Home » Cleveland Real Estate Search and Cleveland Homes For Sale - 1,745 Cleveland OH properties
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- 4 Beds
- 1 Bath1 Half Bath
- 1461 sq. ft
- Single-Family Home
- CLR ID: 37706782
Presented By: transaction realty
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- 3 Beds
- 1 Bath2 Half Baths
- 1795 sq. ft
- Single-Family Home
- CLR ID: 37706550
Presented By: Cleveland Asset Mgmt
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- 3 Beds
- 1 Bath1 Half Bath
- 1272 sq. ft
- Single-Family Home
- CLR ID: 37248941
Presented By: transaction realty
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- 2 Beds
- 1 Bath
- 1012 sq. ft
- Single-Family Home
- CLR ID: 35627285
Presented By: transaction realty
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- 3 Beds
- 1 Bath
- 1560 sq. ft
- Single-Family Home
- CLR ID: 37053219
Presented By: Terra Realty and Development
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- 3 Beds
- 2 Baths1 Half Bath
- 2255 sq. ft
- Single-Family Home
- CLR ID: 34410911
Presented By: RE/MAX Pros
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- 3 Beds
- 1 Bath
- 1248 sq. ft
- Single-Family Home
- CLR ID: 31885831
Presented By: RE/MAX Pros
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- 3 Beds
- 1 Bath1 Half Bath
- 1297 sq. ft
- Single-Family Home
- CLR ID: 37680890
Presented By: transaction realty
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- 4 Beds
- 2 Baths
- 1690 sq. ft
- Single-Family Home
- CLR ID: 37680523
Presented By: CENTURY 21 ARROW REALTY
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- 3 Beds
- 2 Baths
- 1008 sq. ft
- Single-Family Home
- CLR ID: 34946309
Presented By: ERA Lentz Associates, Inc.
Cleveland is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and is the county seat of Cuyahoga County, the most populous county in the state. The municipality is located in northeastern Ohio on the southern shore of Lake Erie, approximately 60 miles west of the Pennsylvania border. It was founded in 1796 near the mouth of the Cuyahoga River, and became a manufacturing center owing to its location at the head of numerous canals and railroad lines. With the decline of heavy manufacturing, Cleveland's businesses have diversified into the service economy, including the financial services, insurance, legal, and healthcare sectors, though the city's population has continued to decline. Cleveland is also home to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
As of the 2000 Census, the city proper had a total population of 478,403, and was then the 33rd largest city in the United States, (now estimated as the 43rd largest due to declines in population) and the second largest city in Ohio. It is the center of Greater Cleveland, the largest metropolitan area in Ohio. The Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor Metropolitan Statistical Area which in 2000 ranked as the 23rd largest in the United States with 2,250,871 people. Cleveland is also part of the larger Cleveland-Akron-Elyria Combined Statistical Area, which in 2000 had a population of 2,945,831, and ranked as the country's 14th largest. Like many former urban manufacturing centers of the U.S. Rust Belt, Cleveland as a city has declined from a population of 914,000 in 1950 to less than half that today.
Suburbanization and white flight plagued the city in the late 1960s and 1970s, when financial difficulties and a notorious 1969 fire on the Cuyahoga River challenged the city. The city has worked to improve its infrastructure, diversify its economy, and invest in the arts ever since, and now Cleveland is considered an exemplar for public-private partnerships, downtown revitalization, and urban renaissance. In studies conducted by The Economist in 2005 Cleveland was ranked as one of the most livable cities in the United States, and the city was ranked as the best city for business meetings in the continental U.S. The city faces continuing challenges, in particular from concentrated poverty in some neighborhoods and difficulties in the funding and delivery of high-quality public education.
Residents of Cleveland are called Clevelanders. Nicknames for the city include "The Forest City", "Metropolis of the Western Reserve", "Sixth City", "The Rock 'n' Roll Capital of the World", "C-Town" and "The Cleve". Due to ocean access provided by the Saint Lawrence Seaway, the Cleveland area is also referred to as "The North Coast".
