Branden Klayko
On Thursday morning, Mayor Greg Fischer and officials from Metro Louisville unveiled the year-and-a-half late transportation plan, Move Louisville. In the report, the city issued two major priorities to guide transportation spending and policy in Louisville in coming decades:...
Increasing speed limits led to 33,000 traffic deaths from 1993 to 2013, including 1,900 deaths in 2013, "essentially canceling out the number of lives saved by frontal airbags that year," says a report by the Insurance Institute for Highway...
We recently took a deep dive into the issue of Oak Street in Old Louisville and what it will take to revive that commercial thoroughfare. One of the critical components of creating a strong Old Louisville is creating a...
The inside of a freshly charred oak barrel must be a dark and moody place. It's within these grey, crackled walls, a clear spirit is imbued with a golden tone as it slowly ages to become fine bourbon. In...
After more than a year-and-a-half of delays, Metro Louisville has finally released the Move Louisville report detailing the city's strategic transportation plan for the next two decades. The report was unveiled at a press conference today at 10:00a.m.
Among Move...
Sixteen floors above Fourth Street, a row of terracotta urns perched atop the Brown Hotel forms its own miniature skyline set against the skyscrapers of Downtown Louisville. These historic details mark the edge of what will soon be a new...
On Friday, Louisville received was awarded the dishonorable distinction as the city with the nation's worst "parking crater," a term for a vast area of surface level parking lots that deaden city block after city block. Streetsblog readers voted Louisville the...
While many studies have shown that rich people live longer than poor people, a study with county-level data published in the Journal of the American Medical Association says life expectancy among poor people varies based on variety on geographic differences.
"Life...
Jay's Cafeteria was once a food hub for the Russell neighborhood, where sit-down restaurants remain a scarcity even today. But in less than a year, the structure that once housed Frank Foster's popular restaurant has been transformed into kitchen...