A New Convention Package

Transcription

A New Convention Package
SM
A New
Convention
Package
Brings Nearly
5,000 Downtown
Rooms by 2016
Rendering of the new 600-room Hilton Cleveland Downtown
connected to the Cleveland Convention Center © Cooper Carry
SM
Is it the fresh paint and carpets? Or maybe the
army of food trucks parked outside? It might
be the freshly cut grass on the roof. (Yes. The
roof.) So take a deep breath. There’s a new
Cleveland in the air
clevelandconventions.com
#ThisisCLE
IT’S GOT THAT
NEW CONVENTION
CENTER SMELL.
Managed by
CLEVELAND:
World-class experiences
without the world-class ego.
Industry News: An inside look at Cleveland’s
meeting industry
Carrie Abernathy, CMP, CEM, CSEP, Director of Education, Training & Events at
Practice Greenhealth, took advantage of Cleveland’s nearly $3 billion in meetingsrelated development while she planned for CleanMed 2014 at Cleveland’s brand
new Global Center for Health Innovation.
By Keith Gribbens
A New Cleveland
Satisfied guests define successful events. It’s a
formula that is transforming the city of Cleveland
into one of the country’s best meeting destinations,
along with an impressive mix of modern
convention facilities, diverse entertainment options,
thousands of hotel rooms and (most importantly)
an all-are-welcome attitude.
“Cleveland, in my eyes, is the perfect convention city,”
said Abernathy. “With the new Global Center for
Health Innovation and the amazing hotel package
downtown — there is no reason why planners
should not source Cleveland for their next event.
Sustainable Convention Facilities
In the heart of Cleveland’s meetings industry, is the
new $465 million Cleveland Convention Center and
Global Center for Health Innovation. A high-tech and
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eco-engineered convention complex, the convention
center provides a 225,000-square-foot exhibit hall
floor, 35 meeting rooms and direct access to the
Global Center – a healthcare provider’s playground for
innovation, sustainability and hands-on exhibits.
Choosing the Global Center for Health Innovation
to host CleanMed 2014 was a no-brainer for Carrie
Abernathy due in large part to its eco-friendly
initiatives. “For our groups, the space, sustainability
initiatives, and cost were all major factors in
choosing Cleveland. You have to see it in person
to understand how fresh and new it feels. You can
tell the city really put a lot of heart into that venue,”
explained Abernathy.
Crowds Are Our Specialty
Cleveland’s undeniable heart, soul and grit along with
nearly $3 billion in meetings-related infrastructure
developments are transforming the city. Anchoring
this investment is the development of four new hotel
properties between now and 2016. Included in the
mix is a 600-room Hilton Cleveland Downtown
expanding Cleveland’s hotel package to nearly
5,000 rooms, while demanding a spot on meeting
planners’ radar.
“I would feel just as comfortable bringing a 10,000
person show to Cleveland, as I do a 1,000 person
show,” said Abernathy. “The Cleveland hotel
package is exceptional with the bulk of hotels
within 3-5 blocks from the convention center.
Almost everything is walkable in Cleveland and
that is such a plus for our conventions.”
A Walkable Urban Landscape
According to Walk Score, a popular website for
ranking pedestrian-friendly cities, Downtown
Cleveland is considered a “walker’s paradise.” The
Cleveland Convention Center and Global Center
for Health Innovation is located within a 15-minute
walk of all downtown hotels and is surrounded by a
city buzzing with food and nightlife options.
Pedestrians, free downtown trolleys, and cab traffic
can access multiple entertainment hubs – like the
famed Food Network restaurants on East Fourth
Street, the trendy clubs of the Warehouse District
and the world-famous theaters of Playhouse Square.
Add to that, a crew of dedicated city ambassadors
work around the clock to keep Downtown clean,
safe and comfortable.
A Seamless Leisure Experience
“Cleveland provides such a great package because
there really is something for every attendee,” said
Abernathy. “The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum, the waterfront and the convention space
are all reasons why I would bring a group here.
Besides that, Cleveland has many headquartered
companies downtown and there is a lot of commerce
and financial institutions.
Those Downtown hotspots are complemented
with sports venues, and just outside of Downtown,
neighborhoods like University Circle and Ohio City
offer everything from prestigious museums to
celebrated bistros and famous craft breweries.
