crooked River"). The Cuyahoga provides a mosaic of the nightspots of the Flats (dockage available at restaurants and bars), downtown's towers rising up the hill, active industrial remnants of the birthplace of the petroleum and steel industries, pastoral settings and the Ohio and Erie Canal (which in the 1800s provided the connection between the Great Lakes and the Ohio River, ultimately enabling shipping from the Atlantic Ocean (via the St. Lawrence Seaway and the East Coast) to the Gulf of Mexico (via the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers)). The '''Ohio & Erie Canal''' has been preserved as a core element of '''[[Cuyahoga Valley National Park]]'''. In Ohio's only National Park, walk or bike the '''[http://www.nps.gov/cuva/planavisit/todo/recreation/ohioerie.htm Canal Towpath]'''. The National Park starts 8 miles south of downtown and stretches for miles down to Akron. The Towpath extends from Lake Erie in Downtown Cleveland through the southern suburbs past [[Akron]], [[Canton (Ohio)|Canton]], [[New Philadelphia]] and into rural [[Bolivar (Ohio)|Bolivar]] and Historic [[Zoar]].
Historically nicknamed the '''Forest City''', Cleveland is a great place for outdoor activities. If you think Cleveland is just a "rust belt" city, get out to the nearest [http://www.clemetparks.com/ Cleveland Metropark]. The parks form an '''Emerald Necklace''' around the Cleveland metropolitan area, so no matter which direction you go from downtown, you're headed toward a park. Biking, horseback riding, jogging and rollerblading are easily accomodated by the miles of trails (paved and unpaved) encircling Cuyahoga County. In the winter, visitors can cross country ski these same trails. Sitting upon the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains, Cleveland also provides downhill skiers with slopes throughout the area.


===Tours===
''No "mistake" about it!'' Cleveland boasts miles of Lake Erie shoreline, providing enjoyment from before Memorial Day to past Labor Day for boaters, fishermen and beach bums. Sailers, boaters, waverunners and jet skiers enjoy the lake with marinas, piers and boat launches available all along America's '''North Coast'''. Fishing is popular more than three seasons of the year with healthy populations of Walleye and Perch in Lake Erie. In the late fall and early winter, anglers pursue steelhead trout in the many rivers feeding Lake Erie up through Northeast Ohio and into Pennsylvania and Western New York.
*{{listing | type=do
| name=Goodtime III | alt= | url=https://goodtimeiii.com/ | email=
| address=825 East Ninth St | lat=41.510290 | long=-81.695374 | directions=Pier
| phone=+1 216 861-5100 | tollfree=
| hours=Monday-Saturday 9AM-10PM, Sunday 9AM-9PM | price=
| lastedit=2019-07-11
| content=See Cleveland by water via Lake Erie and/or the Cuyahoga River. Dining and entertainment available.
}}
*{{listing | type=do
| name=Lady Caroline | alt= | url=https://www.ladycaroline.com/ | email=
| address=1153 Main Ave | lat=41.497296 | long=-81.703679 | directions=
| phone=+1 216 696-8888 | tollfree=
| hours=Monday-Friday 9AM-5PM | price=
| lastedit=
| content=Lakefront and river dining cruises departing from the west bank of the Flats.
}}
*{{do
| name=African American Heritage Trail | alt= | url=https://clevelandcivilrightstrail.org/explore-the-trail/ | email=
| address= | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 921-4246 | tollfree= | fax=
| hours= | price=
| content=This tour provides a perspective of the experience and impact of Cleveland's African American community.
}}


==Work==
''A river winds through it.'' Rowing crews, canoers and kayakers enjoy the diverse scenery along the Cuyahoga (a Native American term, meaning "Crooked River"). The Cuyahoga provides a mosaic of the nightspots of the Flats (dockage at restaurants and bars), downtown's towers rising up the hill, active industrial remnants of the birthplace of the petroleum and steel industries, pastoral settings and the Ohio Canal (which in the 1800s provided the connection between the Great Lakes and the Ohio River, ultimately enabling shipping from the Atlantic Ocean (via the St. Lawrence Seaway and the Erie Canal) to the Gulf of Mexico (via the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers). The '''Ohio Canal''' has been preserved as a core element of [http://www.nps.gov/cuva/ the Cuyahoga Valley National Park].


[[File:Cleveland_Clinic_Miller_Family_Pavilion.jpg|right|thumb|300px|The Cleveland Clinic is a non profit hospital system, with cutting edge facilities.]]
''Not amused by nature?'' If you prefer to step up the pace, Northeast Ohio offers world-class amusement parks including Cedar Point (1 hour drive to Sandusky), Geauga Lake (just outside of southeastern Cuyahoga County) and Memphis Kiddie Park (in Brooklyn, Ohio), a small but fun park for the little ones (toddlers to pre-teens).


Five major industries have evolved to become the economic strength of the region: Health & Medicine, Science & Engineering, Biotechnology & Biomedical, Manufacturing and Education. In addition to 12 ''Fortune 1000'' headquarters, more than 150 international companies have a presence here. ''Site Selection'' magazine ranked Ohio as first in the U.S. with the most corporate facility projects and expansions in 2007.
==Learn==


Of particular note, the Cleveland Clinic Health System is a world-renowned treatment center that has treated dignitaries from all over the world, most notably King Fahd of [[Saudi Arabia]].
Northeast Ohio offers a variety of educational institutions. Among the area's colleges and universities are:


Also of note is Quicken Loans and their Cleveland Web Center. This medium size company founded by Dan Gilbert (also owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers) boasts being the fourth largest Veteran Lender in the nation as well as the tenth best place to work for in the entire nation rated by Fortune. Quicken Loans has been listed many times as one of the best places to work at years before as well.
City of Cleveland
Case Western Reserve University
Cleveland State University
David N. Myers College, Cleveland
Ohio College of Podiatric Medicine, Cleveland
Cleveland Institute of Art
Capital University, Cleveland Center
Cuyahoga Community College, Cleveland


==Buy==
Cuyahoga County
Baldwin-Wallace College, Berea
Cleveland College of Jewish Studies, Beachwood
John Carroll University, University Heights
Notre Dame College of Ohio, South Euclid
Ursuline College, Pepper Pike


===Upscale===
Summit County
University of Akron
University of Akron Community Technical College


Shoppers have been flocking to Northeast Ohio since the development of several lifestyle centers have attracted upscale retailers. On the East Side, '''Legacy Village''' (in Lyndhurst) has been added to Cleveland's ''fashion district'' along Cedar Road (which includes '''Beachwood Place''' and La Place in Beachwood). Nearby, '''Eton Collection''' (on Chagrin Boulevard in Woodmere) provides even more upscale options for shopping and dining. On the West Side, '''Crocker Park''' (in Westlake) provides a mixed-use "new town" environment with upscale shopping.
Portage County
Kent State University, Kent
Hiram College, Hiram
Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine, Rootstown


===Artwork & crafts===
Lake County
Lake Erie College, Painesville
Lakeland Community College, Willoughby


Cleveland's active art community has galleries throughout the area with larger concentrations in '''Tremont''', '''Ohio City''' (just across the Cuyahoga River from downtown), and '''Little Italy'''. Unique boutiques abound in the inner ring suburbs of Cleveland Heights, Shaker Heights and Lakewood. New England charm and "mom-and-pop" shops can be found along the public squares of Western Reserve towns (settled as the Connecticut Western Reserve), including Chagrin Falls, Hudson, Olmsted Falls, Willoughby, Medina, Chardon and Painesville.
Lorain County
Oberlin College, Oberlin
Lorain County Community College


===Groceries and other basics===
Stark County
Malone College, Canton
Mount Union College, Alliance
Kent State University Stark Campus
Stark State College of Technology, Canton
Walsh University, North Canton


The major supermarket chains in the Cleveland area are Giant Eagle, Dave's, Heinen's, Aldi, Whole Foods Market, and Trader Joe's. In addition the nation's two largest discount store chains Walmart and Target each have a store in Cleveland as well. The CVS and Walgreens drug store chains are also ubiquitous throughout Cleveland with many locations open twenty four hours a day.
Mahoning County
Youngstown State University
YSU College of Health Human Services


==Eat==
Columbiana County
Allegheny Wesleyan College, Salem
Kent State University East Liverpool Campus
Kent State University Salem Campus


