Greater Cleveland
The Cleveland metropolitan area, or Greater Cleveland as it is more commonly known, is the metropolitan area surrounding the city of Cleveland in Northeast Ohio, United States. According to 2018 United States Census estimates, the five-county Cleveland–Elyria Metropolitan Statistical Area consists of Cuyahoga County, Geauga County, Lake County, Lorain County, and Medina County, and has a population of 2,057,009 making Greater Cleveland the 33rd most populous metropolitan area in the United States, the third largest metro area in Ohio, and the second largest metro area, behind Columbus, entirely in Ohio. Greater Cleveland is part of the larger Cleveland–Akron–Canton Combined Statistical Area and its 3.5 million residents make it the largest Ohio metro in the 59 million giant Great Lakes Megalopolis.
Changes in house prices for Greater Cleveland are publicly tracked on a regular basis using the Case–Shiller index; the statistic is published by Standard & Poor's and is also a component of S&P's 20-city composite index of the value of the U.S. residential real estate market.
Northeast Ohio refers to a similar but substantially larger area. This article covers the area generally considered to be Greater Cleveland, but includes some information generally applicable to the larger region, which is itself part of what is known historically as the Connecticut Western Reserve.
Northeast Ohio
Northeast Ohio consists of 16 counties and includes the cities of Akron, Ashland, Ashtabula, Brunswick, Canton, Cleveland, Elyria, Lorain, Mansfield, Medina, Wadsworth, Wooster, Warren, and Youngstown. Northeast Ohio is home to approximately 4 million people, has a labor force of almost 2 million, and a gross regional product of nearly $170 billion. Other counties are sometimes considered to be in Northeast Ohio. These include Erie, Holmes, Huron and Tuscarawas counties, and their inclusion makes the total population of the entire northeastern section of Ohio well over 4.5 million people.Cities, townships, and villages
Cuyahoga County
- Bay Village
- Beachwood
- Bedford
- Bedford Heights
- Bentleyville
- Berea
- Bratenahl
- Brecksville
- Broadview Heights
- Brook Park
- Brooklyn
- Brooklyn Heights
- Chagrin Falls
- Chagrin Falls Township
- Cleveland
- Cleveland Heights
- Cuyahoga Heights
- East Cleveland
- Euclid
- Fairview Park
- Garfield Heights
- Gates Mills
- Glenwillow
- Highland Heights
- Highland Hills
- Hunting Valley
- Independence
- Lakewood
- Linndale
- Lyndhurst
- Maple Heights
- Mayfield Heights
- Mayfield Village
- Middleburg Heights
- Moreland Hills
- Newburgh Heights
- North Olmsted
- North Randall
- North Royalton
- Oakwood Village
- Olmsted Falls
- Olmsted Township
- Orange
- Parma
- Parma Heights
- Pepper Pike
- Richmond Heights
- Rocky River
- Seven Hills
- Shaker Heights
- Solon
- South Euclid
- Strongsville
- University Heights
- Valley View
- Walton Hills
- Warrensville Heights
- Westlake
- Woodmere
Geauga County
- Aquilla
- Auburn Township
- Bainbridge Township
- Burton
- Burton Township
- Chardon
- Chardon Township
- Chester
- Chesterland
- Claridon Township
- Hambden Township
- Hunting Valley
- Huntsburg Township
- Middlefield
- Middlefield Township
- Montville Township
- Munson Township
- Newbury Township
- Parkman Township
- Russell Township
- South Russell
- Thompson Township
- Troy Township
Lake County
- Concord Township
- Eastlake
- Fairport Harbor
- Grand River
- Kirtland
- Kirtland Hills
- Lakeline
- LeRoy Township
- Madison
- Madison Township
- Mentor
- Mentor-on-the-Lake
- North Madison
- North Perry
- Painesville
- Painesville Township
- Perry
- Perry Township
- Timberlake
- Waite Hill
- Wickliffe
- Willoughby
- Willoughby Hills
- Willowick
Lorain County
- Amherst
- Amherst Township
- Avon
- Avon Lake
- Brighton Township
- Brownhelm Township
- Camden Township
- Carlisle Township
- Columbia Township
- Eaton Estates
- Eaton Township
- Elyria