“I would suggest getting out to Cleveland to have
a firsthand view of the city,” said Abernathy when
describing her time spent in Cleveland and the city
as an overall meetings destination. “Once you have
the experience, you will see what I mean!”
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Getting Here,
Going There
velopment LLC
© Flats East De
The Future Landscape
© Rosales + Partners/Parsons Brinckerhoff
© James Corner Field Operations
Car, Plane, or Train, We’ll Get You Where You Need to Go
Billions in Cleveland Development Is Reshaping Downtown
By Stephanie Ricca
By Keith Gribbins
Drive
Cleveland is a driver’s market. The city sits within a
500-mile radius of nearly half of the U.S. population.
The Ohio Turnpike and Interstate 90 take visitors east
to west across the state, while I-71 links Cleveland to
Columbus and Cincinnati.
Fly CLE
Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (CLE) is 12
miles from Downtown and offers an abundance
of nonstop flights around the country and
internationally via all major carriers. A new taxi
system and ample on- and off-site parking make
access fast, easy, and reasonably priced.
Fly CAK
Located just 50 miles east of Cleveland, Akron-Canton
Airport (CAK) boasts the lowest average airfares in the
state of Ohio. Southwest Airlines, AirTran, United, US
Airways, and Delta fly nonstop between CAK and
major Midwest, East Coast, and Florida cities.
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Try Public Transit
The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority
(RTA) links travelers via rapid transit trains and
bus routes. The city’s HealthLine bus-rapid transit
system connects downtown to the East Side via the
Cleveland Clinic Main Campus, and airport travelers
can connect quickly from Downtown on a train.
Once Downtown, take advantage of the city’s free
trolley network seven days a week.
On-Demand Rides
Uber and Lyft are now available in the Cleveland
market. Use their respective apps to have a car pick
you up within minutes anywhere in the city.
Or Just Walk
It’s easy to travel by foot around Downtown
Cleveland. All of the city’s major meeting venues are
within a 15-20 minute walk to award-winning dining,
lodging, and entertainment.
A City Connected
Cleveland has a unifying vision for its Downtown.
By 2016, the recently completed Cleveland
Convention Center and Global Center for Health
Innovation will connect to a 600-room Hilton
Cleveland Downtown hotel. A planned $25-million
pedestrian bridge will unite these facilities to the
lakefront and (thus) venues like the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame and Museum, and the $32-million
renovation of Public Square will connect it all.
New Moon over Playhouse Square
That’s no moon! That’s the 20-foot tall, 8,500-pound
crystal GE Chandelier hovering above Cleveland’s
Playhouse Square District like a planetoid. Not only
is it the Guinness World Record for largest outdoor
chandelier, but it’s a beacon for Playhouse Square,
celebrating the largest theater district in America
outside of New York. It’s all part of a $16 million
makeover of Cleveland’s theater district, which
also includes new signage, gateway arches, and
renovation of the outdoor Star Plaza.
The Flats Reinvented
Cleveland’s classic entertainment riverfront is being
revamped for today’s new tourist. Phase I of the
Flats East Bank Development featured the 18-story
Ernst and Young Tower, Aloft hotel, and several
bars and bistros. Now, Phase II of the $423-million
project (opening summer 2015) includes a 3.5acre park, expansive wooden boardwalk, cool new
apartments, and top restaurants that include Toby
Keith’s I Love This Bar and Grill, Zack Bruell’s Alley
Cat, and Steve Schimoler’s Crop Rocks.
City Living
According to the Downtown Cleveland Alliance,
there are more than 13,000 residents living in
Downtown Cleveland today, which is the largest
number of residents in over six decades. By 2020,
the city expects to be home to some 23,000
urbanites. To help meet demand, more than 1,000
new units will enter the market by the end of 2016,
while new residential projects are being planned
including the revitalization of the May Company
building and the modern nuCLEus project.
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Number of Rooms: 206 guestrooms & suites
Meeting Space: 12 meeting rooms totaling 12,000
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sq. ft., largest meeting room: 4,700 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 10 minute walk
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Number of Rooms: 122 guestrooms & suites
Meeting Space: 3,000 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 10 minute walk
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2 Hilton Cleveland Downtown Convention
Center Hotel - Opening Summer 2016
Number of Rooms: 563 guestrooms and 37 suites
Meeting Space: 18 meeting rooms totaling
46,298 sq. ft., largest meeting room: 20,778 sq. ft.
