Jerry’s Butchertown Market May Re-Open After All

    0
    Jerrys Market in Butchertown

    Last August, Jerry’s Market on the corner of Washington Street and Campbell Street abruptly closed for renovations. Those renovations were supposed to wrap up last September, but the shop remains shuttered. We’ve been keeping an eye on the building and have noticed slow, but steady work being done to the building.

    A new coat of interior paint applied in the last week was enough for us to upgrade this one from the “Gone For Good” category to “Maybe Opening Soon.” The rumor on the street last year was that the market was closed for good after repeated complaints from the neighborhood about vagrants hanging around. Renovations were supposed to include a new ceiling and fixtures, but those haven’t changed. A new wall in the back has been built and a few exterior changes to the east side of the building are under construction (any idea what’s going on with that?).

    Flock of Finns Migrates Back To Waterfront Park

    0
    Flock of Finns returns to Waterfront Park

    A collection of colorful birds, ducks, and roosters by folk-artist Marvin Finn (1913-2007) arrived back at Waterfront Park today near the corner of Preston and Witherspoon streets. The public art display of 29 birds had been undergoing restoration involving repairing chipped paint. The total project cost $5,000 and was funded by an endowment set up for the art collection. While individually the birds are quite small, interacting with the flock en masse is quite a whimsical experience, and we’re glad to see the sculptures back in their rightful home.

    Wind Storm Jr. No Match For Museum Plaza

    As Windstorm Jr. rolled through town last night, sending more power lines sprawling into the streets and killing electricity for almost 40,000 people, it tried to pick on our very own Museum Plaza. The fierce wind gusts tore loose one of the colorful Museum Plaza banners on Main Street, but the building isn’t going anywhere. The yellow sheet was quickly reattached today with few people the wiser, except for Broken Sidewalk readers, of course.

    This is near the same spot that the banner mishap happened last December. Could Windstorm Jr. be trying to send us a message, perhaps? That Museum Plaza must weather the “storm” but will be around on fairer days? At least the Museum Plaza folks care enough about the project to continue to bury power lines and keep the banners tidy. If only a few on Metro Council could be more optimistic.

    Paving Waterfront Park: Highway killing the Great Lawn

    Welcome To Louisville: Gaze Upon Our Beautiful Skyline

    Waterfront Park’s Great Lawn is losing a couple hundred square feet of grass underneath Interstate 64. But first, let’s take a moment to gaze upon Louisville’s beautiful skyline. It’s all there in the photo above. Waterfront Park Place is on the left, the Aegon Tower and National City Tower looking elegant in the center, and the Galt House and Arena site on the right. Not many cities can boast a skyline that’s well… a line. And for that, Louisville should be proud.

    We should include this view of our skyline from our beautiful Waterfront Park in our marketing endeavors. Let’s make some postcards to send to all our friend’s to tell them how swell a place this is. We may not have power, but at least we can drive right through one of America’s best parks. And our skyline is growing, too! If we do ever build Museum Plaza, it will interrupt the clean lines of our city, so we’re expanding the skyline by about 75 feet. That’s roughly to the shadow line in the photo, we estimate. That should be enough to hide even the tallest building anyone can dream up.

    8664.org wants to tear down our beloved skyline. They even found some scientists over at Scientific American to back up their story with quotes like: “closing a highway—that is, reducing network capacity—improves the system’s effectiveness.” What are they thinking? Where else can we go for shade on a sunny day? Trees are a thing of the past; nothing says Welcome to Louisville like the harsh clanging of metal and guzzling of big-rigs. Here’s more from the Scientific American article:

    Conventional traffic engineering assumes that given no increase in vehicles, more roads mean less congestion. So when planners in Seoul tore down a six-lane highway a few years ago and replaced it with a five-mile-long park, many transportation professionals were surprised to learn that the city’s traffic flow had actually improved, instead of worsening. “People were freaking out,” recalls Anna Nagurney, a researcher at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who studies computer and transportation networks. “It was like an inverse of Braess’s paradox.”