- Elyria Township
- Grafton
- Grafton Township
- Henrietta Township
- Huntington Township
- Kipton
- Lagrange
- LaGrange Township
- Lorain
- New Russia Township
- North Ridgeville
- Oberlin
- Penfield Township
- Pittsfield Township
- Rochester
- Rochester Township
- Sheffield
- Sheffield Lake
- Sheffield Township
- South Amherst
- Vermilion
- Wellington
- Wellington Township
Medina County
- Brunswick
- Brunswick Hills Township
- Chatham Township
- Chippewa Lake
- Creston
- Gloria Glens Park
- Granger Township
- Guilford Township
- Harrisville Township
- Hinckley Township
- Homer Township
- Lafayette Township
- Litchfield Township
- Liverpool Township
- Lodi
- Medina
- Medina Township
- Montville Township
- Rittman
- Seville
- Sharon Township
- Spencer
- Spencer Township
- Wadsworth
- Wadsworth Township
- Westfield Center
- Westfield Township
- York Township
Cities by population
City | 2010 population |
Cleveland | 396,815 |
Parma | 81,601 |
Lorain | 64,097 |
Elyria | 54,533 |
Lakewood | 52,131 |
Euclid | 48,920 |
Mentor | 47,159 |
Cleveland Heights | 46,121 |
Demographics
According to the 2010 United States Census, the population was 2.077 million in the five-county MSA of the Greater Cleveland Area, making it the second largest metropolitan-statistical area entirely within the state of Ohio. Approximately 48.1% of the population was male and 51.9% were female. In 2010 the racial makeup of the five-county Area was 71.7% Non-Hispanic Whites, 19.7% Blacks or African Americans, 0.2% American Indians and Alaskan Natives, 2.0% Asian Pacific Islander, 1.7% from other races, and 2.0% from two or more races. 4.7% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.satellite photograph of Cleveland at night.
The median income for a household in Greater Cleveland was $46,231 and the median income for a family, $59,611. The per capita income was $25,668. Persons living below the poverty line was 15.1%. According to a study by Capgemini and the World Wealth Report by Merrill Lynch, the Cleveland area has nearly 54,000 millionaire households, and is expected to continue to grow at 17% over the next five years.
The Greater Cleveland area is the most diverse region in the state of Ohio and is becoming increasingly more diverse with new waves of immigration. As of 2010, both the Hispanic and Asian population in the Cleveland-Akron-Ashtabula area grew by almost 40%, Hispanics now number at 112,307. The Asian population alone accounts for 55,087 but people who cite Asian and other ethnicites enumerate 67,231. The Chinese Americans are the oldest Asian group residing in Northeast Ohio, most visible in Cleveland's Asiatown. Nevertheless, the area is also home to hundreds of Thais, Taiwanese, Pakistanis, Laotians, Cambodians, and Burmese peoples as well.
The Cleveland area has a substantial African American population with origins in the First and Second Great Migrations. It also boasts some of the nation's largest Irish, Italian, Slavic, and Hungarian populations. At one time, the Hungarian population of Cleveland proper was so great that the city boasted of having the highest concentration of Hungarians in the world outside of Budapest. Today, the Greater Cleveland area is home to the largest Slovak, Slovene, and Hungarian communities in the world, outside of Slovakia, Slovenia, and Hungary respectively. The Slavic population of the Cleveland-Akron area comprises 17.2%, far higher than the nation's rate of 6%. There are 171,000 Poles, 38,000 Slovaks, 66,000 Slovenes, 38,000 Czechs, 31,000 Russians, and 23,000 Ukrainians in Greater Cleveland. Slavic Village and Tremont historically had some of the largest concentrations of Eastern Europeans within Cleveland proper. Today, both neighborhoods continue to be home to many Slavic Ohioans. In addition, Slovenia maintains a Consulate-General in Downtown Cleveland. The city of Cleveland has also received visits from the Presidents of Hungary and Poland.
