The Louisville Chemical Building on the corner of Jefferson and Hancock Streets has been for sale seemingly forever. At least before we first wrote about it last September. Since then, someone tagged the front windows and the graffiti was painted over with white paint blotches. Today we noticed thought bubbles on top of the white paint on top of the tags on top of the window. We’re wondering, what’s the building trying to say? Write your suggestions in the comments and we’ll choose the best one on Monday. Don’t be shy, the building certainly isn’t. When buildings talk, we listen.
BS Neighborhood Derby: Butchertown-NuLu Takes Downtown Down, Highlands High Above Old Louisville
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The first Round II results are in, and we officially have our first upset. First, As two of the largest and most spirited neighborhoods, Old Louisville and the Highlands, went head-to-head, the number one seed Highlands pulled off an easy victory over their Victorian counterparts. One seed Downtown wasn’t so lucky. It commandingly defeated SoBro-Limerick in Round I, but fell to Butchertown-NuLu-East Market with a sizable margin. Congratulations to the winners, we’ll tip off the next poll on Monday.
Art Car Friday: Zebra Loose In The Cherokee Triangle
It’s a zebra. It’s a car. We saw it in the Cherokee Triangle.
Indianapolis Shuts Down Possibility City Fun
Indianapolis has officially earned the title Impossibility City: It Can’t Happen Here. Legal representatives in the city told tourism officials in Louisville to leave their laser projector in the River City when they are coming up to promote Louisville and the Cardinals during the NCAA tournament happening right now (Go Cards). Indy lawyers cited an anti-advertising ordinance that prohibited such a display. We think they couldn’t handle the prospects of Louisville beamed large on downtown buildings.
Evening News Roundup
Mobility
- If you cause an accident, should you pay for the emergency response? (Capitol Weekly via P-zen)
- How to encourage Americans to drive less, buy smaller cars (Room for Debate/NY Times)
- Failed tolling authority legislation good for keeping spaghetti junction at bay (8664.org)
Evening News Roundup
Local Mobility
- Louisville taking over maintenance of state-controlled roads in Jefferson Co. (C-J)
- Bridge tolling authority still in jeopardy in Frankfort (C-J)
- Jeffersonville to meet with Big Four Ped. Bridge designers to work on approach concept (N & T)
- KFC offers to fill potholes for free, in exchange for a temporary street advert (Business First)
BS Neighborhood Derby: Round I Ends In Drama, Titans Square Off In Round II
Round I of the BS Neighborhood Derby 2009 has officially been decided, and the final two battles went out with a bang. In all, 866 votes were cast in the final two races, which represent the closest competitions to date. New Albany beat out Beechmont-South Louisville after a last minute rally and West Louisville-Russell-Park Hill-California narrowly won over Jeffersonville-Clarksville with a slim 17-vote margin.
Both match-ups were running a dead-heat up through the noon hour today and voting was intense. Congratulations go to all the neighborhoods for the support they brought in and the numbers to back it up. With the closing of the polls this afternoon, we now have eight neighborhoods/neighborhood groups battling for the BS Crown of Neighborhood of the Year, or whatever we decide to call it in the end (suggestions welcome).
Today we’re starting Round II competitions with a few neighborhood titans. The Highlands will square off against Old Louisville and Downtown will again be battling its neighbors Butchertown-NuLu-East Market Street Corridor. All four won convincingly in Round I, but as the stakes grow, so does the difficulty. Voting will be open for two days, so vote in both races below and spread the word.
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- Highlands news archives
- Old Louisville news archives
- Downtown news archives
- Butchertown news archives, NuLu-East Market Corridor news archives
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Video: Take A Fly-Over Tour Of Waterfront Parkway
The folks over at 8664.org released another beautiful video rendering of the proposed Waterfront Parkway that could transform Louisville’s waterfront from concrete menace into a true urban amenity. You should certainly remember the renderings and video from a few weeks ago (and if you don’t, you’d better refresh your memory over here). This is the first installment of a series of videos that will fully detail the 8664.org proposal.
The video takes a fly-over approach through the improved and smaller Spaghetti Junction and onto the new Waterfront Parkway near Slugger Field. It then proceeds past Waterfront Park and along the Ohio River downtown. It’s intended to clarify inaccuracies in the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet’s traffic study of the proposal:
The State’s “8664” traffic study incorrectly terminated all off ramps from Spaghetti Junction at Clay Street. This video shows how I-364 (today’s I-64) would flow seamlessly through a simplified SJ to Waterfront Parkway.
- 8664.org (Official Site)
- Striking Visions Of Louisville’s Future Within Our Grasp (Broken Sidewalk)