News

For being a century old and abandoned, Cincinnati's subway doesn't look too bad. Latonia resident Allen Singer searched for the right word to describe what he saw when he went down there in 1997 ...
Last fall when Cincinnati asked for ideas for what to do with its empty, 2.2-mile abandoned subway tunnel system, many Enquirer readers and social media commenters had the same response: Why not ...
A concept from Over-the-Rhine's Yard & Co. suggests the old subway tunnels could have many uses. Dubbed “The Rhineline," the company created a "sprawling tapestry of interconnected experiences." Near ...
Cincinnati asked architects and designers to submit ideas to repurpose the city's abandoned subway tunnel system. The Enquirer reviewed all proposals.
Two Cincinnati Subway tunnel entrances, alongside Central Parkway and I-75. Just how different would Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky be today had the city-owned subway been finished?
The Cincinnati subway’s roots can, according to the city’s official website, be traced back to March 1912, when officials appointed a board to set up a rapid transit network in the city.
Cincinnati's subway debate is stuck in the past while other cities move forward. It's time our leaders invest in the future.
Cincinnati Public Schools will transition 1,260 more students, primarily seventh and eighth graders, to Cincinnati Metro ...
Cincinnati's abandoned subway tunnel, which stretches 2 miles through Over-the-Rhine and northward, could be reimagined for another use after the city issued an informational request in late ...
Today, some people look at the decision to halt the Cincinnati subway in 1925 as fatally short-sighted. "If they had finished this system, we may have actually held on to some of our businesses ...
Last fall when Cincinnati asked for ideas for what to do with its empty, 2.2-mile abandoned subway tunnel system, many Enquirer readers and social media commenters had the same response: Why not use ...