Crain's Cleveland Business

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MIXED REALITY ART New partnerships make the Revealing Krishna exhibit at the Cleveland Museum of Art possible. PAGE 2

NOTABLE: These marketing executives excelled during difficult economic times. PAGE 10

CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I DECEMBER 20, 2021

MICHELLE JARBOE/CRAIN’S CLEVELAND BUSINESS

OPEN FOR OPPORTUNITY

Corridor attracts first wave of development BY MICHELLE JARBOE

A half-dozen projects are set to rise along the Opportunity Corridor next year, stretching from East 55th Street to the rim of University Circle. The 3-mile boulevard, which links Interstate 490 to Cleveland’s second-largest jobs hub, opened in

November. It cuts through urban prairie and passes industrial relics, factories abandoned as employers and blue-collar workers trickled away over a half-century of decline. While the Ohio Department of Transportation orchestrated the $257 million infrastructure project — the product of decades of discus-

sion and six years of construction — the city and local nonprofits quietly amassed adjacent land. Now developers are eying some of those sites, and private property, for warehouses, business parks and apartment buildings. “I think this is really an untold story. In many respects, people

don’t really know that this work is happening,” said William Willis, the economic development manager for Burten, Bell, Carr Development Inc., a nonprofit group that serves a large expanse of the East Side. See CORRIDOR on Page 20

Orlando Baking Co., with 336 employees, is taking advantage of the visibility created by the new Opportunity Corridor road to advertise open jobs.

` A cold-storage building planned along the Corridor will be a novel facility where food manufacturers can rent space by the pallet. PAGE 21

Closing the digital divide will take more than technology BY RACHEL ABBEY MCCAFFERTY

The pandemic brought a lot of awareness to the digital divide, the inequities between those who have access to the internet and the technology to use it and those who do not.

NEWSPAPER

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When schools and workplaces closed to stem the spread of COVID-19, communities came together to provide that access, but it was often in temporary ways. Hotspots can only go so far. As the world opens back up, the challenge

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going forward will be finding ways to permanently offer that digital access to people, overcoming economic challenges and offering training and other support. Angela Siefer, founder and executive director of the Columbus-based

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National Digital Inclusion Alliance, doesn’t have to tell people there’s a digital divide very much anymore, or explain it in too much depth. Awareness of the issue has greatly See DIVIDE on Page 18

A CRAIN’S CLEVELAND PODCAST

12/17/2021 3:16:34 PM


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