Hey there RonCo.
I am in NorthEastCentral OH and I can tell you this about Ohio in the Greenhouse;
Insulate like bejeezus, Make sure you have a decent Grey-day light source, have a plan for moving your plants back from freezable windows, and a radiant heat source for your warmth- I use 2 of those oil-filled heaters that look like radiators.
Oh, and electrical stability is very much helpful.
Like maybe a separate electric box on its own breaker is the ideal, when you think about powering a heater during those sub-zero days we get in Ohio.
I do something interesting with my heaters;
I get a LARGE, flat rock,(like a granite-type rock), and set it atop the heater. It will heat up and hold heat directly from the heater, I can spray the surface of that rock and then it "steams" the water into the air for added humidity, and I can shut the heater off for periods of time and the rock will still radiate the heat it has stored.
I have several blocky rocks that sit around each heater and will store heat, A pile of bricks will do the same thing.
And plants can sit on those blocky rocks and be spritzed down and bask in the warm humidity.
Plants can be arranged outward in "temperature tiers" to accommodate plant personal temp needs, and I get through some pretty dang COOOOOLD winters, and still manage some warmer growers.
I'm also willing to,(and set up for), bringing plants into the house during the super cold snaps, if need be.
I'd definately make it a bit larger and have that radiant heat source, if I were you. I have found that ambient heat from the house never quite cuts it.
And honestly, a space where you can have a little seat-room and sit and enjoy, even on the gloomiest of the grey Ohio days will have made the extra effort and cost so worthy. I like having a Bright-Lighted, plant-filled greenspace to spend time in, once the November blahs have set in.
I started out in Canada and find that the winters in Ohio can get nearly as cold, although less snow fall amounts.
(Yes, Even More than last years blizzard. LOL!
)