Greater Cleveland is home to a sizable Jewish community. According to the North American Jewish Data Bank, the community comprises an estimated 86,600 people or 3.0% as of 2011, above the nation's 1.7%, and up from 81,500 in 1996. The highest proportion is in Cuyahoga County at 5.5%. Today, 23% of Greater Cleveland's Jewish population is under the age of 17, and 27% reside in the Heights area. In 2010 nearly 2,600 people spoke Hebrew and 1,100 Yiddish.
Ancestry
The top largest ancestries in the Greater Cleveland MSA, were the following:- German: 20.4%
- Slavic: 18.9%
- Irish: 14.5%
- British: 11.3%
- Italian: 9.9%
- Hungarian: 3.7%
- Puerto Rican: 2.8%
- French and French Canadian: 1.9%
- Scandinavian: 1.2%
- Arab: 1.0%
Place of birth
According to the American Community Survey 2006-2010, the number of Greater Cleveland area residents born overseas was 119,136 and the leading countries of origin were India, China, Mexico, Ukraine, Germany, Italy, Canada, United Kingdom, Romania, Poland, Russia, and Yugoslavia.
Language spoken at home
is by far the most commonly spoken language at home by residents in the Cleveland-Akron-Elyria area; approximately 91.2% of the population over the age of five spoke only English at home. Spanish speakers made up 2.8% of the population; speakers of Asian languages made up 1.1% of the population; speakers of other Indo-European languages made up 3.9% of the population. Individuals who spoke languages other than the ones above represented the remaining 1.0% of the populace. As of 2011, individually in addition to English, 2.7% spoke Spanish, 0.6% German, 0.5% Arabic, and 0.5% Chinese. 1.4% also spoke a Slavic language. In 2007, Cleveland area was home to the nation's 3rd highest proportion of Hungarian speakers.County | 2018 Estimate | 2010 Census | Change | Area | Density |
Cuyahoga County | - | - | |||
Geauga County | - | - | |||
Lake County | - | - | |||
Lorain County | - | - | |||
Medina County | - | - | |||
Total | - | - |
Area codes
In the 1950s, AT&T assigned Greater Cleveland Area code 216, which included all of Northeast Ohio. In 1996, Area code 216 was reduced in size to cover the northern half of its prior area, centering on Cleveland and its lake shore suburbs. Area code 330 was introduced for the southern half of Greater Cleveland, including Medina County. The western half of the region, including Ashland and Richland counties, and parts of Huron, Wayne, and Erie counties, are assigned area codes 419 and 567.In 1997, area code 216 was further split as the need for additional phone numbers grew. Area code 216 was reduced in geographical area to cover the city of Cleveland and its inner ring suburbs. Area code 440 was introduced to cover the remainder of was what previously area code 216, including all of Lorain, Geauga, and Lake counties, and parts of Cuyahoga County. Some communities, such as Parma, and Parma Heights were divided between the 216 and 440 area codes. In 1999, Congressman Dennis Kucinich introduced federal legislation to protect small and medium-sized cities from being split into two or more area codes.
In 2000, it was anticipated that the available phone numbers in area code 330 would be exhausted, and an overlay area code was introduced. Area code 234 was assigned to overlap existing area code 330. With the creation of area code 234, any new phone number in the geographical area formerly covered by area code 330 could be assigned a phone number in either the 234 or 330 area codes, with no change in local or long distance toll status. This made necessary the use of ten-digit dialing within the 330/234 area code region. After the introduction of area code 234, assignments of new telephone numbers in the area did not continue at an accelerated pace, and new phone numbers for area code 234 were not assigned until 2003.
Economy
In 2011 the Greater Cleveland area had a GDP of $134.4 billion, which would rank 57th among countries. Cleveland also has the twelfth highest merchandise value at $109.2 billion.Business and industry
More than 37% of Fortune 500 companies are present in Northeast Ohio, through corporate headquarters, major divisions, subsidiaries, and sales offices. In addition, more than 150 international companies have a presence there., Northeast Ohio serves as the corporate headquarters of 22 Fortune 1000 firms :- Progressive Insurance
- Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company
- FirstEnergy
- Sherwin-Williams
- Parker-Hannifin
- J.M. Smucker Company
- Travel Centers of America
- KeyCorp
- RPM International
- Diebold
- PolyOne Corporation
- TransDigm Group
- Medical Mutual of Ohio
- The Timken Company
- Aleris International, Inc.