    The article goes on and is well worth a read, but we’ve got a dying Waterfront Park on our hands as it seems that Interstate 64 isn’t a fan of grass. We first noticed the dirt being moved under the highway a couple weeks ago, but today the ground was being leveled to accept synthetic stone pavers and formwork for a new concrete curb set up. The area was perpetually muddy as grass couldn’t fully take root in the shadow of the elevated road. Torrential ponding of water runoff from the highway also causes erosion problems in the area. Now, we don’t have to worry about the grass… because there won’t be any. A few new trees were planted, though, to catch the meager rays of sun that penetrate through the concrete.

    Butchertown’s Swift Plant Still Stinking Up The Room

    0
    Swift Plant in Butchertown
    Swift Plant in Butchertown
    Swift Plant in Butchertown. (Branden Klayko / Broken Sidewalk)

    Butchertown’s ongoing battle with the Swift Plant between Story Avenue and Mellwood Avenue is one stinky feud. Even in the dead of winter, it seems, the plant can’t contain itself. Patti Clare, the former Interim Director of the Downtown Development Corporation, said last year that the city is looking for a relocation site for Swift, but noted that not many neighborhoods are willing to allow the company in. She estimated that Swift could be out of Butchertown in about five years, though. Meanwhile, an antiquated scrubber installed 14 years ago can’t keep up with production and a new one won’t arrive for months.

    Old Mom’s Music Set To Become Art-Deco Retail

    Old Moms Music under renovation

    The old Mom’s Music store on the corner of Frankfort Avenue and Stilz Avenue is currently under renovation to take the property back to the way it appeared in the 1930s. The original structure is much older, but in the 1930s (when the one-story commercial addition was built, we presume), the facade was streamlined art-deco. The rounded corner is indicative of this style. The project will wrap a glass and metal facade along the sidewalk enclosing a series of retail spaces. The design is based from historic photos of the building. Expect to see new windows on the building in about three weeks.

    Weichert Realtors/ABG Properties, currently located next door, purchased the building and plans to expand into about one third of the ground floor space. Additional ground level space will be available for retail or office space and a new upscale two-bedroom loft will be constructed in the two-story space, making the project officially mixed-use. The loft will rent for about $1800 per month and contains 1500 square feet.

    With such a highly visible location and a new streamlined-modern design, the project sounds like it will make a dramatic gateway into the Crescent Hill commercial district. Now we just have to play the waiting game to see what retail might land here, but it’s certainly better to see the building brought back to its former glory than remain boarded up.

    Dorm Watch: Bellarmine Siena Secondo Dedicated

    1
    Siena Secondo at Bellarmine University
    Siena Secondo at Bellarmine University
    Siena Secondo at Bellarmine University. (Branden Klayko / Broken Sidewalk)

    Yesterday, Bellarmine University officially dedicated its newest dormitory dubbed Siena Secondo. The name is meant to evoke the Italian hilltop town known for its Piazza del Campo, or town square. The first residents arrived last month to the 145-bed residence hall representing the second phase of the Siena Housing Project. Future plans call for demolishing two old two-story dorms to make way for two additional wings that will fully enclose the hilltop Campo and create a unified park like space at the top of the residential campus.

    Stop Lite Spirits In Waterfront Park Demolished

    Demolition in Waterfront Park

    Stop Lite Wine and Spirits moved out of Waterfront Park and into a new store across River Road last November, but this week, crews demolished their old building from the 1950s. The spaced being cleared will one day be incorporated into Waterfront Park as green space, but for now, it will be paved for parking.

    The new Stop Lite Wine & Spirits location hopes to emphasize the cafe side of the business catering to hungry park-goers. A second retail location at the new building is still vacant and for lease.

    Demolition in Waterfront Park
    Demolition in Waterfront Park. (Branden Klayko / Broken Sidewalk)