Two years ago:
- Three units in Pendleton's Glass House Lofts were on the market, and all three were pending.
- The Verona Apartments, the George Hatch House, and the Union Trust Building (aka the Bartlett Building) were nominated for the National Register of Historic Places.
- Chuck Lohre and Cincinnati Form Follows Function (cf3) held a tour of Cincinnati's Fire Station No. 9, the City's first LEED-certified public building.
- "Historic Glendale" signs appeared on I-75, finally letting people know that a 392-acre National Historic Landmark exists just off the highway.
- A Walnut Hills two-family was demolished for a proposed 8- to 12-unit affordable housing development.
- Ordinances allowing the City of Cincinnati to enter into a contract of sale with Graeter's for 4.4 acres of Bond Hill property and to sign a funding agreement for the new manufacturing facility were being considered by City Council's Finance Committee.
- 801 Mt. Hope Avenue in East Price Hill was rezoned to allow for its redevelopment into three or more residential units and a commercial storefront.
- Photos of Over-the-Rhine, West End, Prospect Hill, and the Cincinnati skyline were added to the Building Cincinnati galleries.
- Because some improvements being made as part of the third phase of the Gateway Quarter project weren't eligible for tax increment financing funds, an ordinance was passed to amend its funding agreement.
- The Northside Community Urban Redevelopment Corporation was allowed to by the vacant City-owned parcel at 4210 Mad Anthony Street for $4,400, which it planned to use for the construction of a new single-family home and off-street parking.
- A portion of Madisonville's Red Bank Crossing was rezoned to allow The Goddard School to operate as a stand-alone use.
- Two new Energy Star homes, to be built on Corbly Road in Mount Washington, hit the market for $209,000.
- A single-family, attached house in Evanston was razed due to its imminent collapse.