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Heritage Bank Center is an indoor arena in downtown Cincinnati, adjacent to Great American Ball Park. It was completed in September 1975 and named Riverfront Coliseum because of its placement next to Riverfront Stadium .
Headquarters of Fifth Third Bank. 6 Center at 600 Vine: 418 (127) 30 1984 600 Vine Street The 24th-tallest building in Ohio and the tallest building built in Cincinnati in the 1980s. 7 First Financial Center: 410 (125) 32 1992 255 East 5th Street The 26th-tallest building in Ohio. Headquarters of First Financial Bank, Roto-Rooter, and Chemed. 8
The 4th & Vine Tower (formerly known as the Union Central Tower [6] and Central Trust Bank Building) is a 151 m (495 ft) skyscraper in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio.It stands 31 stories tall, overlooking the Ohio River waterfront.
The Great American Tower at Queen City Square is a 41-story, 667-foot-tall (203 m) [1] [2] skyscraper in Cincinnati, Ohio, which opened in January 2011.The tower was built by Western & Southern Financial Group at a cost of $322 million including $65 million of taxpayer-funded subsidies. [5]
Banks still have a long way to go to make up for all the locations they shuttered. The number of US branches was 69,684 at the end of 2023, down from 82,461 in 2012.
Using cell phone data to track visits to Downtown points of interest, researchers found Cincinnati saw a 28% uptick in visits to the district in February 2024, compared to a year earlier.
The total office vacancy rate for downtown Cincinnati was 16.8% in the first quarter this year, up from 16.6% in the previous quarter, according to the latest Cincinnati office market report from ...
It is currently the fifth-tallest building in Cincinnati. Designed by Harrison & Abramovitz and completed in 1969, it was the first international style building in Cincinnati and is the tallest structure on Fountain Square. [1] The building serves as the corporate headquarters for Fifth Third Bank.