[[File:Warehouse District.jpg|thumb|300px|W. 6th Street in the Historic Warehouse District]]
Trumbull County
Kent State University Trumbull Campus, Warren


Cleveland is host to a wide variety of restaurants and is culinarily much more diverse than an outsider might suspect in the Midwest drawing on large enclaves of ethnic neighborhoods and immigration (Ohio City, '''Slavic Village''', Parma, Hough, '''Little Italy''', '''Chinatown''' and others). Certainly, Eastern European food and Soul food are big in a city where Hungarians, Slavs, Poles, Czechs, Bohemians and Southern African Americans were drawn to the steel and automotive industries in the late 19th and early 20th centuries; however, recent emigres have spiced up the mix, adding many more influences including Indian, Chinese, Southeast Asian, Puerto Rican and Central American, Middle Eastern and Mediterranean.
Wayne County
The College of Wooster


In the mid-1990s Cleveland was in step with the resurgence of the restaurant industry, and has many restaurants on-par with their larger-city counterparts, many of which are located in the '''Historic Warehouse District''', '''the Flats''', '''Ohio City''', '''Tremont''', the '''Gateway Neighborhood''' and along the '''Restaurant Row''' in the East Side suburbs. In fact, the area boasts of 6 AAA Four Diamond restaurants, the most between New York and Chicago.
==Work==


Today's Cleveland goes beyond your grandfather's sausage and pierogi steel town.
==Buy==


Most restaurants in Cleveland are closed on Sunday and many have reduced hours or are closed on Monday.
Downtown Cleveland is home to '''Tower City Center''', a large urban complex, a retail mall, hotels and the '''Terminal Tower'''. '''The Galleria at Erieview''' is another complex that includes a popular lunchtime foodcourt.


Cleveland has two varieties of spicy mustard that are found at sports games and sports pubs, Stadium and Bertmans. Local fans are very opinionated about which one is best, similar to how Americans generally prefer either Coke or Pepsi.
Shoppers have been flocking to Northeast Ohio since the development of several lifestyle centers have attracted upscale retailers. On the East Side, '''Legacy Village''' (in Lyndhurst) has been added to Cleveland's ''fashion district'' along Cedar Road (which includes '''Beachwood Place''' and La Place in Beachwood). Nearby, '''Eton Collection''' (on Chagrin Boulevard in Woodmere) provides even more upscale options for shopping and dining. On the West Side, '''Crocker Park''' (in Westlake) provides a mixed-use "new town" environment with upscale shopping.


==Drink==
Cleveland's active art community has galleries throughout the area with larger concentrations in '''Tremont''' and '''Ohio City''' (just across the Cuyahoga River from downtown). Unique boutiques abound in the inner ring suburbs of Cleveland Heights, Shaker Heights and Lakewood. New England charm and "mom-and-pop" shops can be found along the public squares of Western Reserve towns (settled as the Connecticut [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connecticut_Western_Reserve] Western Reserve), including Chagrin Falls, Hudson, Olmsted Falls, Willoughby, Medina, Chardon and Painesville.
There are plenty of bars in Cleveland - most are located [[Cleveland/Downtown|Downtown]]. However, many are closed on Sundays and some have reduced hours or are closed on Mondays.
[[File:Hilton Cleveland Downtown, May 2016.jpg|thumb|The Hilton hotel in Downtown]]


==Eat==
==Sleep==


Hotels are mostly located [[Cleveland/Downtown|Downtown]], with a few additional [[Cleveland/East Side|East Side]] options around University Circle, and some properties near the airport on the far [[Cleveland/West Side|West Side]]. The only hostel in the city is in Ohio City on the [[Cleveland/West Side|West Side]]. Neighboring suburbs also provide numerous lodging choices.
Cleveland is host to a wide variety of restaurants and is culinarily much more diverse than an outsider might suspect drawing on large enclaves of ethnic neighborhoods and immigration (Ohio City, '''Slavic Village''', Parma, Hough, '''Little Italy''' and others). Certainly, Eastern European food and Soul food are big in a city where Hungarians, Slavs, Poles, Czechs, Bohemians and Southern African Americans were drawn to the steel industry at the end of the 19th century; however recent emigres have spiced up the mix, adding many more influences including Indian, Chinese, Puerto Rican and Central American, Middle Eastern and Mediterranean.


==Connect==
In the mid-1990s Cleveland was in step with the resurgence of the restaurant industry, and has many restaurants on-par with their larger-city counterparts: Michael Symon's Lola Bistro, The Baricelli Inn, One Walnut, The Flying Fig and many others offer contemporary American Cuisine to fine French-themed dining.
===Wireless connectivity===
* Most coffee shops offer wireless internet connection as do the campuses of Cleveland State University and Case Western Reserve. Library branches also offer WiFi. The Tower City Center in the downtown area is another spot with free WiFi access.
<!--Intel named Cleveland as one of its four "Worldwide Digital Communities" (with [[Corpus Christi]], Texas; [[Philadelphia]], Pennsylvania; and [[Taipei]], Taiwan). Due to substantial capital investment in support of this distinction, Cleveland will eventually have free wifi access throughout the entire city.-->


===Phone===
Today's Cleveland is not your Grandfather's sausage and pierogi steel town.
Greater Cleveland, including all of Cuyahoga County, is served by AT&T. Several other local telephone companies have networks in different portions of the county, and most cable companies also offer phone service through their networks.


*Area code '''216''' serves the City of Cleveland and the inner ring suburbs.
*'''West Side Market''', [http://www.westsidemarket.com/].
*Area code '''440''' serves the balance of the suburbs along with Ashtabula, Geauga, Lake, and Lorain Counties.
*'''Shaker Square Farmer's Market''', [http://www.lkwdpl.org/farmersmarket/markets.htm].
*Area code '''234''' and '''330''' together serve the rest of Northeast Ohio, including Medina, Portage, Summit, and Stark Counties to the south.
*'''The Baricelli Inn''', [http://www.baricelli.com/].
*'''Lockkeepers Inn''', [http://www.lockkeepers.com/].
*'''Lola Bistro/Lolita''', [http://www.lolabistro.com/].
*'''The Flying Fig''', 2523 Market Avenue, Ohio City (Cleveland), Ph: (216) 241-4243.
*'''Fire Food and Drink''', [http://www.firefoodanddrink.com/].
*'''Park City Diner''', [http://www.parkcitydiner.com/].
*'''Pacific East''', 1763 Coventry Rd, Cleveland Heights, Ph: (216) 320-2302. (Japanese/Sushi)
*'''Three Birds Restaurant''',[http://www.3birdsrestaurant.com/].


All calling within Cuyahoga County (which includes all of the '''216''' area code) is toll-free, and includes toll-free calling into and from western Lake County, Chesterland in Geauga County, Columbia Township in Lorain County, and the communities abutting Cuyahoga County in Medina, and Summit Counties.
===Budget===


Area code '''216''' callers in the City of Cleveland can call toll-free into other communities in Lorain County, such as Elyria and North Ridgeville, while the remaining callers in Cuyahoga County can call certain areas at a reduced rate. Some phone companies provide the extended calling area toll-free as an added benefit to compete with AT&T.
===Mid-range===


===Splurge===
==Stay safe==
[[File:Cleveland_Public_Square,_June_13_120613-M-VW950-079.jpg|thumb|A Cleveland police officer with his partner.]]
When driving at night in the city, stay in your car along major urban corridors (like Euclid, Chester and Carnegie Avenues heading east and Detroit and Lorain Avenues heading west). At night, you may want to avoid inner city neighborhoods and the City of East Cleveland in its entirety.


Many of the city's so-called "rough" neighborhoods are on the east side. However, tourists in general wouldn't have any reason to visit these neighborhoods, and University Circle on the east side, where all the city's main cultural institutions are, is safe. Eastern inner-ring suburbs such as Cleveland Heights, University Heights, Beachwood and Shaker Heights are all very safe.


The city of Cleveland is ranked 7th in violent crime rate among major US cities.
==Drink==


When walking at night, avoid eye contact, walk assertively, stay in lit areas, be aware of your surroundings, and travel in groups if possible.
*'''The House of Blues'''.
*'''The Grog Shop''', [http://www.grogshop.gs/].
*'''Great Lakes Brewing''', [http://www.greatlakesbrewing.com/].
*'''The Bop Stop''', [http://www.clevelandbopstop.com/]
*'''Beachland Ballroom''', [http://www.beachlandballroom.com].
*'''The Agora''', [http://www.clevelandagora.com/].
*'''La Cave Du Vin''', [http://www.lacaveduvin.com/].
*'''Lava Lounge''', 1307 Auburn Ave, Tremont (Cleveland), Ph: (216) 589-9112.