Cleveland Tourism
Five miles east of downtown Cleveland is University Circle, a 550-acre concentration of cultural, educational, and medical institutions, including the Cleveland Botanical Garden, Case Western Reserve University, University Hospitals, Severance Hall, the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, and the Western Reserve Historical Society. Cleveland is also home to the I. M. Pei-designed Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, located on the Lake Erie waterfront at North Coast Harbor downtown. Neighboring attractions include Cleveland Browns Stadium, the Great Lakes Science Center, the Steamship Mather Museum, and the USS Cod, a World War II submarine. Cleveland also has an attraction for visitors and fans of A Christmas Story, A Christmas Story House and Museum to see props, costumes, rooms, photos and everything referenced to a yuletide film classic from the mind of Jean Shepherd. Cleveland is home to many festivals throughout the year. Cultural festivals such as the annual Feast of the Assumption in the Little Italy neighborhood, the Hellenic Heritage Festival at the Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in the Tremont neighborhood, the Harvest Festival in the Slavic Village neighborhood, and the more recent Cleveland Asian Festival in the Asia Town neighborhood are popular events. Vendors at the West Side Market in Ohio City offer many different ethnic foods for sale. Cleveland hosts an annual parade on Saint Patrick's Day that brings hundreds of thousands to the streets of downtown.
Fashion Week Cleveland, the city's annual fashion event, is one of the few internationally recognized fashion industry happenings in North America. The show is considered by many to be the best in the Midwest—perhaps second only to New York for fashion weeks in the US. In addition to the cultural festivals, Cleveland hosted the CMJ Rock Hall Music Fest, which featured national and local acts, including both established artists and up-and-coming acts, but the festival was discontinued in 2007 due to financial and manpower costs to the Rock Hall. The annual Ingenuity Fest, Notacon and TEDxCLE conference focus on the combination of art and technology. The Cleveland International Film Festival has been held annually since 1977, and it drew a record 66,476 people in March 2009. Cleveland also hosts an annual holiday display lighting and celebration, dubbed Winterfest, which is held downtown at the city's historic hub, Public Square.
Cleveland Economy
Cleveland's location on the Cuyahoga River and Lake Erie has been key to its growth. The Ohio and Erie Canal coupled with rail links helped establish the city as a major American manufacturing center. Steel and many other manufactured goods emerged as its industries. The city has sought to diversify its economy to become less dependent on its struggling manufacturing sector. Cleveland is the corporate headquarters of many large companies such as Eaton Corporation, Forest City Enterprises, Sherwin-Williams Company and KeyCorp. NASA maintains a facility in Cleveland, the Glenn Research Center. Jones Day, one of the largest law firms in the world, traces its origins to Cleveland, and its Cleveland office remains the firm's largest. However, in recent years, Cleveland has lost other corporate headquarters, including BP, National City Corporation and Oglebay Norton, mostly through acquisitions or mergers. In 2005, Duke Realty Corp., one of the area's largest landlords, announced it was selling all of its property in the Cleveland area because of the stagnation of the market; however, the company continues to maintain a large office building portfolio in the southern suburbs. The commercial real estate market rebounded in 2007 as office properties were purchased at a record pace. From the beginning of July to the end of September, 2007, there was one residential foreclosure for every fifty-seven homes in the metropolitan area, and ten percent of the city's homes are now vacant, due in part to the rise in foreclosure filings. Many of the foreclosed homes are vacant and have been vandalized. Cleveland's largest employer, the Cleveland Clinic, ranks among America's best hospitals as tabulated by U.S. News & World Report. Cleveland's healthcare industry includes University Hospitals of Cleveland, a noted competitor which ranked twenty-fifth in cancer care, and MetroHealth medical center. Cleveland is an emerging area for biotechnology and fuel cell research, led by Case Western Reserve University, the Cleveland Clinic, and University Hospitals of Cleveland. Cleveland is among the top recipients of investment for biotech start-ups and research. Case Western Reserve, the Clinic, and University Hospitals have recently announced plans to build a large biotechnology research center and incubator on the site of the former Mt. Sinai Medical Center, creating a research campus to stimulate biotech startup companies that can be spun off from research conducted in the city.
