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9,868,868 +13.5% [5] Source: FAA [3] and CLE airport. [4] Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (IATA: CLE, ICAO: KCLE, FAA LID: CLE) is a city-owned international airport in Cleveland, Ohio, United States, and is the primary airport serving Greater Cleveland and Northeast Ohio. It is the largest and busiest airport in the state, as well as ...
Cuyahoga County Airport (IATA: CGF[2], ICAO: KCGF, FAA LID: CGF), also known as Robert D. Shea Field, [3] is a public use airport in northeastern Cuyahoga County, Ohio, United States. [1] Owned and operated by Cuyahoga County since 1946, [3] it also serves Lake County and Geauga County.
Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport (IATA: BKL, ICAO: KBKL, FAA LID: BKL) is a city-owned airport on the shore of Lake Erie, in the northeast part of downtown Cleveland, Ohio, United States. [1] It's classified as a general aviation airport and is an FAA designated reliever to Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (CLE), which is Greater ...
James M. Cox Dayton International Airport: P-S 858,022 Toledo: TOL: TOL KTOL Eugene F. Kranz Toledo Express Airport: P-N 123,541 Reliever airports: Cleveland: CGF CGF KCGF Cuyahoga County Airport (Robert D. Shea Field) R 217 Columbus: TZR KTZR Bolton Field: R 0 Columbus: OSU OSU KOSU Ohio State University Airport: R 277 Dayton: MGY MGY KMGY ...
Airport station (GCRTA) Coordinates: 41°24′40″N 81°50′15″W. Airport. Entrance to Airport station. General information. Location. 5300 Riverside Drive. Cleveland, Ohio. Coordinates.
Coordinates: 41°17′50″N 82°12′23″W. Cleveland Air Route Traffic Control Center (ZOB) or Cleveland Center is located at 326 East Lorain Street, Oberlin, Ohio, United States. [1] The center is located about 30 miles (48 km) outside of the city of Cleveland. [2] The Cleveland ARTCC is the 3rd busiest of the 22 Air Route Traffic Control ...
Area codes 440 and 436. Coordinates: 41°45′N 81°0′W. The regions shown in blue are in Ohio. Area codes 440 and 436 are telephone area codes in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) for the U.S. state of Ohio, serving the parts of the Greater Cleveland area, surrounding the city of Cleveland, but not the city and most of its inner suburbs.
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. [13] [14] 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 (up from 80,738 in 2000). [15]