Proximity to Cleveland Convention Center
(CCC): connected
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1 Drury Plaza – Opening 2016
Number of Rooms: 180 guestrooms &TREMONT
suites
DETOUR
Meeting Space: 6 meeting rooms totaling 4,000
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Proximity to CCC: adjacent
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funky boutiques to amenities-laden convention
hotels. Add in the flexible meeting spaces and
signature dining spots, and these hotels become
destinations in themselves. Here’s a Downtown
snapshot to get your planning started:
He n
Mab
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By Stephanie Ricca
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CLEVELAND’S DOWNTOWN HOTEL SCENE WILL OFFER
19 HOTELS AND NEARLY 5,000 ROOMS BY 2016
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With so many conventions, businesses, and
entertainment options drawing people into the
city, Cleveland’s hotel scene is busy building to
meet demand. Four hotels are under development
in the walkable, downtown core, ranging from
St
Room to
Grow
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Downtown Cleveland
Hotel Cleveland
Map
Downtown
Hotel Map
Jefferson Ave
5 Aloft Cleveland Downtown
Number of Rooms: 150 guestrooms
Meeting Space: 4 meeting rooms totaling 3,630
sq. ft., largest meeting room: 3,100 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 10 minute walk
6 Cleveland Marriott Downtown at Key Center
Number of Rooms: 385 guestrooms & 15 suites
Meeting Space: 14 meeting rooms totaling 17,000
sq. ft., largest meeting room: 9,746 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: adjacent
7
rt R
d
INDU
VAL
7 Comfort Inn Downtown
Number of Rooms: 94 guestrooms & 15 suites
Meeting Space: 1 meeting room, largest meeting
room size: 1,536 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 15 minute walk
12 Hyatt Regency Cleveland at The Arcade
Number of Rooms: 288 guestrooms & 5 suites
Meeting Space: 15 meeting rooms totaling 14,073
sq. ft., largest meeting room size: 7,000 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 5 minute walk
8 DoubleTree by Hilton Cleveland
Downtown Lakeside
Number of Rooms: 374 guestrooms & 5 suites
Meeting Space: 13 meeting rooms totaling 10,347
sq. ft., largest meeting room size: 5,643 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 5 minute walk
13 The Metropolitan Hotel at The 9
Number of Rooms: 83 guestrooms & 73 suites
Meeting Space: 11 meeting rooms totaling 14,000
sq. ft., largest meeting room size: 5,122 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 10 minute walk
9 Hampton Inn Cleveland Downtown
Number of Rooms: 185 guestrooms & 9 suites
Meeting Space: 2 meeting rooms totaling 1,200
sq. ft., largest meeting room size: 600 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 5 minute walk
10 Hilton Garden Inn Cleveland Downtown
Number of Rooms: 232 guestrooms & 8 suites
Meeting Space: 12 meeting rooms totaling
18,268 sq. ft., largest meeting room size:
5,430 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 15 minute walk
11 Holiday Inn Express Hotel & Suites
Cleveland Downtown
Number of Rooms: 129 guestrooms & 12 suites
Proximity to CCC: 5 minute walk
14 Radisson Hotel Cleveland Gateway
Number of Rooms: 137 guestrooms & 5 suites
Meeting Space: 9 meeting rooms totaling 5,400
sq. ft., largest meeting room size: 1,800 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 10 minute walk
15 Renaissance Cleveland Hotel
Number of Rooms: 446 guestrooms & 45 suites
Meeting Space: 34 meeting rooms totaling
64,734 sq. ft., largest meeting room size:
22,590 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 5 minute walk
16 Residence Inn by Marriott
Cleveland Gateway
Number of Rooms: 175 suites
Meeting Space: 5 meeting rooms totaling 3,356
sq. ft., largest meeting room size: 1,680 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 10 minute walk
17 The Ritz-Carlton, Cleveland
Number of Rooms: 179 rooms & 26 suites
Meeting Space: 12 meeting rooms totaling 19,000
sq. ft., largest meeting room size: 7,565 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 5-10 minute walk
18 The Westin Cleveland Downtown
Number of Rooms: 445 rooms & 39 suites
Meeting Space: 18 meeting rooms totaling 19,410
sq. ft., largest meeting room size: 9,040 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: adjacent
19 Wyndham Cleveland at Playhouse Square
Number of Rooms: 172 rooms & 33 suites
Meeting Space: 9 meeting rooms totaling 13,079
sq. ft., largest meeting room size: 5,112 sq. ft.
