Data map showing the four Cleveland neighborhoods with diverging Census trends: where people were lost, while housing was added.showed that, while some neighborhoods in Cleveland gained hundreds of housing units in the past decade, several of them still lost hundreds of people.
In Tremont, where contemporary townhomes and $1 million flat-roofs began to rise before the Great Recession, the notion of the popular neighborhoodIn the CPC's analysis, such seemingly contradictory trends are understood at a kind of micro level. Cory Riodan, the executive director of Tremont West Development Corporation, said that such tract-level changes in how homes were built, and who they were serving, is key to understanding the data.