==Sleep==
==Cope==


===Newspapers===
* [http://cleveland.wyndham-hotels.com/ Wyndham Cleveland Hotel at Playhouse Square], 1260 Euclid Avenue, Ph: (216) 615-7500, Fax: (216) 615-3355, . Located in the heart of one of the nation's most dynamic entertainment districts, just minutes away from four Broadway-style theaters, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the Indians' Jacobs Field, the Gund Arena, Brown's Stadium and a number of corporate headquarters.
* {{listing | type=listing
* '''Hyatt Regency Cleveland at the Arcade''', [http://cleveland.hyatt.com/property/index.jhtml]. The Hyatt corporation redeveloped the Arcade into Cleveland's first Hyatt Regency hotel. The Hyatt Regency occupies the two towers and the top three floors of the atrium area. The two lower floors of the atrium area remain open to the public with retail merchants and a food court. In addition, the Hyatt's lobby and offices are located near the Superior Avenue entrance.
| name=Cleveland Plain Dealer | alt=P.D. | url=https://www.cleveland.com/ | email=
*[http://ci-clevelanddowntown-oh.chidirect.com Comfort Inn Downtown Cleveland Hotel] 1800 Euclid Ave. Tel/Fax: (216) 861-0001. Centrally located off of I-90 in downtown Cleveland - just walking distance to the Playhouse Square, Jacob's Field, and Cleveland State University. The Flats is nearby, plus, plenty of shopping and restaurants.
| address= | lat=41.507083 | long=-81.679778 | directions=
* [http://www.ritzcarlton.com/hotels/cleveland/ Ritz Carlton Cleveland], Located in Tower City Center
| phone= | tollfree=
| hours= | price=
| wikipedia=The Plain Dealer | wikidata=Q286036
| lastedit=2019-07-11
| content=Known locally as the "P.D.", the Plain Dealer is the largest local daily newspaper and Cleveland's paper of record.
}}
* {{listing | type=listing
| name=Cleveland Scene | alt= | url=https://www.clevescene.com/ | email=
| address= | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone= | tollfree=
| hours= | price=Free
| wikipedia=Cleveland Scene | wikidata=Q5132227
| lastedit=2019-07-11
| content=A weekly paper containing a lot of entertainment information.
}}
* {{listing
| name=Sun Newspapers | alt= | url= | email=
| address= | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone= | tollfree= | fax=
| hours= | price=
| wikipedia=Sun Newspapers | wikidata=Q7638423
| lastedit=2018-12-02
| content=Community papers with a ton of different versions providing local info on every part of town and throughout the suburbs.
}}


===Alternative radio + weeklies===
===Budget===


* [http://www.913thesummit.com/ WAPS 91.3 FM] (south of Cleveland) Adult alternative (M–Sa), international folk (Su)
===Mid-range===
* [http://www.wbwc.com/ WBWC 88.3 FM] Non-commercial alternative music of Baldwin-Wallace College
* [http://www.wcsb.org/ WCSB 89.3 FM] A little bit of everything from Cleveland State University
* [http://www.wjcu.org/ WJCU 88.7 FM] College alternative of John Carroll University
* [http://www.wobc.org/ WOBC 91.5 FM] Free-form noncommercial radio of The Oberlin College Student Network
* [https://wruw.org/ WRUW 91.1 FM] Noncommercial multi-format of Case Western Reserve University
* [https://www.uakron.edu/schlcomm/clubs-organizations/wzip WZIP 88.1 FM] (south of Cleveland) Rhythm radio/rock of University of Akron


'''Other music publications'''
===Splurge===


* [http://www.jazz-blues.com/ Jazz + Blues Report]
==Contact==
* [http://www.altpress.com/ Alternative Press]
===Read===
* '''Cleveland Plain Dealer''', [http://www.cleveland.com/plaindealer/]. The largest local daily newspaper.
* '''The Free Times''', [http://www.freetimes.com/]. A free weekly paper.
* '''Cleveland Scene''', [http://www.clevescene.com/]. A free weekly paper.
* '''Crain's Cleveland Business''', [http://www.crainscleveland.com/]. Catering to the business community.
* '''Inside Business'''. Monthly.
* '''Smart Business'''. Monthly.
* '''Cleveland magazine'''.
* '''Northern Ohio Live'''.


===Listen===
===Consulates===
{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
! Consulates
! list&nbsp;
|-
| style="vertical-align:top;width:50%;" |


* {{flag |Albania}} {{listing
* '''WRUW-FM 91.1''', [http://www.wruw.org/].
| name=Albania (Honorary) | url= | email=pck@metalstamping99.com
* '''WCSB-FM 89.3''', [http://www.wcsb.org/].
| address=1200 W 58th St | lat= | long= | directions=
* '''WCPN-FM 90.3''', [http://www.wcpn.org/].
| phone=+1 216 631-1755 | tollfree= | fax=
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Belgium}} {{listing
| name=Belgium (Honorary) | url= | email=jedn@lubrizol.com
| address=163 Chestnut Ln, Chagrin Falls | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 440-347-5040 | tollfree= | fax=+1 440 338-8983
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Canada}} {{listing
| name=Canada (Honorary) | url= | email=
| address=4900 Key Tower | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 479-8730 | tollfree= | fax=+1 216 479-8793
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Denmark}} {{listing
| name=Denmark (Honorary) | url= | email=chris@niagaracustom.com
| address=13400 Glenside Rd | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 541-0500 | tollfree= | fax=+1 216 541-5005
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|France}} {{listing
| name=France (Honorary) | url= | email=sjknerly@hahnlaw.com
| address=3300 BP Tower, 200 Public Sq | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 621-7277 | tollfree= | fax=+1 216 241-2824
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Germany}} {{listing
| name=Germany (Honorary) | url=http://www.germany.info/Vertretung/usa/en/04__Legal/01__Consulate__Finder/HC/02__ABC/Thimmig.html | email=dthimmig@ralaw.com
| address=One Cleveland Center, 1375 E Ninth St 10F | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 696-7078 | tollfree= | fax=+1 216 623-0134
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Hungary}} {{listing
| name=Hungary (Honorary) | url= | email=bojtos@stratos.net
| address=11312 Fitzwater Rd, Brecksville | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 440-717-0238 | tollfree= | fax=+1 440 717-0238
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Italy}} {{listing
| name=Italy (Honorary) | url=http://www.ambwashingtondc.esteri.it/Ambasciata_Washington/Menu/Informazioni_e_servizi/La_rete_consolare/ | email=RZiska4358@aol.com
| address=1422 Euclid Ave, 618 Hanna Bldg | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 861-1585 | tollfree= | fax=+1 216 861-6304
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Lithuania}} {{listing
| name=Lithuania (Honorary) | url= | email=Ingrida.Bublys@ibinternationalinc.com
| address=37841 Euclid Ave, Ste 2, Willoughby | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 440 946-3388 | tollfree= | fax=
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Luxembourg}} {{listing
| name=Luxembourg (Honorary) | url= | email=jbright@spiethbell.com
| address=2000 Huntington Bldg, 925 Euclid Ave | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 696-4700 | tollfree= | fax=+1 216 696-2706
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Netherlands}} {{listing
| name=Netherlands (Honorary) | alt= | url=https://www.netherlandsandyou.nl/your-country-and-the-netherlands/united-states/about-us/honorary-consulate-in-cleveland | email=cleveland@nlconsulate.com
| address=640 Cleveland St., [[Elyria (Ohio)|Elyria]] | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 440-365-1123 | tollfree= | fax=
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Romania}} {{listing
| name=Romania (Honorary) | url= | email=Dobreaart@aol.com
| address=5500 S Marginal Dr | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 391-3112 | tollfree= | fax=+1 216 391-8274
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Serbia}} {{listing
| name=Serbia (Honorary) | url= | email=alex1801@aol.com
| address=127 Public Sq | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 344-2010 | tollfree= | fax=+1 216 344-2015
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Slovenia}} {{listing
| name=Slovenia (Honorary) | url= | email=zvone.zigon@gov.si
| address=55 Public Sq, Ste 945 | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 589-9220 | tollfree= | fax=+1 216 589-9210
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Slovakia}} {{listing
| name=Slovakia (Honorary) | url= | email=e.keshock@csuohio.edu
| address=1900 E 9th St | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 687-2494 | tollfree= | fax=+1 216 687-9280
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Spain}} {{listing
| name=Spain (Honorary) | url= | email=Socmanel@yahoo.com
| address=15112 Windsong Dr, Middlefield | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 531-0761 | tollfree= | fax=+1 440 321-1063
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Switzerland}} {{listing
| name=Switzerland (Honorary) | url= | email=
| address=6980 S Edgerton Rd | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 440-546-1370 | tollfree= | fax=+1 440 546-1407
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Sweden}} {{listing | type=listing
| name=Sweden | alt= | url= | email=cleveland@consulateofsweden.org
| address=11610 Euclid Ave | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 421-8016 | tollfree=
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|Ukraine}} {{listing
| name=Ukraine (Honorary) | url= | email=ukrcleconsl@ameritech.net
| address=5566 Pearl Rd | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 440-887-9306 | tollfree= | fax=
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
* {{flag|United Kingdom}} {{listing
| name=United Kingdom (Honorary) | url= | email=morganmatters@yahoo.com
| address=16050 Henly Rd | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone=+1 216 272-7942 | tollfree= | fax=
| hours= | price=
| content=
}}
|}


