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After the latter intersection, the road curves eastward toward downtown Mt. Vernon. Southbound SR 13 travels two blocks east along the concurrency from Sandusky to Mulberry streets. Eastbound SR 229 also leaves at Mulberry Street. Shortly after the intersection, US 36, SR 3, and westbound SR 229 travel through a traffic circle.
Around 1994, a short controlled-access highway opened east of I-275 that bypassed Mulberry. [7] The bypass features one interchange for Wolfpen-Pleasant Hill Road. [ 8 ] Prior to 2015, a 0.89-mile-long (1.43 km) concurrency existed along US 50 at SR 28's west end in Milford.
Mulberry is located in northwestern Clermont County near the center of Miami Township. It is bordered to the east by Mount Repose. Ohio State Route 28 passes through the southeast corner of the CDP, and Interstate 275 forms the western edge, with access to Mulberry where it crosses State Route 28 at Exit 57.
A grocery store chain that flourished throughout Indiana and Ohio, eventually opening dozens of stores, Marsh Supermarkets filed for bankruptcy in 2017. Founded in 1931, it lasted for 88 years ...
Grocery stores in the Southern Orchards include Little's IGA (supermarkets). [13] In 1999, the Free Store on Parsons Avenue opened, which accepts donations and distributes clothes and household items to the area’s poor. By the end of this year, 150,000 people will have walked through its doors since it opened. [14]
CHANGE OF ADDRESS: While some retailers are touting a resurgence in in-store shopping, Mulberry has been quietly welcoming consumers to its new Wooster Street store in Manhattan. In keeping with ...
Roughly bounded by Livingston Ave., Pear Alley, Nursery Lane, Blackberry Alley, and Lathrop St.; also Briggs between E. Beck and Sycamore, S. 9th between E. Blenkner and Sycamore 39°56′45″N 82°59′34″W / 39.945833°N 82.992778°W / 39.945833; -82.992778 ( German
171–191 South High Street is a pair of historic buildings in Downtown Columbus, Ohio.The commercial structures have seen a wide variety of retail and service uses through the 20th century, including shoe stores, groceries, opticians, hatters, jewelers, a liquor store, and a car dealership.