Proximity to CCC: 10-15 minute walk
8
Regional Hotels
at a Glance
QUICK FACTS ABOUT GREATER CLEVELAND’S GROWING HOTEL COMMUNITY
By Stephanie Ricca
Whether your event is a charity marathon or a black
tie business meeting, Greater Cleveland hotels have
a wide range of brands and styles to meet your
particular needs, ranging from luxury to budgetfriendly. Here are some of the highlights:
Regional Snapshot
The Cleveland region as a whole has more than
22,000 guestrooms across all major hotel brands
and segments. Over the past year the area has
welcomed of-the-moments brands including
Westin, Aloft, and Hotel Indigo. Both boutique and
traditional options offer character and variety for
meetings and events of all sizes.
Airport Properties
More than 3,000 guestrooms are available within a
five-mile radius of Cleveland Hopkins International
Airport and the I-X Center. These range from affordable
and clean economy hotels to full-service offerings like
the recently renovated Cleveland Airport Marriott.
Hopkins is a mere 15 minutes from Downtown.
University Circle
Just east of Downtown, more new hotels are adding
capacity in the thriving University Circle neighborhood,
where museum and medical centers are a big draw.
The Cleveland Clinic is developing a 274-room,
nine-story Holiday Inn hotel on the medical center’s
campus, set for a spring 2016 opening.
Suburban Clusters
West of the city, new rooms are popping up in
Westlake and Avon, including brand-new Cambria
Suites, Hyatt Place, and Residence Inn hotels. With
12 hotels comprising more than 1,800 rooms, the
city of Independence is just south of Cleveland. To
the east, Beachwood has several notable hotels
including a new 135-room Aloft and a recently
renovated 396-room DoubleTree.
Suited for Meetings
Depending on the property, meeting spaces in
Cleveland’s hotels range from traditional boardroom
seating to AV- and tech-enabled theaters,
auditoriums, and ballrooms.
9
Dine, Recline,
and Do Business
AWARD-WINNING CHEFS, CRAFT BEER, FOOD TRUCKS –
IT’S TIME TO DINE IN CLEVELAND
By Jason Freed
Culinary Crescendo
Liquid Palate
Great chefs continue to open new restaurants.
More than 100 new bistros, grills, and greasy
spoons have opened in Greater Cleveland over
the past three years — most of which are locally
owned and operated. A new convention center
complex has new restaurants popping up within
walking distance. Today, there are more than 80
eateries in Downtown Cleveland, from a true
farm-to-table steakhouse near the lake, Urban
Farmer, to Chinato’s upscale Italian dining on
quaint East 4th Street.
Great food always pairs well with great beer.
The neighborhood of Ohio City recently added
two handspun craft breweries, bringing its
growing list to five, including famed Great Lakes
Brewing Co. Brewers are spreading like hop
vines in Downtown too, with establishments like
Cleveland Brewery, Butcher and the Brewer, Brick
and Barrel, and Goldhorn Brewery either open
or near opening. Perhaps the biggest opening is
Hofbräuhaus, a 1,700-seat restaurant and beer
garden behind Playhouse Square’s theaters.
Award-winning Chefs
Street Eats
One year after opening his first restaurant in 1997,
Michael Symon was named one of the Ten Best
New Chefs in America by Food & Wine. Nearly 10
area restaurants later, Symon notched the coveted
James Beard Foundation Award in 2009. Symon
paved the way for a number of award-winning
Cleveland successors, including Chris Hodgson
(Hodge’s), named Food & Wine’s Best New Chef,
and Jonathon Sawyer (The Greenhouse Tavern),
a finalist for the Best Chef Beard award.
For those on a tighter schedule, street food in
Cleveland has taken on a whole new meaning.
Food trucks serving gourmet fare, from smoked
barbecue to organic tacos, can be found
throughout the city. More than 20 trucks gather
for Walnut Wednesdays from May through
September, and the rest of the week you can find
them camped out at destinations like the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, near Lake Erie
at Edgewater Park, or Crocker Park in Westlake.
