Downtown Cleveland
Downtown Cleveland has so much to offer, from amazing hotels, world class restaurants to events & great attractions. Find discounts and special offers and so much more with Downtown Cleveland Guide. The bustling downtown core is known for sports venues like the Q Arena, hosting Cavaliers basketball games, and Progressive Field, home to the Indians baseball team. The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame contains instruments played by famous bands, and the Great Lakes Science Center displays astronaut John Glenn’s space module. Upscale clubs, boutiques and bistros fill the fashionable Warehouse District.
Warehouse District
Back in the mid-19th century, this neighborhood donned warehouses for hardware, marine and garment businesses, as well as offices for the then-mighty iron, coal, railroad and shipping industries. Nowadays, many of the Victorian-era buildings may look the same on the outside, but are filled with steak eaters, wine drinkers, club crowds and loft dwellers.
Campus District
Cleveland State University, Cuyahoga Community College and St. Vincent Charity Hospital anchor this neighborhood just east of Cleveland's central business district. New modern academic buildings, apartments and renovated mid-rises with street-level restaurants and shops now line Euclid Avenue.
3 Must-Do Things
Step inside the Gothic 1907 Trinity Cathedral and into a world of music, art, education and spirituality. Explore the diversity of numerous musical genres by attending the annual BrownBag Concert Series featuring everything from jazz to classical music.
Head to the Wolstein Center at Cleveland State University with 15,000 of your closest friends for concerts, sporting events, trade shows and other occasions.
Becky's Bar and Grill is the "Downtown's Neighborhood Bar" and a local favorite. Stop in and enjoy good beer and great eats (and free parking).
Civic Center District
This area, also known as the heart of Downtown Cleveland is home to the city's landmark skyscraper, Terminal Tower. A few blocks north, The Cleveland Mall, one of the city's public parks, offers a grassy oasis in the middle of Downtown. In warm weather, it's a popular lunch spot for office workers and convention center attendees and has even been known to attract Frisbee players and sunbathers.
3 Must-Do Things
Public Square is an essential piece of the Cleveland experience. Undergoing a $32 million renovation, Public Square will soon offer visitors and residents a new area to gather for lunch during the summer, ice skate in the winter and relax under the stars at evening concerts.
Located on the southeast quadrant of Public Square is the historic Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument. Opened in 1894 to commemorate local Civil War contributions, the monument includes a free mini-museum inside.
Try your luck at the JACK Cleveland Casino, located in the former Higbee Department Store featured in the famous A Christmas Story movie. Home to 1,609 slot machines, 119 table games, and 35 electronic table games, this casino will ensure a night filled with excitement.
Playhouse Square
The big marquees and twinkling lights let you know you've arrived in Playhouse Square, Cleveland's official theater district. This collection of glamorous, restored theaters draws well over a million visitors annually for Broadway shows, concerts, dance performances, opera and two in-house performing groups, The Cleveland Play House and Great Lakes Theater. Aside from New York's Lincoln Center, this is as big as it gets in the United States.
3 Must-Do Things
Watch incredible actors perform your favorite Broadway shows at Playhouse Square.
Relax at U.S. Bank Plaza while viewing the iconic chandelier at the intersection of Euclid Avenue and East 14th Street. Enjoy the cozy fire pit, comfy outdoor seating and juicy burgers at the outdoor eatery DYNOMITE.
From escargot to cassoulets, take in Chef Zack Bruell's modern French cuisine inside the upscale Cowell & Hubbard situated in the heart of this vibrant district.
East 4th Street
With its strings of overhead light bulbs, patio seating and ever-present street life, pedestrian-friendly East 4th Street exudes a come-hither draw that's hard to ignore. This concentrated chunk of commerce is the result of a tenacious developer's effort to redevelop a tawdry block of vacant and struggling storefronts into the city's newest entertainment and housing district. The New York Times called it a "prime example of 21st-century urban redevelopment in the Midwest."
3 Must-Do Things
Eat, drink and bowl at The Corner Alley Downtown on the corner of East 4th and Euclid Avenue. Spice up your dining experience with delicious cuisine, a variety of craft brews and some friendly bowling banter at one of the restaurant's 16 bowling lanes right in the heart of Downtown Cleveland.
East 4th also is a good place to find souvenirs. The CLE Clothing Co. sells T-shirts, glassware and local artistic treasures designed to represent a die-hard love for Cleveland.
Pickwick and Frolic is more than just a restaurant. The venue also houses one of the largest made-for-comedy theatres in the country called Hilarities 4th Street Theatre. Weekly shows at Hilarities present a wide-range of comedians who share many laughs with East 4th patrons.
Gateway District
The Gateway District attracts swarms of locals and visitors Downtown for major concerts and professional baseball, basketball and hockey games — plus all the eating, drinking and celebrating (or commiserating) that goes on before and after those events. It also is home to many Downtown hotels, retails stores and more than 60 restaurants and bars.
The Flats
The Flats have come back to life thanks to a multi-million-dollar makeover to both its east and west banks. This waterfront neighborhood now features restaurants, bars, shops and a boardwalk with complementary green space. (The area's famous water taxis will even take you from one side of the Flats to the other to help you explore.) For decades, the land's proximity to the Cuyahoga River, Lake Erie and railroad tracks have made it the central locale for the manufacturing, coal and shopping industries. If your timing is right, you can still see huge freighters navigating the river's sharp oxbow turn.
North Coast Harbor
North Coast Harbor includes Cleveland's most notable attractions. The I.M. Pei-designed Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Great Lakes Science Center and FirstEnergy Stadium, home of the Cleveland Browns, sit side-by-side along Lake Erie. Voinovich Bicentennial Park juts into the harbor off East 9th Street Pier and makes for impressive skyline photo opps. The area becomes a hotspot of activity during football games and summer events.