Cedar Cliff
A community guide to Cedar Cliff in New York, the United States.
- Population
- Population data unavailable
- Region
- New York
- Country
- the United States
- Coordinates
- 41.5865, -73.9596
Community and amenities
Cedar Cliff offers the everyday community amenities that one would expect of a populated place in New York: places to gather, public spaces, and services that connect residents to each other and to the wider region. Educational, cultural, and recreational facilities serve the local population and reflect the priorities of Cedar Cliff's residents. Visitors passing through Cedar Cliff encounter a community whose character is built on the patient work of generations of locals.
Economy and services
The economy of Cedar Cliff reflects small-scale local commerce, with employment distributed across the sectors typical for similarly-sized communities in New York. Local services include the everyday provisions residents and visitors expect — retail, food, and personal services — supported by the wider municipal infrastructure of New York and the United States. Businesses based in Cedar Cliff draw from the regional labour pool and supply both local needs and the broader market beyond the immediate area.
Overview
Cedar Cliff is a populated place in New York, the United States. The community is recognised as a populated place with population figures not formally recorded but with an established presence in New York. Its position within the broader regional network gives Cedar Cliff a distinct local character shaped by surrounding communities and shared services.
Geography and location
Cedar Cliff sits at approximate coordinates 41.5865 latitude and -73.9596 longitude within New York. The terrain and natural features around Cedar Cliff reflect those typical of its part of the United States, with land use, water access, and transport corridors that have shaped the way the community has developed over time. Travel distances to neighbouring populated places vary, with the wider New York road network providing the principal routes in and out.