City leaders stepped up efforts to cultivate a technology sector in its economy in the early 2000s. Former Mayor Jane L. Campbell appointed a "tech czar" whose job is to actively recruit tech companies to the downtown office market, offering connections to the high-speed fiber networks that run underneath downtown streets in several "high-tech offices" focused on the Euclid Avenue area. Cleveland State University hired a Technology Transfer Officer to work full time on cultivating technology transfers from CSU research to marketable ideas and companies in the Cleveland area, and appointed a Vice President for Economic Development to leverage the university's assets in expanding the city's economy. Case Western Reserve University participates in technology initiatives such as the OneCommunity project, a high-speed fiber optic network linking the area's major research centers intended to stimulate growth. OneCommunity's work attracted the attention of Intel and in mid-2005, Cleveland was named an Intel "Worldwide Digital Community" along with Corpus Christi, Texas, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Taipei, Taiwan. This distinction added about $12 million for marketing to expand regional technology partnerships, create a city-wide WiFi network, and develop a tech economy. In addition to this Intel initiative, in January 2006 a New York-based think tank, the Intelligent Community Forum, selected Cleveland as the sole American city among its seven finalists for the "Intelligent Community of the Year" award. The group announced that it nominated the city for its OneCommunity network with potential broadband applications. The OneCommunity Network is collaborating with Cisco Systems to deploy a cutting-edge wireless network that could provide widespread access to the region. Cisco is testing new technologies in wireless "mesh" networking. OneCommunity and Cisco officially launched the first phase in September 2006, blanketing several square miles of University Circle with wireless connectivity.
Cleveland OH Area Information
- Total Crime Risk: 334.0 (100 = National Average)
- Population: 402,036
- Population Growth Since 2000: -15.96%
- Annual Max Avg. Temperature: 59 F
- Annual Min Avg. Temperature: 41 F
- Male Median Age: 31.9 years
- Female Median Age: 35.2 years
- Median Household Income: $31,994
- Highest Education Level Attained: High School 35.56%, Bachelors 8.89%, Grad School 4.5%
Community Demographics
Information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Demographic Information FAQ
| 2010 Population Growth and Population Statistics | Cleveland, OH | Ohio | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Population | 402,036 | 11,552,663 | ||
| Square Miles | 77.58 | 40,948.38 | ||
| Population Density | 5,182.20 | 282.10 | ||
| Population Change Since 1990 | -20.01% | 6.47% | ||
| Population Change Since 2000 | -15.96% | 1.76% | ||
| Forecasted Population Change by 2014 | -5.75% | 0.89% | ||
| Population Male | 192,143 | 47.79% | 5,657,557 | 48.97% |
| Population Female | 209,893 | 52.21% | 5,895,106 | 51.03% |
| Median Age | 33.60 | 36.90 | ||
Information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Demographic Information FAQ
| 2010 Weather Summary | Cleveland, OH | Ohio |
|---|---|---|
| Weather Index | 34 | 42 |
| Annual Maximum Avg. Temperature | 59.0 °F | 60.0 °F |
| Annual Minimum Avg. Temperature | 41.0 °F | 41.0 °F |
| Annual Avg. Temperature | 49.6 °F | 50.6 °F |
| Annual Heating Degree Days (Tot Degrees < 65) | 6,201 | 5,951 |
| Annual Cooling Degree Days (Tot Degrees > 65) | 621 | 752 |
| Percent of Possible Sunshine | 49 | 51 |
| Mean Sky Cover (Sunrise to Sunset - Out of 10) | 7 | 7 |
| Mean Number of Days Clear (Out of 365 Days) | 66 | 73 |
| Mean Number of Days Rain (Out of 365 Days) | 156 | 141 |
| Mean Number of Days Snow (Out of 365 Days) | 18 | 12 |
| Avg. Annual Precipitation (Total Inches) | 37.00" | 38.00" |
| Avg. Annual Snowfall (Total Inches) | 55.00" | 36.00" |
Information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Demographic Information FAQ
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