Covington

This genteel town just south of the Ohio River features a number of charming treasures including the lively MainStrasse district with its trendy bars, pubs and restaurants as well as beautiful homes stretched along the river beneath the strikingly modern architecture of the architectural jewel, the Ascent at Roebling's Bridge, designed by Daniel Libeskind. Covington is experiencing a renaissance with new shops, restaurants and condos opening along Madison and Pike Streets, and a burgeoning Arts District that acts as the cultural glue that binds the city's charm to its proud denizens. Plus, its successful startup scene is attracting entrepreneurs, especially in emerging informatics and data-driven industries thanks to the UpTech business accelerator.

bioLOGIC moves into historic Covington toll house

bioLOGIC Corp. is locating its U.S. headquarters and 10 jobs to the historic toll house at the Suspension Bridge, moving there from Cincinnati's BioStart life sciences incubator. bioLOGIC provides administration to affiliate companies that it either wholly or partially owns in the life sciences sector. Its U.S. affiliate companies include PrimeDP, a drug development firm; PHD Diagnostics, a diagnostic development genetic testing firm; Propexion, a custom protein development company; and Propel Labs, a medical instrumentation company. "Our interest in an urban environment easily accessible to Greater Cincinnati led us to Covington," says Nigel Ferrey, managing partner of bioLOGIC. It will take the ground floor of the Toll House, an early 20th century brick structure at the foot of the suspension Bridge that has been renovated for office use. Writer: David HolthausSource: Margaret van Gilse, bioLOGIC

Devou mountain bike trail starts this Saturday
From Cuba with love

Three years ago, professional dancers Cervilio Amador and Gema Diaz made the decision to leave their homes and families and defect to the United States from Cuba. Their decision brought them to the Queen City where dancing for the Cincinnati Ballet has given them a new home.

Cincinnati USA among ‘best in class’ of place branding initiatives

Cincinnati USA's branding efforts deliver a consistent and persuasive message, according to the Branding Strategy Insider.Ed Burghard, executive director of the Ohio Business Development Coalition, writes that it is his belief that place branding is an effective strategy for accelerating the economic growth of a location, either through direct foreign investment or through the expansion of already established companies.In his opinion, the Cincinnati region does a great job across seven different place branding strategies, making the area even more competitive for capital investment.But Burghard warns that other cities and states are also in the game, so both the state and the region must continue to push their brand promises while continuing to improve their business climates.Read the full article here.

Study: Subway tubes can accommodate light rail transit

A new Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Regional Council of Governments (OKI) study looking at the future use of the City's subway tunnels was presented to the OKI Intermodal Coodinating Committee on September 9.The Cincinnati Subway Conversion Study, conducted by URS Corporation, looks at three possible options for the segment of tunnels between the Western Hills Viaduct and the underground stations at Race Street, Liberty Street, and Brighton: maintaining the tunnels, filling them, or improving them for light rail transit.A 2006 inspection showed that the overall condition of the tunnels is fair to good, but ten locations show signs of advanced deterioration, mostly caused by water leakage at construction joints.The Race Street and Liberty Street stations were found to be in generally good condition, and the Brighton station was in fair condition with deterioration to the roof slab and beams.The study also finds that, with a few modifications, light rail transit in the tunnels is feasible.Estimated to cost $115 million, $85 million would be dedicated to hard construction costs, $15 million to soft costs, and $15 million for water main and communications line relocation.New platforms and headhouses would be required for all three stations, as well as new construction for ticketing and other related transit functions.The study recommends: Maintaining the tunnels ($3 million) and developing a funding strategy any long-term decision Planning for the relocation of the water main and communication lines Continuing documentation for a potential local funding match Studying future light rail transit impacts to the CBD street grid and the feasibility of extending the tunnel system along the I-71 corridor and down Walnut Street, past the Riverfront Transit Center, and into Covington Studying the possibility of running light rail along Central Parkway Writer: Kevin LeMasterSource: Cincinnati Subway Conversion Study, OKI

Neigbhorhood Profile: A day on MainStrasse

Hold

Soapicks September 23-28

With hurricane Ike gone and electricity back on, Cincinnati continues to bring a line-up of Fall events which you absolutely cannot miss. This week it’s rock and roll’s turn to blow into town as the MidPoint Music Festival takes over stages everywhere. Also sweeping in is the 20/20 Arts Festival which kicks-off Cincinnati’s arts season. Making smaller vibrations are short films from around the world and a radio’s look at this year’s Presidential race.

the sundresses released

On fire with the anticipation of their latest release, the sundresses is a Cincinnati band determined to make it to the top through a combination of great music, innovative business strategy and a fierce loyalty to themselves. While at it, they wouldn’t mind bringing the modern recording industry to its knees.

Licking greenway plans ‘a place of union’, regional connection
Ladies night is back

Ladies Night in Cincinnati isn’t just about free drinks. Retailers across the city are tapping into the power of the purse sponsoring Ladies Night Out events to create long lasting shopping relationships.

Our Partners

Taft Museum of Art
Warsaw Federal

Don't miss out!

Everything Cincinnati, in your inbox every week.

Close the CTA

Already a subscriber? Enter your email to hide this popup in the future.