- Hyster-Yale Materials Handling
- Applied Industrial Technologies
- A. Schulman
- Lincoln Electric
- Cliffs Natural Resources
- American Greetings
- Nordson
- Agilysis
- Babcock & Wilcox
- Cafaro Corp
- Cleveland Clinic
- DeBartolo-York Corp
- Eaton Corporation
- Exal Corp Aluminum Production
- Ferro Corporation
- FirstMerit
- Forest City Enterprises
- Gojo
- Home Savings and Loan
- IMG
- Invacare
- Jo Ann Stores
- Jones Day
- Lubrizol Corporation
- Mayfran International
- Nacco Industries
- Nestlé USA
- Roadway Express
- Rockwell Automation
- SITE Centers
- Summa Health System
- University Hospitals of Cleveland
Small businesses and startups
Colleges and universities
Greater Cleveland is home to a number of higher education institutions, including:- Baldwin Wallace University
- Case Western Reserve University
- Cleveland Institute of Art
- Cleveland Institute of Music
- Cleveland State University
- Cuyahoga Community College
- DeVry University
- John Carroll University
- Kent State University at Geauga
- Kent State University College of Podiatric Medicine
- Lake Erie College
- Lakeland Community College
- Lorain County Community College
- Notre Dame College
- Oberlin College
- South University
- Stautzenberger College
- Ursuline College
Transportation
Airports
Greater Cleveland is served by international, regional and county airports, including:- Burke Lakefront Airport
- Concord Airpark Airport
- Cuyahoga County Airport
- Cleveland Hopkins International Airport
- Lorain County Regional Airport
- Willoughby Lost Nation Municipal Airport
Highways
- Interstate 71
- Interstate 77
- Interstate 80
- Interstate 90
- Interstate 271
- Interstate 277
- Interstate 480
- Interstate 490
- U.S. Route 6
- U.S. Route 20
- U.S. Route 42
- U.S. Route 224
- U.S. Route 250
- U.S. Route 322
- U.S. Route 422
- Ohio State Route 2
- Ohio State Route 3
- Ohio State Route 8
- Ohio State Route 10
- Ohio State Route 11
- Ohio State Route 14
- Ohio State Route 17
- Ohio State Route 18
- Ohio State Route 21
- Ohio State Route 43
- Ohio State Route 44
- Ohio State Route 83
- Ohio State Route 88
- Ohio State Route 91
- Ohio State Route 113
- Ohio State Route 175
- Ohio State Route 176
- Ohio State Route 225
- Ohio State Route 254
- Ohio State Route 700
- Ohio State Route 711
Highway notes
- I-271 and I-480 are the only two three-digit interstates in the nation to be concurrent, near Bedford Heights in Cuyahoga County.
