Dude, Where’s My Roof: Phoenix Hill Edition

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Bargain Supply Warehouse

Situated on Liberty Street mid block between Campbell Street and Shelby Street sits a simple yet quite grand brick and limestone structure serving as a warehouse for the Bargain Supply Company. Flapping in the breeze amongst the cracked and damaged brick parapet is a grey tarp keeping the structure dry (or as dry as possible with today’s rain). Next to the building behind a fence a pile of bricks lay strewn across pavement after falling three very tall floors and affixed to the building’s door is a bright yellow sticker declaring the building a “DANGEROUS STRUCTURE.” The note was small so we had to get up close to read it, but once we read all about the peril the building had put us in, we were thankful for the protection of the green cloth awning just above (then proceeded to back away from the building).

Bargain Supply Warehouse Damage Detail
Bargain Supply Warehouse Damage Detail. (Branden Klayko / Broken Sidewalk)

The building dates to around the 1880s and represents a commercial vernacular style that made up most of the city fabric in the 19th century. Because of the austere appearance of this type of building and the general abundance of its type years ago, this type of structure is one of the most endangered historical types in the city. Back in September, the hurricane… err, windstorm took the entire roof off the structure, damaging the masonry walls as it went. A portion of the side parapets collapsed and some of the front facade is caving in. Do not fear for the building, however. Bargain Supply Company is preparing to fix the historic building and has already been in talks with contractors to do the work. Repairs would have already been underway, but there have been delays with the large volume of repair work in the city and issues with the LG&E power lines out front.

Current regulations require a 10 foot buffer between workers and the power lines and there’s what, maybe 3 feet or so at best? We’re not sure what needs to be done to the lines (bury them! bury them!), but as soon as the power line situation is resolved, the building will get some much needed care. Plans to fix the structure involve deconstructing the top floor facade down to the third floor window sills and completely rebuilding the wall, and of course, a new roof (and hopefully some correctly sized windows?) will be added.

This isn’t the first time this building has run into trouble with mother nature. The folks over at the Bargain Supply claim there’s some sort of curse on the structure as this is its third bit of major damage in five years. First, the building was struck by lightning and damaged by fire; then the property was again heavily damaged by a tornado a couple years back. It seems a miracle the building survived the Great Earthquake of 2008 unscathed, but hey, it made it through the Flood of 1937, so this building has proved it’s tough. We say hurry up LG&E to we can see this fine structure fixed and out of harm’s way (we know how much the city loves to demolish ‘imminently dangerous buildings’).

Art Car Friday: Halloween Edition

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    Halloween Hearse
    Halloween Hearse
    Halloween Hearse. (Branden Klayko / Broken Sidewalk)

    As All Hallows’ Eve draws ever nearer, we bring you this week a skeleton adorned hearse. You may have spotted the car at the Caufield’s Halloween Parade on Baxter Avenue towing a hot rod coffin this year or you may have seen while it picking out your costume at the Caufield’s store on West Main Street, either way this is one spooky set of wheels.

    Big Blank Thursdays: Barret Avenue Blindsided

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    Maximum ASP Maximum Blankness

    Since the Broken Sidewalk has been blank for the last several days, we’ve decided to launch a new feature: Big Blank Thursdays where we hope to bring you some of the ugliest, most deadening, and downright pedestrian unfriendly walls and facades around Louisville. To start things off this week, here’s a double header on Barret Avenue just south of Broadway.

    Kindred Hospital Concrete Castle
    Kindred Hospital’s Concrete Castle. (Branden Klayko / Broken Sidewalk)

    These two buildings are directly across the street from one another. The brick wall above is part of the web hosting company Maximum ASP’s building and the concrete fortress below belongs to Kindred Hospital. The two combined create double-whammy dead-zone at the sidewalk level several hundred feet long.

    Where have you seen big blank walls around Louisville? They are everywhere and you probably pass a few every day. Send blank wall suggestions to tips@brokensidewalk.com and we’ll feature the best ones on Thursdays.

    Demo Watch: Shelby Park Destroys Brick Townhouse

    East St. Catherine Street Demolition
    East St. Catherine Street Demolition. (Branden Klayko / Broken Sidewalk)

    A Broken Sidewalk tipster pointed us to the site of the most recent historic destruction in the Shelby Park neighborhood on East St. Catherine Street. A two-and-a-half story brick townhouse most recently used as a church for the Riverview Missionary Baptist Congregation is being reduced to rubble.

    Museum Plaza Losing Its International Edge

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    While the vision of Museum Plaza grows dim in these uncertain economic times where financing isn’t easy to come by, the international media has begun looking elsewhere for the most inspirational skyscraper designs today. After the Wall Street Journal a while back jumped on the Museum Plaza–love-bandwagon praising the 62-story, 703-foot-tall tower as one of the three most exciting projects in the world (along with a tower in China and one in Russia), the tower enjoyed its time in the international spotlight (The MP project site news room has all the stories written about the tower). Now, CNN has released its list of the most interesting skyscraper proposals and Museum Plaza is nowhere to be seen.

    Even though Museum Plaza isn’t going anywhere fast right now, we still think its design is better than most on the list. It seems the world is caught up in the Dubai-syndrome of architectural design (many of the buildings on the list are in Dubai or surrounding regions) where height is a priority and innovative design is an afterthought. Paris is seeing the most interesting high-rise boom of all the global cities mentioned. Enough has been written about Museum Plaza’s design, but essentially the building is a paradigm changer.

    While any tower can be tall or feature an interesting shape as it rises, Museum Plaza takes a radically different approach to the skyscraper overall. No other tower proposal yet (or rather very few have tried) has done so to the extent of Museum Plaza. Undoubtedly when (if) financing is found for Museum Plaza and the tower starts rising out of the ground at some point in the future, the international eye will again focus on the unlikely Louisville as a leader in architectural design and innovation.

    Wasteland No More: The Greening Of Waterfront Park (Phase III)

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    Granite Memorial Steps
    Future Site Of Lincoln Statue
    Future Site Of Lincoln Statue. (Branden Klayko / Broken Sidewalk)

    Waterfront Park has undoubtedly been a major boon to revitalizing Louisville’s urban neighborhoods, but the eastern and western phases of the park still remain divided by hundreds of feet of chain link fence as construction continues on some of the most dramatic features of the entire park system: the Big Four Bridge and the Lincoln Memorial. It’s been a long and arduous process to move from the industrial wasteland that once comprised Louisville’s waterfront to the nationally acclaimed park that exists now, but the wait has well been worth it. The final 13 acres of the 85 acre project are scheduled to be phased in over the next couple of years and will finally unite the park into one community jewel.