==Stay safe==
==Go next==
[[File:CUVA foilage.jpg|thumb|250px|Cuyahoga Valley National Park is a large valley with many natural attractions.]]


*'''Not amused by nature?''' If you prefer to step up the pace, Northeast Ohio offers world-class amusement parks including [[Cedar Point]] (1 hour drive west to [[Sandusky]]) and Memphis Kiddie Park (in Brooklyn, Ohio), a small but fun park for the little ones (toddlers to pre-teens).
==Cope==
* '''[[Cuyahoga Valley National Park]]'''. Located south of Cleveland, this park follows the course of the Cuyahoga River and the historic Ohio & Erie Canal between Cleveland and Akron. A number of older buildings are preserved here. The '''Cuyahoga Scenic Railroad''', with train cars from the 1940s and 1950s also runs through the park. Pick up the train in Valley View near '''[https://thornburgstation.com/ Thornburg Station]''' (8111 Rockside Rd), a mixed-use retail, restaurant and office complex sitting between the river and canal.
*'''[[North Coast Beaches]]'''. Along the southern shore of Lake Erie are a large number of public beaches. The largest natural sand beach in Ohio, '''[http://parks.ohiodnr.gov/headlandsbeach Headlands Beach State Park]''', is located east of Cleveland, in Mentor. '''Edgewater Park''', located just west of downtown Cleveland, includes a large beach. Many other beaches are available throughout Northeast Ohio, including Huntington Beach, Euclid Beach and Fairport Harbor.
* '''[[Lake Erie Islands]]'''. Located west of Cleveland, a group of picturesque and festive islands in Lake Erie are accessible via ferry. In addition to several Ohio State Parks located on the islands, there is plenty to do including wineries, restaurants, bars, marinas and beaches.
* '''Hall of Fame Cycle'''. Tourists can plan visits to the Rock Hall, [http://www.invent.org/ Inventure Place] (the National Inventors Hall of Fame in [[Akron]]) and the [http://www.profootballhof.com/ Pro Football Hall of Fame] (in [[Canton (Ohio)|Canton]]).
* '''[https://www.mainstreetpainesville.org Historic Downtown Painesville]'''. Visit quaint Painesville for specialty shops, ethnic restaurants, relaxing spas, college nightlife from nearby [http://www.lec.edu/ Lake Erie College], historic homes, and bed and breakfasts.
*'''[[Sandusky]]'''. Sandusky is home to [[Cedar Point]], the world's largest amusement park, and Kalahari Resorts, a massive water park. Also home to Ghostly Manor, a top rated year-round haunted house, a Carousel Museum, and a historic downtown.

{{routebox
| placename=Cleveland (by train)
| image1=Amtrak Capitol Limited icon.png
| imagesize1=100
| directionl1=W
| majorl1=[[Toledo (Ohio)|Toledo]]
| minorl1=[[Elyria (Ohio)|Elyria]]
| directionr1=E
| majorr1=[[Pittsburgh]]
| minorr1=[[Alliance (Ohio)|Alliance]]

| image2=Amtrak Lake Shore Limited icon.png
| imagesize2=100
| directionl2=W
| majorl2=[[Toledo (Ohio)|Toledo]]
| minorl2=[[Elyria (Ohio)|Elyria]]
| directionr2=E
| majorr2=Buffalo ([[Cheektowaga|Depew]])
| minorr2=[[Erie]]
}}

{{routebox
| placename=Cleveland (by car)
| image1=I-71.svg
| imagesize1=22
| directionl1=N
| majorl1=END
| minorl1=
| directionr1=S
| majorr1=[[Columbus]]
| minorr1=[[Middleburg Heights]]

| image2=I-77.svg
| imagesize2=22
| directionl2=N
| majorl2=END
| minorl2=
| directionr2=S
| majorr2=[[Akron]]
| minorr2=[[Richfield (Ohio)|Richfield]]

| image3=I-90.svg
| imagesize3=22
| directionl3=W
| majorl3=[[Toledo (Ohio)|Toledo]]
| minorl3=[[Lakewood (Ohio)|Lakewood]]
| directionr3=E
| majorr3=[[Erie]]
| minorr3=[[Willoughby]]

| image4=I-480.svg
| imagesize4=22
| directionl4=W
| majorl4=Ends at [[File:I-80.svg|18px]] [[File:OhioTurnpike.svg|18px]]
| minorl4=[[North Ridgeville (Ohio)|North Ridgeville]]
| directionr4=E
| majorr4=[[Youngstown (Ohio)|Youngstown]] via [[File:I-80.svg|18px]] [[File:OhioTurnpike.svg|18px]]
| minorr4=[[Streetsboro]]


| image5=US 6.svg
==Get out==
| imagesize5=22
| directionl5=W
| majorl5=[[Sandusky]]
| minorl5=[[Lakewood (Ohio)|Lakewood]]
| directionr5=E
| majorr5=[[Meadville]]
| minorr5=[[Chardon]]


| image6=US 20.svg
* '''[[Cuyahoga Valley National Park]]'''. Located south of Cleveland, this park follows the course of the Cuyahoga River and the Ohio Canal between Cleveland and Akron. A number of older buildings are preserved here. The Cuyahoga Scenic Railroad, with train cars from the 1940's and 1950's also runs through the park. Pick up the train in Valley View near '''[http://www.cuyahogavalley.net/thornburg.html Thornburg Station]''' (8111 Rockside Road), a mixed use retail, restaurant and office complex sitting between the river and canal.
| imagesize6=22
*'''[[North Coast Beaches]]'''. Along the southern shore of Lake Erie are a large number of public beaches. The largest natural sand beach in Ohio, '''[http://www.dnr.state.oh.us/parks/parks/headlnds.htm Headlands Beach State Park]''', is located east of Cleveland, in Mentor. [http://www.dnr.state.oh.us/parks/parks/clevelkf.htm Cleveland Lakefront State Park] also includes a large beach at its '''Edgewater Park''', just west of downtown Cleveland. Many other beaches are available throughout Northeast Ohio, including Huntington Beach, Euclid Beach and Fairport Harbor.
| directionl6=W
* '''[[Lake Erie Islands]]'''. Located west of Cleveland, a group of picturesque and festive islands in Lake Erie are accessible via ferry. In addition to several[http://www.dnr.state.oh.us/parks/parks/lakeerie.htm] Ohio State Parks] located on the islands, there is plenty to do including wineries, restaurants, bars, marinas and beaches.
| majorl6=[[Toledo (Ohio)|Toledo]]
| minorl6=[[Lakewood (Ohio)|Lakewood]]
| directionr6=E
| majorr6=[[Erie]]
| minorr6=[[Willoughby]]


| image7=US 322.svg
==External links==
| imagesize7=22
| directionl7=W
| majorl7=END
| minorl7=
| directionr7=E
| majorr7=[[Meadville]]
| minorr7=[[Cleveland Heights]]


| image8=US 422.svg
*[http://www.travelcleveland.com/ Convention and Visitors Bureau of Greater Cleveland]
| imagesize8=22
*[http://www.city.cleveland.oh.us/ City of Cleveland Web Site]
| image8a=OH-8.svg
| imagesize8a=22
| directionl8=W/N
| majorl8=END
| minorl8=
| directionr8=E/S
| majorr8=[[Youngstown (Ohio)|Youngstown]]/[[Akron]]
| minorr8=[[Shaker Heights]]


| image9=OH-2.svg
[[WikiPedia:Cleveland, Ohio]]
| imagesize9=22
[[Dmoz:North_America/United_States/Ohio/Localities/C/Cleveland]]
| directionl9=W
| majorl9=[[Sandusky]]
| minorl9=[[Lakewood (Ohio)|Lakewood]]
| directionr9=E
| majorr9=Painesville
| minorr9=[[Willoughby]]
}}


{{isPartOf|Cuyahoga County}}
{{msg:stub}}
{{geo|41.50446|-81.69056|zoom=13}}
{{usablecity}}

Latest revision as of 20:57, 23 November 2024

For other places with the same name, see Cleveland (disambiguation).

