The land use visioning process involved citizens, elected officials and other stake holders and was managed by the Hamilton County Regional Planning Commission.

Goal-setting workshops, public input, land capability analyses and economic market forecasting were among the tools used to craft the vision plan.

Public Participation
Education Analyses

Focus area recommendations
The whole of the Eastern Corridor was broken into six focus areas for detailed study and workshop-level evaluation.

Then, with further study and coordination, the focus plans were "put back together" and coordinated among each other to help construct the consensus vision plan for the whole Corridor.

Focus Area Action Items
General Action Items

Final vision plan
The final vision plan calls for significant increases in jobs and economic activity in the Corridor, as well as housing of all types.

Strengthening of existing community centers is an important part of the plan. The vision plan also calls for a big increase in the amount of preserved greenspace in the Corridor.

Public Opinion Survey
Map

  Final Eastern Corridor Land Use Vision Plan - Summary and Table of Contents
  Final Eastern Corridor Land Use Vision Plan (7MB)

Green Infrastructure Concept Master Plan
The Green Infrastructure Committee, comprised of citizens and representatives from the jurisdictions throughout the Eastern Corridor was established by Resolution of the Hamilton County Transportation Improvement District (TID).

The committee focused on three areas: economic development and community needs; environmental protection and preservation; and transportation improvements.

The Plan will serve as a guide document to keep protection and enhancement of the Little Miami River plains in the forefront of future work on the Eastern Corridor Project and planning efforts of local jurisdictions.

Green Infrastructure Concept Master Plan