Walking Cincinnati. Danny Korman

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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_c435ac42-d172-5c8e-97ff-60d4e92a6d25">images Mt. Adams Bar & Grill 938 Hatch St., 513-621-3666, mtadamsbarandgrill.com

      6 Walnut Hills

      From Prominent Suburb to Urban Neighborhood

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      Be sure to visit Twin Lakes Overlook for a spectacular view of the city.

      BOUNDARIES: Gilbert Ave., William Howard Taft Rd., Victory Pkwy., Eden Park Dr.

      DISTANCE: 2.75 miles

      DIFFICULTY: Moderate

      PARKING: On-street or at the Walnut Hills Branch Library

      PUBLIC TRANSIT: Metro bus to Taft Rd. and Gilbert Ave.

      Walnuts Hills is a unique Cincinnati neighborhood that is in the process of redefining its identity through deep introspection and a genuine celebration of its history of diversity, walkability, and proximity to great amenities such as Eden Park. This walk traverses some of Cincinnati’s most beautiful parkland, as well as some historic and commercial districts of Walnut Hills.

      Reverend James Kemper purchased 150 acres for his homestead from John Cleves Symmes in 1791 and called it Walnut Hill. Kemper’s legacy stretches far beyond naming Walnut Hills, however, as he and his family helped to establish the First Presbyterian Church of Walnut Hills and supported the development of the neighborhood as a racially and spiritually diverse community. During the 1830s, Kemper sold land to the Lane brothers, who opened the Lane Theological Seminary. The seminary was home to famous abolitionists Calvin and Harriet Beecher Stowe during those early years, and soon after Harriet moved out of Cincinnati, she published Uncle Tom’s Cabin, one of the most influential books in the history of the United States.

      Walk Description

      Walk away from the tower and along William Howard Taft Road beside the Alexandra Apartments. This expansive property holds an important place in the development of Cincinnati’s hillside neighborhoods, the original suburbs. When it was built in 1904, it was the largest apartment building in the city and a symbol of development patterns, including the expansion of residential life to the hillsides, the role of the streetcar in determining development, and the impact of population growth on residential styles.

      Continue on William Howard Taft Road for two more blocks until you reach the Alms Hill Apartments. Originally built as the Hotel Alms in 1925, the expansive modern hotel had 500 rooms and a number of eccentric and glamorous amenities, including the Mermaid Lounge and Tokyo Garden. The towers were also used as a TV broadcasting site for WKRC.

      Turn right onto Victory Parkway, where you’ll walk through the tree-lined streets for several blocks as you approach Eden Park.

      After crossing Cypress Street, a University of Cincinnati campus sits on your left at 2220 Victory Parkway. This site is home to Communiversity, a program of noncredit education programs designed for nonenrolled community members who enjoy ongoing education.

      Follow the bend and keep right to continue on Victory Parkway. Take a slight left onto Eden Park Drive and enter Eden Park.

      You’ll first come upon the iconic Twin Lakes. If you’d like to add a short side trip, take the loop around the lakes to Twin Lakes Overlook, where you can find breathtaking views of the city.

      Just beyond and opposite Twin Lakes is the Eden Park Standpipe, also designed by Samuel Hannaford and listed on the National Register of Historic Places. This historic water tower was erected in 1894 and, at that time, was an active channel in the water supply system in Walnut Hills.

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