Two years ago:
- Photos of East Price Hill, Downtown, Mount Adams, Lower Price Hill, Fountain Square, the Cincinnati skyline, and West End's City West development were added to the Building Cincinnati galleries.
- With the closure of the Walnut Hills Kroger a possibility, Cincinnati city manager Milton Dohoney Jr. said that the problem of inner-city 'food deserts' needed to be addressed.
- The former Quebec Heights School, which had been proposed by a neighborhood resident for use as a new Price Hill recreation center, was found to be unsuitable for that use without extensive remodeling.
- The final buildings on the former Nivison-Weiskopf site in Reading were demolished.
- A dilapidated Avondale house was razed by the owner prior to a pre-prosecution hearing.
- A group was formed to try to stem the tide of demolitions in Over-the-Rhine.
- The Cincinnati Preservation Association urged an auctioneer to reconsider an estate sale that may have featured fixtures and architectural details from a North Avondale home.
- Twenty-six photos of Cincinnati Union Terminal's "Cincinnati Goes to War" exhibit were added to the Building Cincinnati galleries.
- Cincinnati City Council adopted a list of policy guidelines to help inform local decision making for the Brent Spence Bridge project.
- Five neighborhoods hit hard by foreclosure were selected to take part in Cincinnati's Neighborhood Homes Initiative.
- Cincinnati City Councilmember Laketa Cole introduced a motion to lower City inspection fees, which could make the redevelopment of blighted properties easier.
- A vacant and neglected Westwood multi-family was razed.