Food Station
The 102-year-old West Side Market is Cleveland’s
ultimate culinary attraction and Ohio’s last
municipally-owned grocery market. Anchoring
the historic Ohio City neighborhood, the city’s
yellow-bricked market is home to more than
100 haggle-friendly meat, seafood and produce
vendors. Even if you can’t take any food home
with you, you can still snack on exotic fare like
falafel, cannoli, street crepes and pierogi. It’s
worth a visit just for the architecture.
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Cleveland
Convention
Center
Facility Facts
Exhibition Hall
•
The Exhibit Hall is more than 30 feet
underground with the main 16-foot
entrance on Lakeside Avenue featuring
floor-to-ceiling windows providing natural
light into the area.
•225,000 total sq. ft. of Class A exhibit space
Meeting Rooms
•Thirty Five (35) meeting rooms are located
on four levels between the Global Center
for Health Innovation and Cleveland
Convention Center.
93,000 total sq. ft. of state-of-the-art
•
meeting rooms
Grand Ballroom
•32,000-sq.-ft., column-free Grand Ballroom
Connected Facilities
The Heart
of It All
The Cleveland Convention Center Draws Crowds Downtown
By Jennifer Kovacs Silvis
Downtown Cleveland is buzzing with new
business. The Cleveland Convention Center is
bringing big shows and even bigger crowds
back downtown. With 225,000 gross square
feet of exhibit space, 35 meeting rooms, and a
grand ballroom overlooking neighboring Lake
Erie, this sleek, modern, and sustainable venue is
equipped for all types of events and boasts plenty
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of technology to customize them. Attendees will
have 19 downtown hotels nearby (with nearly
5,000 rooms) by 2016, including the attached 600room Hilton Cleveland Downtown, and more than
12,000 available parking spaces. For downtime,
the city’s vibrant nightlife is just a stone’s throw
away, including nationally-recognized restaurants,
sports arenas, and performing arts theaters.
Global Center for Health Innovation
•
connects via the Concourse Level
•Cleveland Public Auditorium connects in
the Exhibition Hall
Global Center
for Health
Innovation
•
Dedicated to displaying the latest
advancements in health-related products
and technology with showrooms and
educational spaces aplenty.
•
The four-story, 235,000-sq.ft. building is
LEED Silver-certified with an expansive
glass facade that yields loads of natural
light and stunning views.
•
11,000-square-foot, column-free junior
ballroom with floor-to-ceiling windows,
divisible into two rooms
•Connected to the Cleveland Convention
Center via the Concourse Level
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Classic Crowd
Pleasers
Go BIG
Cleveland
THE LOGICAL
CHOICE
The following associations and
organizations have booked Cleveland
for their future conferences or have
recently held a successful meeting here:
• 2015 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Inductions
• 2015 Association of Iron & Steel
Technology
• 2015 Content Marketing World
• Healthcare Information &
Management Systems Society
(HIMSS) Connectathon
• Rubber Division, American
Chemical Society
• 2016 Republican National
Convention
• 2017 American Bus Association
Three Proven Cleveland Venues That
Are Perfect for Your Next Meeting
By Keith Gribbins
Public Hall Auditorium
The Cleveland Public Auditorium has hosted it all —
Republican National Conventions, Cleveland State
University basketball games, and even The Beatles.
The multi-purpose performing arts, entertainment,
and exposition facility opened in 1922, but recently
received $5 million in upgrades to the electrical,
plumbing, and mechanical infrastructure. Cleveland’s
“classic auditorium” also has a conference center with
15 meeting rooms (accommodating 10 to 700), while
the performing arts area features a 10,000-seat “Public
Hall” auditorium, 3,000-seat Cleveland Music Hall, and
600-seat Little Theater. The complex is even connected
to the Cleveland Convention Center via underground
tunnel.
Quicken Loans Arena
Some meetings require arena-sized settings. Quicken
Loans Arena (home to the Cleveland Cavaliers, Lake Erie
Monsters, and touring acts from Jay Z to Disney on Ice)
has nine exclusive spaces for rent, providing the perfect
setting for functions with elite motifs and themes.
CSU Wolstein Center
Cleveland State University’s Wolstein Convocation
Center offers the ultimate in flexibility, accommodating
everything from elaborate black tie affairs to Division I
college basketball. Specifically, the 10,000-square foot
Wolstein Center Conference Pavilion can host and cater
events for 20 to 2,000 guests.
