Unique Shippingport Building Saved From Demolition

Friday, November 20, 2009 by Branden Klayko.
1500 Bank Street (BS File Photo)

1500 Bank Street (BS File Photo)



You won’t find another example like it in Louisville, or likely anywhere else in the world.  This two-story commercial building at the intersection of Bank Street, Rowan Street, and 15th Street in Shippingport was once planned for demolition but a group led by Gill Holland and his wife, Augusta Brown Holland, has saved the property and plans improvements.


Situated on the acute end of a triangular block, this structure dating to 1888 has been sitting vacant for years.  When Gill learned of its proposed demolition, he quickly purchased the property, closing only three weeks ago.  He says the quirky structure has long been one of his favorites in Louisville, and we would have to agree.


Gill brought on Shine Properties to help with the first phase of the renovation which involves gutting the decaying interior.  Gill recalls the building “was such a mess inside,” filled with old doors, 1950s push lawnmowers, and Playboy magazines from the early 1980s.  Everything had to go so you could simply walk around inside and evaluate its potential.


Matthew Gilles of Shine Properties says work on the initial phase should wrap up by the end of next week and brainstorming for the structure’s future can begin.  Gill Holland has plenty of ideas in mind for the 1500 Bank Street building, but nothing final.  He envisions the building as a “gateway to Shippingport” and hopes it will spur investment in other buildings in the area.


Shippingport has been the target recently of a University of Kentucky student project imagining future development for the neighborhood and we took a photo-tour of the area shortly after that.  Also located on the block are several sturdy brick shotgun houses and a two-story townhouse, currently boarded up.  Improvement in Shippingport will likely begin with these smaller buildings before the large warehouse district is redeveloped at 15th & Lytle Streets.


Whatever form the building takes in the end, it’s most important that there’s new investment coming to Shippingport.  Gill says the building will keep its white paint and could eventually have a curving glass storefront installed on the first floor currently covered by non-historic stone.  Little is known of the structure’s history, but it has started a new chapter this week.





1500 Bank Street (Courtesy Matthew Gilles, Shine Properties)

1500 Bank Street (Courtesy Matthew Gilles, Shine Properties)


1500 Bank Street (Courtesy Matthew Gilles, Shine Properties)

1500 Bank Street (Courtesy Matthew Gilles, Shine Properties)


View from 1500 Bank Street (Courtesy Matthew Gilles, Shine Properties)

View from 1500 Bank Street (Courtesy Matthew Gilles, Shine Properties)


View from 1500 Bank Street (Courtesy Matthew Gilles, Shine Properties)

View from 1500 Bank Street (Courtesy Matthew Gilles, Shine Properties)


Debris from 1500 Bank Street (Courtesy Matthew Gilles, Shine Properties)

Debris from 1500 Bank Street (Courtesy Matthew Gilles, Shine Properties)


1500 Bank Street (BS File Photo)

1500 Bank Street (BS File Photo)


1500 Bank Street (BS File Photo)

1500 Bank Street (BS File Photo)


1500 Bank Street (BS File Photo)

1500 Bank Street (BS File Photo)


1500 Bank Street (BS File Photo)

1500 Bank Street (BS File Photo)


5 Comments. Now we're talking!
  1. Ken Wilson

    November 20th, 2009

    7:21 pm

    Thumb up 0

    What a fascinating building. It cries out for a story, for visual closure: is its tentative, suggestive shape the result of a long lost context? What truncated gesture is it making? As haunting as the vestigial arms of the Venus de Milo, in a gritty way.

    Gill Holland deserves our thanks… again and again.

  2. Nathalie Andrews

    November 21st, 2009

    2:23 pm

    Thumb up 0

    Thirty-one years ago, when "Shippingport" was still East Portland or Portland Extension, and the Portland Museum was still housed at Roosevelt School on 17th street, this building was a favorite of ours and of the children who lived near by. We included it on our first neighborhood walking tour map. More recently, a gentleman came to the museum and told us that his family lived there above the grocery store they ran. Beneath the permastone I suspect there is the old store window frame. I'll have to look up his name. Everyone in Portland is trilled that this wonderful structure is now safe.

  3. Bryce Hudson

    November 21st, 2009

    2:59 pm

    Thumb up 0

    I have loved this building since I moved to Louisville 10 years ago. I commend Gill Holland on saving it and recognizing that there are treasures all over our city. I bought and renovated a unique building blocks from there in Portland, 2 years later I discovered that it was built by Authur Loomis, the architect behind the Speed Art Museum, Carnigie museum in New Albany, IN and the Levy Building in downtown Louisville!

  4. Pip

    November 21st, 2009

    6:01 pm

    Thumb up 0

    Damn you, Holland! Leave some cool buildings for the rest of us!

    Thank you for rescuing this.

  5. Charlie F.

    November 22nd, 2009

    5:10 pm

    Thumb up 0

    What a great story and I agree, we all should be so thankful for Gil and his wife helping Louisville preserve our past!

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