Cleveland is a culturally diverse city on the shores of Lake Erie, one of the Great Lakes, in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA. Recreational, cultural and educational opportunities are abundant throughout Northeast Ohio. You'll find world-class museums and cultural events, professional sports and amusement parks, and the most golf courses per capita in the United States. Places Rated Almanac ranks the area second in recreational options out of 354 US metro areas. This region ranks fifth in the nation in number of major cultural resources per one million residents.

Districts

[edit]

The following are districts of the city of Cleveland. For the Cleveland Metropolitan area see Cuyahoga County.

Districts of Cleveland
  Downtown
The downtown district includes the area at the heart of the city around the mouth of the Cuyahoga River, including the Flats, Terminal Tower, the Warehouse District, Playhouse Square, the East 4th neighborhood, North Coast Harbor, and the sports arenas.
  East Side
The East Side is the portion of the city to the east of the river, including the city's world-class cultural and arts complex, and contains the following neighborhoods: University Circle, Buckeye-Shaker Square, Central, Collinwood, Corlett, Euclid-Green, Fairfax, Forest Hills, Glenville, Goodrich-Kirtland Park, Hough, Kinsman, Lee Harvard/Seville-Miles, Mount Pleasant, Nottingham, Slavic Village, St. Clair-Superior, Union-Miles Park, Little Italy, and Woodland Hills.
  West Side
The West Side is the portion of the city to the west of the river, including the West Side Market and the airport, and contains the following neighborhoods: Brooklyn Centre, Clark-Fulton, Detroit-Shoreway, Cudell, Edgewater, Ohio City, Old Brooklyn, Stockyards, Tremont, West Boulevard, and the four neighborhoods colloquially known as West Park: Kamm's Corners, Jefferson, Puritas-Longmead, and Hopkins.

Understand

[edit]
Cleveland from lakefront.
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum

Cleveland is named after Moses Cleaveland, a veteran of the American War of Independence and distant relative of U.S. President Grover Cleveland, who surveyed the area and founded the city in 1796.

Cleveland is the urban center of Northeast Ohio, with 363,000 people in 2020. It is the center of the 15th largest combined metropolitan area in the United States. From 1890 until 1970, Cleveland was ranked as one of the 10 largest cities in the U.S. Like most U.S. cities, Cleveland began to lose population to suburban areas in the 1960s and 1970s. However, in the mid-1980s, Cleveland earned the nickname the "Comeback City" as the urban core experienced a dramatic revitalization process that continues today. As its "comeback" has continued, the official moniker is now the New American City as Cleveland has rightfully earned the reputation as a model of effective public-private partnership for urban planning.

Despite the common perception that Cleveland is an industrial town, just beyond the automotive and steel plants, a clean and beautiful downtown rises at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River on the southern shore of Lake Erie (often marveled over by visitors who are surprised you can't see the other side, i.e., Canada). Like other cities in the so-called "rust belt", Cleveland has endured growing pains as it makes its transition from a manufacturing-based economy. While Cleveland continues to play a leading role in building the U.S. industrial base, it has also developed economic prowess in the fields of health care, law, finance, insurance, real estate development, and professional services. In fact, Cleveland's economy frequently ranks amongst the most diverse and most dynamic in the USA.

Cleveland's long history of industrial wealth has left it chock full of cultural riches as well as the beginnings of a "sustainable city" movement. Serving as a global model for urban rebirth, Cleveland has been named one of the top 10 international visitor hotspots by Travel and Leisure magazine.

Climate

[edit]
Cleveland
Climate chart (explanation)
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
 
2.6
 
 
34
19
 
 
 
2.3
 
 
36
21
 
 
 
3
 
 
46
28
 
 
 
3.4
 
 
58
38
 
 
 
3.5
 
 
69
48
 
 
 
3.5
 
 
79
58
 
 
 
3.6
 
 
83
62
 
 
 
3.4
 
 
81
61
 
 
 
3.2
 
 
74
54
 
 
 
2.6
 
 
63
44
 
 
 
3.2
 
 
50
35
 
 
 
2.9
 
 
38
25
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation+Snow totals in inches
See Cleveland's 7 day forecast
Metric conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
 
66
 
 
1
−7
 
 
 
58
 
 
2
−6
 
 
 
76
 
 
8
−2
 
 
 
86
 
 
14
3
 
 
 
89
 
 
21
9
 
 
 
89
 
 
26
14
 
 
 
91
 
 
28
17
 
 
 
86
 
 
27
16
 
 
 
81
 
 
23
12
 
 
 
66
 
 
17
7
 
 
 
81
 
 
10
2
 
 
 
74
 
 
3
−4
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation+Snow totals in mm

Cleveland experiences four seasons, with vibrant spring blossoms, hot humid summers, colorful autumns, and frigid winters.

  • July, on average, is the warmest month with a mean temperature of 71.9 °F (22.2 °C); however, Cleveland summers often experience temperatures in the high 80s to low 90s °F (low 30s °C) with relatively high humidity.
  • January, on average, is the coldest month with a mean temperature of 25.7 °F (−3.5 °C). Cleveland winters are cold, but the city usually experiences just a handful of heavy snowfalls, but does have the occasional windchill factor below 0 °F (-18 °C). Also, Cleveland gets lake effect snow from mid-November until the surface of Lake Erie freezes, typically by early February. This is snowfall due to Cleveland's position on the southern shore of Lake Erie, at the point where the shoreline shifts from an east-west direction to a northeast-southwest orientation. The East Side primarily experiences lake effect snow. Cleveland's snow belt, which receives substantially more snowfall than the West Side, begins on the East Side of the city (spreading southward from the Lake for up to 10 mi (16 km) in Greater Cleveland) and stretches northeast along the I-90 corridor past Buffalo as far as Syracuse.
  • Due to its proximity to Lake Erie, autumn in Cleveland has some enjoyable weather of the year. Some years, high 60 °F (16 °C) weather can be enjoyed through Halloween, without the humidity of the summer months.

Read

[edit]
  • Showplace of America: Cleveland's Euclid Avenue - once considered among the most beautiful and wealthy corridors in the world, read about the tightly knit community where Corporate America was born (including the likes of John D. Rockefeller).
  • The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History - the rich history of Cleveland includes the story of the industrial revolution, the roots of a vibrant arts and cultural mecca, and description of the proto-typical 'melting pot' of America. This is a thick book, but answers just about any question that arises - perhaps plan a stop at a Cleveland or Cuyahoga County Public Library.

