ICL FACILITIES

To ensure that the diverse training needs of our client base are met, ICL has several training sites in Northeast Ohio. ICL clients benefit from the different settings and indoor/outdoor training venue that each site offers for business meetings and retreats.

Hale Farm and Village: Grounds and ICL's Facility

One training facility is located at Hale Farm and Village, part of the Western Reserve Historical Society, in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park. A two story historic structure has been dedicated for ICL's training facility, and overlooks the pastoral life in the Western Reserve region as it was in 1848.

Renaissance Quail Hollow Resort

A second training facility is located at Renaissance Quail Hollow Resort in Concord, OH. As a choice destination for meetings, conferences, and retreats, ICL makes a wide array of creative, relelvant, and effective leadership and teambuilding training services available to business and industry guests planning a stay.

Polaris Career Center

Polaris Career Center provides a third training facility in Middleburg Heights, OH. This location is ideal for those businesses wanting a more traditional classroom learning environment, and has the advantage of an on-site, outdoor team-training course.

The Hines Hill Center 

A blend of architectural and pastoral beauty, the Hines Hill conference facility has been available to ICL groups since 1994. This 30 acre site is located in the heart of the Cuyahoga Valley National Park and can accomodate approximately 30 people. Both the conference facility and site provide an ideal setting in which to reflect on personal leadership abilities, learn new skills, and develop new perspectives.

"ICL's training facilities are fantastic settings. In a relaxed and comfortable fashion, we are able to explore and reflect on what it takes to be effective, contributing and successful leaders."


"The ICL facilitators effectively help us see ourselves in a different context, making it easier to notice strengths and abilities that otherwise would go unnoticed and unsupported."