Downtown - West
Downtown - West
Making Place: How Louisville is using tactical urbanism to rebuild civic...
"You can have a space, and even though it's vacant at the time, it can still have a life. It's still part of the...
New aerials show Spaghetti Junction’s enormous footprint in Downtown Louisville
When you're zooming through Spaghetti Junction for most of the day when there's no traffic, it might seem like the tangle of highway ramps...
Louisville Downtown Partnership honors new development with Cornerstone Awards
On Monday evening, the Louisville Downtown Partnership issued eleven Cornerstone Awards to recently completed projects in and around Downtown Louisville. The annual celebration fetes projects...
Louisville, Southern Indiana awarded $10.3 million from HUD for capital improvements...
This month, the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD) issued more than $1.8 billion in federal funds to 3,100 housing authorities across the country...
St. Peter’s Church has found a way to save its historic...
Clarke & Loomis's exuberant Gothic-Revival St. Peter’s United Church of Christ still stands tall over West Jefferson Street after 121 years in the Russell neighborhood. It's...
Chart of the Day: Watch Louisville’s urban bike network grow over...
Until now, Louisville's Urban Bike Network (UBN) meant more on paper than on pavement—but that's changing fast. "The bike lanes in town didn't make up...
Worst: Louisville went crazy with the wrecking ball in the name...
A policy that was intended to improve the quality of life for city-dwellers actually resulted in expediting the social and cultural deterioration of urban Louisville. We're...
Wait, what?! Louisville removes sidewalk in the name of pedestrian safety...
Louisville's Ninth Street Divide just got a little bit wider, and Downtown Louisville a little less walkable.
During a street repaving project, two small pieces...
This week: Help plan the future of Louisville’s Urban Bike Network...
Bike lanes are nothing new in Louisville. We've been building them for years. But the city is beginning to get wise to newer innovations...