Visitor information

[edit]

Get in

[edit]

By plane

[edit]
Cleveland Hopkins International Airport
  • 1 Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (CLE  IATA), +1 216-265-6030. 13 mi (21 km) southwest of Downtown. The RTA Red Line Rapid Transit provides frequent and fast rail service from the airport to downtown. $2.50. Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (Q1100795) on Wikidata Cleveland Hopkins International Airport on Wikipedia
  • 2 Burke Lakefront Airport (BKL  IATA), 1501 N Marginal Rd. A small airport downtown right on the shore of Lake Erie that handles private jet, business, and general aviation traffic. Ultimate Air Shuttle offers twice daily flights to Cincinnati from Burke. Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport (Q1657006) on Wikidata Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport on Wikipedia
  • 3 Akron-Canton Airport (CAK IATA). 50 mi (80 km) south of Cleveland in Akron. Served by most major U.S. airlines. Akron-Canton Airport (Q954097) on Wikidata Akron–Canton Airport on Wikipedia
  • 4 Cuyahoga County Airport (CGF  IATA) (In northeastern Cuyahoga County.). Serves private planes as a General aviation airport. Cuyahoga County Airport (Q1655461) on Wikidata Cuyahoga County Airport on Wikipedia

By car

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Four two-digit interstate highways serve Cleveland:

  • Interstate 71 runs primarily west before heading due south into the suburbs, and most directly connects downtown to Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (via Ohio 237), the lower west suburbs (via I-480), the southwest suburbs, and eventually the state capital of Columbus. The curved section of I-71 that runs between W 25th Street and I-90/490 is referred to as the Metro Curve, due to its proximity to MetroHealth Medical Center.
  • Interstate 77, shown on maps as the Willow Freeway is Cleveland's oldest freeway, and heads due south from the Innerbelt along the east side of the Cuyahoga Valley and most directly connects downtown to the south suburbs, southeast suburbs (via I-480), Ohio Turnpike (I-80), and the city of Akron. The stack interchange at I-480 is sometimes referred to as The Cloverleaf, although the actual cloverleaf is located at the junction of Brecksville Road and Granger Road, which is just west of the later extension of the Willow Freeway.
  • Interstate 80/Ohio Turnpike is a toll road that connects the Greater Cleveland with Toledo to the west, and Youngstown and Pittsburgh to the east. Access to the city and its suburbs is from I-90, I-480 Eastbound, I-71, I-77, Ohio 8, and I-480 Westbound.
  • Interstate 90 connects the two sides (the terms "East Side" and "West Side" have deep root in defining this region) of Cleveland, and is the northern terminus for I-71 and I-77. I-90 separates from the Ohio Turnpike just west of Elyria and joins with Ohio 2 until Ohio 2 separates at Detroit Road in the west side suburb of Rocky River. I-90 then proceeds to I-71, I-490, and the Jennings Freeway (Ohio 176) in the Tremont neighborhood, and over the Innerbelt Bridge into downtown; from this confluence of freeways, I-90 is known as The Innerbelt, until it again merges with Ohio 2 at Dead Man's Curve and becomes the East Shoreway. I-90 once and for all splits from Ohio 2 near the Cuyahoga-Lake County line at the Euclid Spur, which connects to the northern terminus of I-271 and then parallels the lakeshore to Erie, PA.

Several other freeways also serve the city:

The Shoreway
  • Interstate 271 runs primarily north and south through the city's east suburbs, forming The Outerbelt East, which connects to I-90 at the end of the Euclid Spur in Lake County and I-71 just north of Medina. I-480 briefly follows I-271, and Ohio 8 connects I-271 to Akron in the south.
  • Interstate 480 runs east-west along the southern edge of the City of Cleveland, forming The Outerbelt South. It is a loop route into the city that both begins and ends at the Ohio Turnpike (I-80). I-480 is also the primary route to access Hopkins Airport from the east suburbs.
  • Interstate 490 connects I-71, I-90, and the Jennings Freeway (Ohio 176) on the near west side to I-77 on the near east side just south far enough to bypass much of downtown traffic.
  • The West Shoreway, which is also Ohio 2, follows the lakeshore across downtown west from I-90 past the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Edgewater Park to just short of the west side suburb of Lakewood.
  • The Jennings Freeway (part of Ohio 176) connects I-90/490 to I-480 on the west side of the Cuyahoga Valley. It serves as an effective alternate route to I-71 and I-77 from I-480 to downtown.
  • The Berea Freeway (part of Ohio 237) connects I-71 and I-480 to Cleveland Hopkins International Airport and the southwest suburb of Berea.
  • Ohio 2 connects far east lakeshore suburbs in Lake County to I-90 and I-271 (via the Euclid Spur).
  • Ohio 10/US 20 connects Oberlin in southern Lorain County to I-480 at its western terminus at the Ohio Turnpike.
  • US 422 becomes a freeway at I-271/I-480 and connects to the far southeast suburbs and Warren farther to the east.

By train

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Lakefront Station is next to the lake, right in the core of downtown
See also: Rail travel in the United States

By bus

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  • 6 Barons Bus, (office) 12800 Brookpark Rd, toll-free: +1-888-378-3823.
  • 7 Go Bus (Operated by Barons Bus), Greyhound bus station at 1465 Chester Ave (Additional stop at the airport.), toll-free: +1-888-95-GOBUS (46287). Travels to Parkersburg through Parma, Broadway Heights, Ankron, Canton, Mt Eaton, New Philadelphia, Newcomerstown, Cambridge, Caldwell and Marietta.
  • 8 Greyhound, (bus station) 1465 Chester Ave (between E 13th and E 17th Sts), +1 216 781-0520. Station and ticketing hours: 24 hours daily. Greyhound offers passenger bus service from many U.S. cities. Buses arrive and depart from Greyhound's Art Deco station in downtown Cleveland.
  • 9 Megabus, E 22nd St and Prospect Ave (Stephanie Tubbs Jones Transit Center). Low-cost bus company offering service to Cleveland from Chicago and Toledo

By boat

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Many boaters use the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence Seaway and their connection points as a travel route. There are many marinas and public boat ramps available for this purpose. Also, some commercial cruise lines [1] provide Great Lakes cruises that include Cleveland on the itinerary.

Get around

[edit]

By car

[edit]

Cleveland might be one of the easiest cities in the world to navigate. There are almost no one-way streets, because the city was planned to have "European Avenues" (which resulted in the foresight to make them broad enough for vehicular transportation that couldn't have been imagined in the late 1700s). Traffic is generally not a problem relative to other major U.S. metro areas. Throughout the downtown area, purple signs direct visitors to let you know where you are and what district you are in. The streets that run north-south are numbered, except for Ontario Street (the north-south street bisecting Public Square). Numbered streets are named "West", west of Ontario and "East", east of Ontario. (Broadview Road becomes the primary geographic boundary between 'East' and 'West' addresses to the south of the city.) The major east-west streets are generally named as "avenues".

Finding an address is simple as well. Numbers on north-south streets increase as you head south from Lake Erie, numbers on east-west streets increase as you head away from downtown and coincide with the numbered streets (i.e. 6500 Detroit Ave is located at the corner of Detroit Ave and W 65th St). Odd addresses on north-south streets are for buildings on the east side of the street, and even addresses are on the west side; on the west side of Cleveland, odd addresses on east-west streets are located on the south side of the street, while even addresses are on the north side—the reverse is true for east-west streets on the east side of Cleveland. This addressing scheme continues into most of the suburbs (some exceptions include Berea and Bedford) and even most cities and townships in Lake and Lorain Counties.

Most of the city is laid out in grids and has very clear signage enabling you to easily know where you are. Throughout the area, signs are thoroughly placed to indicate the route to the nearest major freeway, making the city extremely visitor-friendly!

Cleveland rush hours (7AM-9AM; 4PM-6:30PM in the afternoon) are light compared to many metropolitan areas, with traffic still moving near posted speed limits throughout most of the area. Some places notorious for slow or stop and go traffic are:

Morning:

  • I-71 Northbound from W 25th St into Downtown and from Bagley Rd to I-480
  • I-77 Northbound from I-490 into Downtown and from the Ohio Turnpike to I-480
  • I-90 Eastbound from W 25th St into Downtown
  • I-90 Westbound from E 55th St into Downtown
  • I-271 Northbound approaching I-480
  • I-480 Eastbound from the Jennings Freeway (Ohio 176) to I-77 and approaching I-271
  • Jennings Freeway (Ohio 176) approaching I-90/490

Afternoon:

  • I-71 Southbound from I-480/Ohio 237 to Bagley Rd
  • I-77 Southbound from downtown to I-490 and from I-480 to Pleasant Valley Rd
  • I-90 Westbound from downtown to the Innerbelt Bridge
  • I-90 Eastbound from downtown to Dead Man's Curve
  • I-271 Southbound approaching I-480
  • I-480 Westbound from W 130th St to I-71/Ohio 237

Road construction can impact travel times at rush hours, and usually occurs only from March to November. Any point in Cuyahoga County is normally reachable from any other point in the county by car in 45 minutes or less at non-peak driving hours.

