Queensgate, Cincinnati

Queensgate is a neighborhood of Cincinnati, Ohio.
Queensgate was the center of Cincinnati's pork packing industry.

Queensgate is a neighborhood in Cincinnati, Ohio. It sits in the same valley as Downtown Cincinnati and has been dominated by industrial and commercial warehouses for most of its history. Cincinnati's nickname of "Porkopolis" started here with hog slaughtering in the early 19th century.[1]

Queensgate was formerly known as part of the West End, Cincinnati. The Metropolitan Master Plan of 1948, a City Plan for Cincinnati, called for slum clearance and urban renewal. Beginning in 1960, large tracts of the historic West End were razed.[2]

The Queensgate I project came out of the 1948 Metropolitan Master Plan. It kickstarted urban renewal in the West End neighborhood, and led to the creation of a commercial/industrial complex, that is known as the neighborhood of Queensgate.[3]

Queensgate is home of the Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal.[1] From 1884 until 1970 the Cincinnati Reds at the intersection of Findlay Street and Western Avenue in Queensgate—the last 57½ of those years at Crosley Field. The former site of home plate of Crosley Field has been painted in an alley.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 Holthaus, David. "An eco-industrial vision for Queensgate". Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  2. Singer, Allen J. (2005). "Stepping Out in Cincinnati: Queen City Entertainment 1900-1960". Arcadia Publishing. p. 100. Retrieved 28 July 2013.
  3. Miller, Zane L., and Bruce Tucker. Changing Plans for America's Inner Cities: Cincinnati's Over-The-Rhine and Twentieth-century Urbanism. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1998. Santa Barbara
  4. "Site of Crosley Field as it is today". The Cincinnati Enquirer. April 5, 2012. Retrieved 7 January 2014.

Coordinates: 39°6′N 84°32′W / 39.100°N 84.533°W / 39.100; -84.533


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