Public transit
Culture
Theater
is the epicenter of the Cleveland Theater District and the second largest theater district in the United States.Playhouse Square Theaters
- Allen Theatre
- Hanna Theatre
- Ohio Theatre
- State Theatre
- Palace Theatre
- Kennedy's Cabaret
- Second Stage
- The Helen Rosenfeld Lewis Bialosky Lab Theatre
- Westfield Insurance Studio Theatre
Theaters
- Beck Center
- Cabaret Dada
- Cassidy Theater
- Cleveland Play House
- Cleveland Public Theater
- Dobama Theater
- Euclid Avenue Opera House
- Lorain Palace Theatre
- Geauga Lyric Theater
- Huntington Playhouse
- Karamu House
- Near West Theatre
- Olde Towne Hall Theatre
Theatrical companies
- The Bang and Clatter Theatre Company
- Beck Center for the Arts
- Bodwin Theater Company
- Charenton Theatre Company
- Cleveland Shakespeare Festival
- Cleveland Signstage Theatre
- Convergence-Continuum
- Fairmount Center for the Arts
- Fourth Wall Productions
- Great Lakes Theater Festival
- The Group
- Portage Lakes Players
- The Public Squares
- Red Hen Productions
Music
Art
There are two main art museums in Cleveland. The Cleveland Museum of Art is a major American art museum, with a collection that includes more than 40,000 works of art ranging over 6,000 years, from ancient masterpieces to contemporary pieces. Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland showcases established and emerging artists, particularly from the Cleveland area, through hosting and producing temporary exhibitions.Sports and recreation
Cleveland's professional sports teams include the Cleveland Indians, Cleveland Browns, and Cleveland Cavaliers. The Lake County Captains, a Single-A minor league affiliate of the Cleveland Indians, play in Eastlake at Classic Park. Additionally, the Lake Erie Crushers of the Frontier League play at Sprenger Stadium in Avon.Minor league hockey is represented in the area by the Cleveland Monsters of the American Hockey League. They began play in the 2007–08 AHL season at the Quicken Loans Arena. The team is the top minor league affiliate of the Columbus Blue Jackets of the National Hockey League.
The Cleveland Metroparks are a system of nature preserves that encircle the city, and the Cuyahoga Valley National Park encompasses the Cuyahoga River valley between Cleveland and Akron. The region is home to Mentor Headlands Beach, the longest natural beach on the Great Lakes.
Notable natives
- Avant
- Albert Ayler
- Jim Backus
- Kaye Ballard
- LeCharles Bentley
- Halle Berry
- Chris Butler
- Eric Carmen
- Drew Carey
- Mary Carey
- Ray Cash
- Drew Carter
- Machine Gun Kelly
- Gerald Casale
- Chris Chambers
- Tracy Chapman
- Cheetah Chrome
- Tim Conway
- Jacob Cramer
- Wes Craven
- Kid Cudi
- Dorothy Dandridge
- Cheri Dennis
- Ruby Dee
- Donald DeFreeze
- Phil Donahue
- Stephen R. Donaldson
- Harlan Ellison
- Lee Evans
- James A. Garfield
- Sonny Geraci
- Donald A. Glaser
- Ted Ginn Jr.
- Bob Golic
- Mike Golic
- Anthony Gonzalez
- Jim Graner
- Joel Grey
- Arsenio Hall
- Roy Hall
- Margaret Hamilton
- Steve Harvey
- Patricia Heaton
- Anne Heche
- Mike Hegan
- John W. Heisman
- Kim Herring
- Hal Holbrook
- Bob Hope
- Langston Hughes
- Chrissie Hynde
- LeBron James
- Philip Johnson
- Joe Jurevicius
- Sammy Kaye
- Don King
- Bobby Knight
- Heather Kozar
- Dennis Kucinich
- Dante Lavelli
- Mike Lebowitz
- Gerald Levert
- D. A. Levy
- Bob Lewis
- Peter B. Lewis
- Jim Lovell
- Henry Mancini
- Scott Mescudi
- Howard Metzenbaum
- O.J. McDuffie
- Burgess Meredith
- Toni Morrison
- Bob Mothersbaugh
- Mark Mothersbaugh
- Paul Newman
- Urban Meyer
- Chuck Noll
- Andre Norton
- Charles Oakley
- Jesse Owens
- Harvey Pekar
- Scott Raab
- Dave Ragone
- John D. Rockefeller
- Michael Ruhlman
- Screamin' Jay Hawkins
- Molly Shannon
- Sam Sheppard
- Don Shula
- Jerry Siegel
- Robert Smith
- Troy Smith
- Ruth Simpson
- Steve Stone
- George Steinbrenner
- Carl B. Stokes
- Michael Symon
- David Thomas
- Jim Tressel
- George Voinovich
- David Wain
- Carl E. Walz
- Lew Wasserman
- Debra Winger
- Archibald Willard
- Fred Willard
- Frank Yankovic
- Roger Zelazny
- Stephen Curry