By public transit

[edit]
Waterfront green line
Tower City RTA station

Greater Cleveland is also served by a public bus and rail transit system, operated by the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority, also known as "RTA". The rail portion is officially called the Cleveland Rapid Transit, but is known by locals as "The Rapid". It consists of two light rail lines, known as the Green and Blue Lines (which extend to the east side suburbs), and a heavy rail line, the Red Line (which connects Cleveland Hopkins International Airport and the west side suburbs with Tower City Center downtown and continues past University Circle to the inner-ring suburb of East Cleveland.) RTA's Waterfront Line is a short track specifically catering to tourists by connecting Tower City Center to the Flats Entertainment District, Cleveland Browns Stadium, Great Lakes Science Center, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Burke Lakefront Airport.

Bus

[edit]

A bus rapid transit line, called the "Health Line", runs along Euclid Avenue, providing a direct route between Cleveland's primary tourist attractions from downtown to University Circle. A $5 All-Day Pass is good for unlimited rides on the trains and the buses.

By bicycle

[edit]

Greater Cleveland is expanding its bicycle trails and bicycle paths throughout the city. In addition, the city has numerous bicycle shops, mostly located on the near west side

See

[edit]
Downtown Cleveland
  • Most attractions in Cleveland are Downtown. These include the Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, and the Cleveland Botanical Gardens, all in and around the University Circle neighborhood. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame & Museum, Great Lakes Science Center, and the Steamship William G. Mather Maritime Museum, are all on the lakefront.
  • Churches: Particularly visit the Tremont district in West Side (where the movie The Deer Hunter was filmed) and the Church Square district along Euclid Avenue between Downtown and University Circle (where you can see a broad sampling of houses of prayer, many of which are used by their second or third generations of faith). There are also several monumental churches in near east side suburbs of Cleveland Heights and Shaker Heights along Cedar Road, Fairmount and Shaker Boulevards.

Do

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Sports

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Enjoy a game with the world's best sports fans. Cleveland is home to the second longest span of sold out baseball games (5 consecutive seasons in the late 1990s), the largest American League baseball attendance (72,086 on 8/9/1981) and the birthplace of Monday Night Football (9/21/1970). But given its storied sports past coupled with its weathered but dedicated fan base (ESPN named Cleveland the "Most Tortured Sports City"), terms like The Drive, The Fumble, The Shot, The Move, The Decision, 2 More Outs will ring in the ears of Cleveland sports fans for generations to come. After the Cavaliers finally ended the city's half-century long championship drought in 2016, The Block will also ring in fans' ears, but with a far happier note. Win or lose, Clevelanders (obviously) just love sports.

Progressive Field - Home of the Cleveland Guardians

Outdoors

[edit]
  • Cleveland Harbor/Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
    No "mistake" about it! - Lake Erie. The shallowest and warmest Great Lake (with the most vibrant fishery) defines Cleveland's northern border and provides many opportunities for boating, fishing, swimming and walks. Cleveland boasts more miles of shoreline than any other city in the world, providing enjoyment from before Memorial Day to past Labor Day for boaters, fishermen and beach bums. Sailers, boaters, waverunners and jet skiers enjoy the lake with marinas, piers and boat launches available all along America's North Coast. Fishing is popular more than three seasons of the year with healthy populations of Walleye and Perch in Lake Erie. In the late fall and early winter, anglers pursue steelhead trout in the many rivers feeding Lake Erie up through Northeast Ohio and into Pennsylvania and Western New York.
  • Historically nicknamed the "Forest City" (due to a famous description of a highly sophisticated society amid a heavily forested environment in Alexis DeTocqueville's "Democracy in America" (1831)), Cleveland is a great place for outdoor activities. USA Today ranked Cleveland among the 10 best big cities for hiking. If you think Cleveland is just a "rust belt" city, get out to the nearest Cleveland Metropark. The parks form an Emerald Necklace around the Cleveland metropolitan area, so no matter which direction you go from downtown, you're headed toward a park. Biking, horseback riding, jogging and rollerblading are easily accommodated by the miles of trails (paved and unpaved) encircling Cuyahoga County. In the winter, visitors can cross country ski these same trails. Sitting upon the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains, Cleveland also provides downhill skiers with slopes throughout the area.
The Cuyahoga River winds through the city to feed Lake Erie. This once highly polluted river inspired the American environmental movement, and its restoration is a symbol of the city's recovery.
  • A river winds through it. Boaters, rowing crews, canoers and kayakers enjoy the diverse scenery along the Cuyahoga (a Mohawk Native American term, meaning "Crooked River"). The Cuyahoga provides a mosaic of the nightspots of the Flats (dockage available at restaurants and bars), downtown's towers rising up the hill, active industrial remnants of the birthplace of the petroleum and steel industries, pastoral settings and the Ohio and Erie Canal (which in the 1800s provided the connection between the Great Lakes and the Ohio River, ultimately enabling shipping from the Atlantic Ocean (via the St. Lawrence Seaway and the East Coast) to the Gulf of Mexico (via the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers)). The Ohio & Erie Canal has been preserved as a core element of Cuyahoga Valley National Park. In Ohio's only National Park, walk or bike the Canal Towpath. The National Park starts 8 miles south of downtown and stretches for miles down to Akron. The Towpath extends from Lake Erie in Downtown Cleveland through the southern suburbs past Akron, Canton, New Philadelphia and into rural Bolivar and Historic Zoar.

Tours

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  • 1 Goodtime III, 825 East Ninth St (Pier), +1 216 861-5100. Monday-Saturday 9AM-10PM, Sunday 9AM-9PM. See Cleveland by water via Lake Erie and/or the Cuyahoga River. Dining and entertainment available.
  • 2 Lady Caroline, 1153 Main Ave, +1 216 696-8888. Monday-Friday 9AM-5PM. Lakefront and river dining cruises departing from the west bank of the Flats.
  • African American Heritage Trail, +1 216 921-4246. This tour provides a perspective of the experience and impact of Cleveland's African American community.

Work

[edit]
The Cleveland Clinic is a non profit hospital system, with cutting edge facilities.

Five major industries have evolved to become the economic strength of the region: Health & Medicine, Science & Engineering, Biotechnology & Biomedical, Manufacturing and Education. In addition to 12 Fortune 1000 headquarters, more than 150 international companies have a presence here. Site Selection magazine ranked Ohio as first in the U.S. with the most corporate facility projects and expansions in 2007.

Of particular note, the Cleveland Clinic Health System is a world-renowned treatment center that has treated dignitaries from all over the world, most notably King Fahd of Saudi Arabia.

Also of note is Quicken Loans and their Cleveland Web Center. This medium size company founded by Dan Gilbert (also owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers) boasts being the fourth largest Veteran Lender in the nation as well as the tenth best place to work for in the entire nation rated by Fortune. Quicken Loans has been listed many times as one of the best places to work at years before as well.

Buy

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Upscale

[edit]

Shoppers have been flocking to Northeast Ohio since the development of several lifestyle centers have attracted upscale retailers. On the East Side, Legacy Village (in Lyndhurst) has been added to Cleveland's fashion district along Cedar Road (which includes Beachwood Place and La Place in Beachwood). Nearby, Eton Collection (on Chagrin Boulevard in Woodmere) provides even more upscale options for shopping and dining. On the West Side, Crocker Park (in Westlake) provides a mixed-use "new town" environment with upscale shopping.

Artwork & crafts

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Cleveland's active art community has galleries throughout the area with larger concentrations in Tremont, Ohio City (just across the Cuyahoga River from downtown), and Little Italy. Unique boutiques abound in the inner ring suburbs of Cleveland Heights, Shaker Heights and Lakewood. New England charm and "mom-and-pop" shops can be found along the public squares of Western Reserve towns (settled as the Connecticut Western Reserve), including Chagrin Falls, Hudson, Olmsted Falls, Willoughby, Medina, Chardon and Painesville.

Groceries and other basics

[edit]

The major supermarket chains in the Cleveland area are Giant Eagle, Dave's, Heinen's, Aldi, Whole Foods Market, and Trader Joe's. In addition the nation's two largest discount store chains Walmart and Target each have a store in Cleveland as well. The CVS and Walgreens drug store chains are also ubiquitous throughout Cleveland with many locations open twenty four hours a day.

