6-454: Detroit–Shoreway is a neighborhood on the West Side of Cleveland , in the U.S. state of Ohio . Detroit–Shoreway consists of the streets between Lake Erie and Interstate 90 , from West 85th to West 45th streets. The retail hub of Detroit–Shoreway is Gordon Square , a series of retail buildings on the four corners of Detroit Avenue and West 65th Street. Named for W.J. Gordon, considered
12-728: A "city father", Gordon Square is currently the central focus of efforts to remake Detroit–Shoreway into a cultural and artistic hub for the west side, including the renovation and re-opening of the Capitol Theatre , a new building for the Near West Theatre , and renovations to the Cleveland Public Theater complex, as well as a complete rebuild of the Detroit Avenue streetscape from West 58th to West 73rd streets, including burying of utility lines. Reinberger Auditorium houses
18-632: A low-speed, 35 mph boulevard, reconnecting the long-split neighborhood with access to the lake. Neighborhoods in Cleveland Neighborhoods in Cleveland refer to the 34 neighborhood communities of the city of Cleveland , Ohio , as defined by the Cleveland City Planning Commission. Based on historical definitions and census data, the neighborhoods serve as the basis for various urban planning initiatives on both
24-748: The Talespinner Children's Theatre , a professional theater made for child audiences. Additional plans include rebuilding the Lorain Avenue Streetscape within the Lorain Avenue Antiques District, from West 52nd to West 82nd. oWOW Radio is located at the 78th Street Studios in Gordon Square. Detroit–Shoreway is serviced by various bus routes, and includes its own rapid transit station, West 65th–Lorain . The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority , in conjunction with
30-572: The City of Cleveland and the Cleveland EcoVillage, is working on plans for transit-oriented development in the area around the station, and Detroit–Shoreway is additionally the site of a brownfield redevelopment of an old Eveready Battery Plant, known as Battery Park. The city is working with the Ohio Department of Transportation on plans to rebuild the limited access West Shoreway ( SR-2 ) as
36-648: The municipal and metropolitan levels. Technically known as Statistical Planning Areas (SPAs), they also provide a "framework for summarizing socio-economic and other statistics within the city." City neighborhood boundaries were last revised by the City Planning Commission in 2012. Cleveland's neighborhoods are generally defined by their position on either the East Side or West Side of the Cuyahoga River . Downtown and Cuyahoga Valley are situated between
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