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Tag Archives: Bars & Clubs

Below are listed the articles tagged Bars & Clubs
  • 08 / May
    2009

Gourmet Drama To Fill The Kentucky Theater Marketplace

The central hall will organize the interior spaces

The central hall will organize the interior spaces at the Theater Square Marketplace



The old Kentucky Theater just north of the Brown Hotel on Fourth Street has been dubbed the Theater Square Marketplace for some time now, but the renovation work is winding down and a grand opening is in sight.  The project is the vision of entrepreneur George Stinson and lawyer Eric Haner and when the official opening happens in June, Fourth Street will have a lively marketplace bazaar.


Some of the businesses have been open for a while, like Nancy’s Bagel Box (which is located in the spot where the original ticket window once stood) and Theater Square Wine & Spirits.  Bikram Yoga studio has been open a couple weeks on the second floor and Haner’s law firm is in the building.  Joining them will be a gourmet cafe, a market, a dessert counter, a florist, a bar, and there’s still room for another retail tenant.  The cafe and market will be run by Dustin VonWheeler, formerly of Market on Market, and a large bar will feature a permanent open air pavilion behind the building.


VonWheeler explains that the group hopes to recapture the qualities of theater in the new spaces, and the businesses have been arranged around a central two-story hall to connect all the levels.  The interior spaces open up as you enter the building revealing an urban theater in the round: patrons are at once the actors and the audience.


A mix of industrial and natural materials sets the stage.  Tinted concrete and tile floors run through the building and smooth concrete block columns with sleek sconces hold up the second floor.  Dramatic exposed duct work forms a sort of arched promenade through the space and brightly colored lights hang from the ceiling.  A large glass window leading to the bar pavilion fills the hall with natural light.


Not too long ago the building was up for demolition.  The original theater was built in 1921 and operated as a movie house for over 60 years.  The Kentucky Show, now reincarnated at the Kentucky Center, played for a couple years there in the 1980s.  By the mid 1990s, long vacant, the City of Louisville wanted the structure torn down.  George Stinson stepped up to save the old theater and for a time leased the space for free to the Kentucky Theater Project.  Now, the property has been completely renovated and will serve Downtown residents and workers as well as convention goers strolling up Fourth Street.


A new gourmet market should be similar to the old Market on Market.  A range of goods ranging from a box of Cheerios to a $150 bottle of balsamic vinegar will fill the shelves.  The idea is to offer the basics a Downtown resident might need for daily life while showcasing hard-to-find epicurean items.  The cafe will specialize in healthy and creative “gourmet-to-go” options prepared in a full kitchen on the second floor.  Tables are arranged in the central hall so patrons can dine in as well.


At the back of the building, a round bar negotiates between the central hall and the new pavilion on the other side of a large glass window.  The pavilion will be able to open large doors in warm weather to create an open-air atmosphere.  It has its own HVAC system that will allow it to be fully heated in the winter.  There’s also a separate wine bar that will feature a nitrogen system to keep bottles of wine on tap.  This allows more obscure bottles of wine to be sold by the glass.  The Theater Square Marketplace is perhaps the only place in Kentucky where you could buy packaged liquor at the front of the building and buy a glass of wine in the back.


With the vast array of retail uses found in the Theater Square Marketplace, it’s sure to offer a well rounded gourmet experience, and with many residential buildings like the Henry Clay or Crescent Center less than a block away and the Brown Hotel next door, it’s bound to fill a niche.  When it opens tentatively in June, Fourth Street will be quite a bit more lively with the theater of urban life.



Click through for a look around the building and historic photos of the theater.

  • 08 / May

Retail Watch: New Albany Preparing Another Downtown Bar

New Bar in New Albany to occupy two store fronts

New Bar in New Albany to occupy two store fronts



Another boarded up building on New Albany’s Main Street are set to become a new bar.  Construction was underway today on two adjacent buildings between Bank Street and Pearl Street and people around told us about the bar.  Details were sparse, though, so that’s pretty much all we know.  Anyone have the scoop on what the bar is called or when it might open?