Eat

[edit]
W. 6th Street in the Historic Warehouse District

Cleveland is host to a wide variety of restaurants and is culinarily much more diverse than an outsider might suspect in the Midwest drawing on large enclaves of ethnic neighborhoods and immigration (Ohio City, Slavic Village, Parma, Hough, Little Italy, Chinatown and others). Certainly, Eastern European food and Soul food are big in a city where Hungarians, Slavs, Poles, Czechs, Bohemians and Southern African Americans were drawn to the steel and automotive industries in the late 19th and early 20th centuries; however, recent emigres have spiced up the mix, adding many more influences including Indian, Chinese, Southeast Asian, Puerto Rican and Central American, Middle Eastern and Mediterranean.

In the mid-1990s Cleveland was in step with the resurgence of the restaurant industry, and has many restaurants on-par with their larger-city counterparts, many of which are located in the Historic Warehouse District, the Flats, Ohio City, Tremont, the Gateway Neighborhood and along the Restaurant Row in the East Side suburbs. In fact, the area boasts of 6 AAA Four Diamond restaurants, the most between New York and Chicago.

Today's Cleveland goes beyond your grandfather's sausage and pierogi steel town.

Most restaurants in Cleveland are closed on Sunday and many have reduced hours or are closed on Monday.

Cleveland has two varieties of spicy mustard that are found at sports games and sports pubs, Stadium and Bertmans. Local fans are very opinionated about which one is best, similar to how Americans generally prefer either Coke or Pepsi.

Drink

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There are plenty of bars in Cleveland - most are located Downtown. However, many are closed on Sundays and some have reduced hours or are closed on Mondays.

The Hilton hotel in Downtown

Sleep

[edit]

Hotels are mostly located Downtown, with a few additional East Side options around University Circle, and some properties near the airport on the far West Side. The only hostel in the city is in Ohio City on the West Side. Neighboring suburbs also provide numerous lodging choices.

Connect

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Wireless connectivity

[edit]
  • Most coffee shops offer wireless internet connection as do the campuses of Cleveland State University and Case Western Reserve. Library branches also offer WiFi. The Tower City Center in the downtown area is another spot with free WiFi access.

Phone

[edit]

Greater Cleveland, including all of Cuyahoga County, is served by AT&T. Several other local telephone companies have networks in different portions of the county, and most cable companies also offer phone service through their networks.

  • Area code 216 serves the City of Cleveland and the inner ring suburbs.
  • Area code 440 serves the balance of the suburbs along with Ashtabula, Geauga, Lake, and Lorain Counties.
  • Area code 234 and 330 together serve the rest of Northeast Ohio, including Medina, Portage, Summit, and Stark Counties to the south.

All calling within Cuyahoga County (which includes all of the 216 area code) is toll-free, and includes toll-free calling into and from western Lake County, Chesterland in Geauga County, Columbia Township in Lorain County, and the communities abutting Cuyahoga County in Medina, and Summit Counties.

Area code 216 callers in the City of Cleveland can call toll-free into other communities in Lorain County, such as Elyria and North Ridgeville, while the remaining callers in Cuyahoga County can call certain areas at a reduced rate. Some phone companies provide the extended calling area toll-free as an added benefit to compete with AT&T.

Stay safe

[edit]
A Cleveland police officer with his partner.

When driving at night in the city, stay in your car along major urban corridors (like Euclid, Chester and Carnegie Avenues heading east and Detroit and Lorain Avenues heading west). At night, you may want to avoid inner city neighborhoods and the City of East Cleveland in its entirety.

Many of the city's so-called "rough" neighborhoods are on the east side. However, tourists in general wouldn't have any reason to visit these neighborhoods, and University Circle on the east side, where all the city's main cultural institutions are, is safe. Eastern inner-ring suburbs such as Cleveland Heights, University Heights, Beachwood and Shaker Heights are all very safe.

The city of Cleveland is ranked 7th in violent crime rate among major US cities.

When walking at night, avoid eye contact, walk assertively, stay in lit areas, be aware of your surroundings, and travel in groups if possible.

Cope

[edit]

Newspapers

[edit]
  • 2 Cleveland Plain Dealer (P.D.). Known locally as the "P.D.", the Plain Dealer is the largest local daily newspaper and Cleveland's paper of record. The Plain Dealer (Q286036) on Wikidata The Plain Dealer on Wikipedia
  • Cleveland Scene. A weekly paper containing a lot of entertainment information. Free. Cleveland Scene (Q5132227) on Wikidata Cleveland Scene on Wikipedia
  • Sun Newspapers. Community papers with a ton of different versions providing local info on every part of town and throughout the suburbs. Sun Newspapers (Q7638423) on Wikidata Sun Newspapers on Wikipedia

Alternative radio + weeklies

[edit]
  • WAPS 91.3 FM (south of Cleveland) Adult alternative (M–Sa), international folk (Su)
  • WBWC 88.3 FM Non-commercial alternative music of Baldwin-Wallace College
  • WCSB 89.3 FM A little bit of everything from Cleveland State University
  • WJCU 88.7 FM College alternative of John Carroll University
  • WOBC 91.5 FM Free-form noncommercial radio of The Oberlin College Student Network
  • WRUW 91.1 FM Noncommercial multi-format of Case Western Reserve University
  • WZIP 88.1 FM (south of Cleveland) Rhythm radio/rock of University of Akron

Other music publications

Consulates

[edit]
Consulates list 

Go next

[edit]
Cuyahoga Valley National Park is a large valley with many natural attractions.
  • Not amused by nature? If you prefer to step up the pace, Northeast Ohio offers world-class amusement parks including Cedar Point (1 hour drive west to Sandusky) and Memphis Kiddie Park (in Brooklyn, Ohio), a small but fun park for the little ones (toddlers to pre-teens).
  • Cuyahoga Valley National Park. Located south of Cleveland, this park follows the course of the Cuyahoga River and the historic Ohio & Erie Canal between Cleveland and Akron. A number of older buildings are preserved here. The Cuyahoga Scenic Railroad, with train cars from the 1940s and 1950s also runs through the park. Pick up the train in Valley View near Thornburg Station (8111 Rockside Rd), a mixed-use retail, restaurant and office complex sitting between the river and canal.
  • North Coast Beaches. Along the southern shore of Lake Erie are a large number of public beaches. The largest natural sand beach in Ohio, Headlands Beach State Park, is located east of Cleveland, in Mentor. Edgewater Park, located just west of downtown Cleveland, includes a large beach. Many other beaches are available throughout Northeast Ohio, including Huntington Beach, Euclid Beach and Fairport Harbor.
  • Lake Erie Islands. Located west of Cleveland, a group of picturesque and festive islands in Lake Erie are accessible via ferry. In addition to several Ohio State Parks located on the islands, there is plenty to do including wineries, restaurants, bars, marinas and beaches.
  • Hall of Fame Cycle. Tourists can plan visits to the Rock Hall, Inventure Place (the National Inventors Hall of Fame in Akron) and the Pro Football Hall of Fame (in Canton).
  • Historic Downtown Painesville. Visit quaint Painesville for specialty shops, ethnic restaurants, relaxing spas, college nightlife from nearby Lake Erie College, historic homes, and bed and breakfasts.
  • Sandusky. Sandusky is home to Cedar Point, the world's largest amusement park, and Kalahari Resorts, a massive water park. Also home to Ghostly Manor, a top rated year-round haunted house, a Carousel Museum, and a historic downtown.
Routes through Cleveland (by train)
ToledoElyria  W  E  AlliancePittsburgh
ToledoElyria  W  E  ErieBuffalo (Depew)


Routes through Cleveland (by car)
END  N  S  Middleburg HeightsColumbus
END  N  S  RichfieldAkron
ToledoLakewood  W  E  WilloughbyErie
Ends at North Ridgeville  W  E  StreetsboroYoungstown via
SanduskyLakewood  W  E  ChardonMeadville
ToledoLakewood  W  E  WilloughbyErie
END  W  E  Cleveland HeightsMeadville
END  W/N  E/S  Shaker HeightsYoungstown/Akron
SanduskyLakewood  W  E  WilloughbyPainesville



This city travel guide to Cleveland is a usable article. It has information on how to get there and on restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.