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This is a list of properties and historic districts in Kentucky that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. There are listings in all of Kentucky's 120 counties . The locations of National Register properties and districts (at least for all showing latitude and longitude coordinates below), may be seen in an online map by ...
Oldest surviving house in Johnson County; built 1843; Fryer House – Home of pioneer Walter Fryer; built 1811; Glen Willis – built 1815; Hausgen House – Colonial Revival style house; built c. 1890; Hawkins House – Has served as a ropewalk and a dormitory for the Georgetown Female Seminary. Became a residential home in 1858; built c. 1790
House at 855–857 Oak Street: November 28, 1984 ... Magnus Metal Company Building: November 1, 2023 ... Northern Bank of Kentucky. December 23, 1998 ...
Stone House (1898), 106 N. Ewing, a castle-like mansion; Rose House (1820), 112 E. Park, adjacent to Stone House, another large house; Robert Penn Warren Museum, a home of author Robert Penn Warren; Three buildings which, in 2011, were planned to become a railroad museum. [2] In 2022, a railroad museum including a caboose is open by appointment ...
In 1987, while researching a book on Frey, the author, educator, and architect Joseph Rosa found the long-lost house. By then, the building was in extremely poor condition.
Needing more space, the brothers built a new plant on 8 acres (3.2 ha) near Madison Avenue and 17th Streets in 1903. The firm had four buildings to house its five divisions, the jail cell division, a truck division, wrought iron furniture and fence division, and a chain-link fence division.
The following lists the buildings constructed by Thomas Metcalfe, governor of Kentucky, including many that survive are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Thomas Metcalfe (1780–1855) (sometimes spelled "Metcalf") was one of the most prominent stonemasons and building contractors during the settlement period ...
The Museum Plaza project was first announced on February 9, 2006, as a 62-story three-tower skyscraper. [4] The original intent of the project was to house a "contemporary art museum, restaurants, retail stores, 85 luxury condominiums, 150 lofts, a 300-room hotel, office space and a 1,100-car underground parking garage."