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Farewell to 2023 and hello to 2024! From fine dining to Champagne toasts at midnight and more, here is a list of 16 restaurants where you can dine in or order a meal to-go around Louisville this ...
The menu at High Stakes Grill, which opened in July on the rooftop of the new Tempo by Hilton Louisville Downtown NuLu, includes the More Than A Wedge salad. WHAT: Enjoy a special prix fixe family ...
The Highlands is an area in Louisville, Kentucky which contains a high density of nightclubs, eclectic businesses, and many upscale and fast food restaurants. It is centered along a three-mile (5 km) stretch of Bardstown Road and Baxter Avenue ( US 31E / US 150 ) and is so named because it sits atop a ridge between the middle and south forks of ...
Russell is a neighborhood immediately west of downtown Louisville, Kentucky, U.S.. It is nicknamed "Louisville's Harlem". [1] It was named for renowned African American educator and Bloomfield, Kentucky native, Harvey Clarence Russell Sr. [2] [3] Its boundaries are West Market Street, 9th Street, West Broadway and I-264.
The hotel formerly had a historic restaurant called the Oakroom, which was Kentucky's only AAA Five Diamond Restaurant Award winner, one of 44 in the nation. [35] It closed in 2018 and was converted to a ballroom. [36] The Rathskellar, decorated with Rookwood Pottery, was a rare and distinctively Seelbach south-German influenced restaurant. [34]
5700 Captains Quarters Road, Prospect; cqriverside.com; Hours: Monday-Tuesday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Wednesday-Thursday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., Friday-Saturday, 11 a.m. to ...
The second location of the Tacos and Margaritas Mexican restaurant in Mansfield is open seven days a week. Twice as nice: Couple open second Gigi's Tacos and Margaritas Mexican restaurant Skip to ...
Like many older American cities, Louisville has well-defined neighborhoods, many with well over a century of history as a neighborhood. The oldest neighborhoods are the riverside areas of Downtown and Portland (initially a separate settlement), representing the early role of the river as the most important form of commerce and transportation.