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No Matter the Size, the I-X Center Has Your Event Covered
By Jennifer Kovacs Silvis
Offering more than 1 million square feet of flexible
exhibit space, Cleveland’s International Exposition
Center (I-X Center) knows what it means to go
big. Among the 10 largest convention centers in
the world, according to Trade Show Executive
magazine, this northeast Ohio staple matches
its square footage with its services, providing an
A-to-Z business model that offers everything
from catering to exhibit design, all right on site.
Boasting a location adjacent to Cleveland Hopkins
International Airport and five major interstates,
as well as plenty of on-site parking, travel to the
I-X Center couldn’t be easier. To accommodate
visitors for everything from trade and consumer
shows to private meetings, there are 9,000
hotel rooms within minutes of the venue, not
to mention Downtown Cleveland’s attractions
are just a 15-minute drive away. Recent updates
include digital LED screens on the show floor,
transitional theater seating to achieve an arena
feel, and Wi-Fi throughout the facility.
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Settings for
Every Style
Meet Me
ON THE GREEN
In Cleveland, golf is more than just
a game — it’s an opportunity to meet
By Mike Kezdi
Choose from more than 300 courses in Northeast
Ohio. A mix of prestigious country clubs, top-rated
public courses, and economical greens will please any
golf pro or amateur in your group.
© Robert Muller
Planning Great Events with Motivational Themes
By Chris Crowell
Every audience loves a stage, so the country’s
second-largest
performing
arts
district,
PlayhouseSquare, offers 10 such stages (five fullsized professional theatres). The largest, State
Theatre, at full capacity fits more than 3,000. Blocks
away, the House of Blues Cleveland boasts several
rooms for rent, including the restaurant and music
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18
hall which holds up to 3,000 guests. For an open-air
vibe, the amphitheater of Jacobs Pavilion at Nautica
and nearby FirstEnergy Powerhouse can hold
nearly 10,000 people for mingling right along the
Cuyahoga River, while Edgewater Park’s 6,000 feet
of shoreline includes two beaches, a playground,
and reservable pavilions.
Cleveland is full of similarly dynamic gathering spots
that can empower your specific meeting with a
motif — especially big sports metaphors. FirstEnergy
Stadium, home of the Cleveland Browns, and
Progressive Field, home of the Cleveland Indians,
both offer unique areas for rent. FirstEnergy’s largest
area (BrownsTown Patio) holds 2,000, while the
warning track at Progressive can fit 500 to 1,000.
© Roger Mastroianni
Productive meetings call for inspirational settings —
art, music, theater, or sports backdrops. For instance,
classy and cultured galas would be perfect for the
Cleveland Museum of Art, which can hold up to
700 under its amazing new atrium. Looking for
edgy and in your face? Head back Downtown to
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, which
has multiple rental options from its theater (163) to
the entire museum (2,500).
Boulder Creek
This is an 18-hole, par-72 course located in Streetsboro
with easy access from I-480 or the Ohio Turnpike.
Additional features include a driving range, cigar shop, and
The Halfway Grill. Boulder Creek features an event center
that can accommodate up to 150 guests, and both on and
offsite catering is allowed.
Cleveland Metroparks Manakiki
World-renowned golf course architect Donald Ross
designed Manakiki, located in Willoughby Hills, east of
Cleveland in the North Chagrin Reservation. Dino’s Catering
offers full service for a variety of events from cookouts to
weddings and seminars. The course is an 18-hole, par-72.
Cleveland Metroparks Sleepy Hollow
In 2013, Golfweek Magazine named Sleepy Hollow the
No. 1 Municipal Course in Ohio and No. 15 nationwide.
Theo’s of Sleepy Hollow offers full service catering for a
variety of events. The 18-hole, par 71 course located in the
Brecksville Reservation includes a driving range.
Fowler’s Mill
This Pete Dye-designed course was ranked 2nd Best Public
Course in Ohio by Golf Digest in 2011. As specialists in golf
outings, events, and weddings, the banquet facility can
accommodate up to 225 guests. Located in Chesterland,
the 27-hole, par-72 course is suitable for all skill levels.
Shale Creek
The Granite Grille at Shale Creek is open daily for public
dining. The course provides a great backdrop for a variety of
banquet functions and can accommodate up to 175 guests.
Located in Medina, Shale Creek is an 18-hole, par-71 course.
SM
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Ron Newman, Director of Sales | e: [email protected] | p: 216.875.6630