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The places where we grow up, live, work, and age shape our lives and our opportunities to thrive. This is the eighth story in ...
A hotel doesn’t provide housing for Cincinnati residents. It generates lots more traffic in terms of accommodating hotel ...
There’s a certain magic in the air when Kathy Wade walks into a room. Not the kind that demands attention through pomp or circumstance, but the kind that commands presence with her grace, and calm ...
Mustard Seed Farm, which operates primarily with a community-supported agriculture (CSA) subscription model that collaborates ...
New program embeds dental students in Ohio communities to improve access and address shortages in rural and urban oral health ...
A new start sometimes requires a clean slate. The central Hamilton County village of St. Bernard, after years of planning and ...
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While traditional trades like carpentry, blacksmithing, upholstery, and tailoring seem like dying trades, they’re not dead yet. It might be hard to find them but, yes, there are still plenty of things ...
GORV's home base is in Lower Price Hill, where its corps of youth and young adults have done most of their work. Here, that includes planting trees, helping to build a green roof on Oyler School, ...
All throughout his rich life, Robert O’Neal, a product of both Covington Independent Schools and Cincinnati Public Schools, traversed in and around Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, becoming a fixture ...
In the post-COVID aftermath, the rapid rise of small businesses and entrepreneurialism has yielded positive outcomes. According to Forbes, the U.S. Census Bureau reported 16 million new businesses ...
Cincinnati’s first hilltop neighborhood, Mt Auburn, began in the early 1800s as an affluent, suburban retreat from the crowding and chaos of the city’s urban core. Conveniently located to both ...