This is your first of three free stories this month. Become a free or sustaining member to read unlimited articles, webinars and ebooks. In 1916, the people of Cincinnati voted to fund the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Just askin': Why was the Cincinnati subway never finished? Construction of the Cincinnati subway stopped in 1929 and never started ...
Cincinnati's abandoned subway tunnel, which stretches two miles through Over-the-Rhine and northward, could be reimagined for another use after the city issued an informational request in late ...
Cincinnati, you’re funny sometimes. As a relative newcomer − my family and I have been here two and a half years − I’ve followed several city and regional planning discussions with keen interest and ...
For being a century old and abandoned, Cincinnati's subway doesn't look too bad. Latonia resident Allen Singer searched for the right word to describe what he saw when he went down there in 1997 and a ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A view of the entrance to the 100-year-old subway tunnel beneath Central Parkway. The city of Cincinnati never finished building ...
What should Cincinnati do with its unused subway tunnels? They asked, and the public answered, and the ideas range from a theater to bathhouses to speakeasies to kayak training centers and more.It all ...
CINCINNATI — Few motorists heading east and west on Central Parkway know that more than two miles of abandoned subway exists directly below them. Those that do probably spend little time thinking ...
This is part of our weekly series, Lost Masterpieces, about the greatest buildings and works of art that were destroyed or never completed. One hundred years ago this month, the Ohio city of ...
The following is an open letter to national transportation reporter, Andrew J. Hawkins, in response to his story, "Train to Nowhere: How Cincinnati tried, and failed, to build one of America’s first ...
A Subway sandwich shop on the east side of Cincinnati is closing after nearly 40 years of business.A patron posted the sign that hangs outside the restaurant's door, announcing the closure.It's also ...
It remains among the stranger articles ever published by a Cincinnati newspaper. On Christmas Eve 1950, the Enquirer announced that the new trend in home décor was the personal bomb shelter: “Man, in ...
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