Inside, three openings had been cut in the brick party wall to connect to two spaces, and it appears each building has its own structural wall.  Check out how thick the brick is in the photo below.  It also appears a suspended acoustical ceiling has recently been removed as well from the hanging light fixtures, and the original tin ceiling has been exposed.  Quite an improvement if you ask us.  Hopefully, in time, the upper two floors of the structures will lose the boarded windows and become something creative.



Interior renovations for a future bar

Interior renovations for a future bar

  • 25 / Nov
    2008

Seeing Stars: O’Shea’s On Main’s Facade Repaired

Before and after O'Shea's masonry repair

Before and after O'Shea's masonry repairs



The scaffolding is down from the construction site of the O’Shea’ on Main site, revealing the first visible changes on the future arena district restaurant and pub.  Besides the newly painted cornice, the drooping limestone on the right hand side of the building has been fixed.  Work involved removing some pieces of stone and re-setting them and tuck-pointing the entire facade.  Small cast iron masonry stars, common on many historic buildings, have been added to keep the facade in place for generations to come.


It’s good to see the building’s Main Street face looking less droopy as the building’s best years still lay ahead of it.  The building is currently being cleaned out in preparation for interior construction.  Truck loads of stored goods have been removed, leaving a blank pallette on the inside for work to begin soon.  We’ll bring you more news on this one soon.






Detail of the new cast iron masonry stars

Detail of the new cast iron masonry stars

  • 14 / Nov
    2008

Snapshot: Painting O’Shea’s On Main



The scaffolding went up on the O’Shea’s on Main project in late October, we already took a sneak-peak at what’s in store down the road, and not to be outdone with construction activity at the 4th Street Live Irish pub,  today we spotted a painter high atop the scaffolding with brush in hand.  As you can see, the cornice is being painted light grey, representing the first visible signs of progress at the new restaurant / pub / tea room sandwhiched between the Whiskey Row Lofts and the Iron Quarter.





  • 12 / Nov
    2008

4th Street Live Getting Its Faux Irish On

Ri Ra Construction at 4th Street Live

Ri Ra Construction at 4th Street Live



The new Ri Ra Irish Pub planned for 4th Street Live is now under construction and sporting faux pilasters on its facade.  On the interior, wood wainscotting can be seen covering the walls and columns.  The bar will occupy 9,000 square feet and apparently uses salvaged materials from old Irish pubs, but we didn’t see any of that on site.  Another Irish pub is also under construction on Main Street.  The locally owned O’Shea’s on Main retaurant, tea room, pub has recently been covered in scaffolding.






Ri Ra Construction at 4th Street Live

Ri Ra Construction at 4th Street Live

  • 10 / Sep
    2008

Club Planned for McCrory’s on 4th Street Falls Through


McCrory's on 4th Street sits empty

McCrory's on 4th Street sits empty




Earlier this summer plans were announced that a local nightclub would open in the old McCrory’s building on Fourth Street between Muhammad Ali Blvd. and Chestnut Street.  This was excellent news as the local response to 4th Street Live has been timid to put it mildly.  In August, workers were clearing the interior of the building in what we hoped was a precursor to construction.  Broken Sidewalk has now learned plans for the site have fallen through and the property is back on the market.  Financing the project seems to be largely to blame.




McCrory's on 4th Street sits empty

McCrory's on 4th Street sits empty



McCrory's on 4th Street sits empty

McCrory's on 4th Street sits empty



  • 02 / Sep
    2008

4th Street Live Prepares for Two New Venues

New Clubs at 4th Street Live

New Clubs at 4th Street Live


The 4th Street Live entertainment center in downtown Louisville built by the Cordish Company is preparing for the launch of two new club concepts following the demise of Fashion Shop clothing store and Felt Club.  The new clubs will be one atop the other.  A stand up live comedy club will be on the second floor and Ri Ra, an Irish pub, will be on the 4th Street level.  Ri Ra will occupy about 9,000 square feet and will be constructed of materials salvaged from old Irish pubs.  The name Ri Ra is derived from the Irish phrase “Ri Ra agus Ruaile Buaile” meaning “clebration and good fun”.


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