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Bounded by Broadway, Louis Coleman Jr. Drive, Ohio River, the southern boundary of Chickasaw Park and the Paducah and Louisville Railroad 38°14′48″N 85°49′15″W / 38.2468°N 85.8209°W / 38.2468; -85.8209 ( Chickasaw Neighborhood Historic
1340 S 4th Street, Louisville, Kentucky: Coordinates ... Louisville ultimately purchased the old estate for $297,500 in 1904 (equivalent to $10,088,555.56 in 2023).
Louisville Waterfront Park, once an industrial wasteland, Louisville's reclaimed waterfront now features trees and walking paths. Auburn Park (Jeffersontown) Beargrass Creek State Nature Preserve; Blackacre Nature Preserve and Historic Homestead; Bowling Park (St. Matthews) Brown Park (St. Matthews) Dayton Avenue Park (St. Matthews)
Algonquin Parkway connects the Western parkways to Southern and Eastern Parkways via Third Street, cutting east-to-west across the city. The last of the parkways to be finished, [5] Algonquin was partially completed in 1928 by the Carey-Reed Company of Lexington at an initial cost of $120,000 with a width of just 20 feet (6.1 m) at the time, although space was reserved for widening once the ...
Street Map of downtown Louisville; Getting around Downtown Louisville at the Wayback Machine (archived May 6, 2003) Emporis – Tallest buildings in Louisville at the Wayback Machine (archived June 24, 2016) Images of Central Business District / Downtown (Louisville, Ky.) in the University of Louisville Libraries Digital Collections
The Hogan's Fountain Pavilion was a large gazebo, and picnic shelter of mid-century modern architecture built in 1965 and located in Cherokee Park, Louisville, Kentucky, United States. It was considered the most prominent landmark in Cherokee Park until it was demolished in 2023. The pavilion was available to rent for a variety of events.
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A residential street in the Original Highlands. The Highlands was the last area near downtown Louisville to be urbanized, since its steep 60-foot (18 m) incline above the flood plain made travel difficult, and the area showed no signs of urban development until just before the Civil War.