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Fourth Street Live! is a 350,000-square-foot (33,000 m 2) [1] entertainment and retail complex located on 4th Street, between Liberty and Muhammad Ali Boulevard, in Downtown Louisville, Kentucky. It is owned and was developed by the Cordish Company; it was designed by Louisville architects, Bravura Corporation. Fourth Street Live! first opened ...
In 2005, NYTW purchased a vacant building at 72 East 4th Street, which it converted into scenic and costume shops. [2] On January 11, 2006, Mayor Michael Bloomberg donated several city-owned buildings to arts organizations, including New York Theatre Workshop, on East Fourth Street, designating the block Fourth Arts Block.
The Connelly Theater is an Off-Broadway theatre at 220 East 4th Street in the East Village of Manhattan in New York City. It was originally built in the 1860s as the choir hall for an orphanage. [1] The theater consists of a 200-seat main auditorium and a smaller 50-seat auditorium rented from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York.
604 W. Walnut Street [1] Closed. One of four theatres open to blacks before desegregation. [4] In 2003, proposed to have its name live on as a youth center to be called the Grand Lyric Theatre. [16] Closed by the late 1980s, part of the Walnut Street corridor, a center of a black-owned businesses and entertainment venues. Macauley's Theatre ...
West 4th Street – Washington Square — accessible station. 34th Street – Herald Square — accessible station. 42nd Street – Bryant Park.
At the turn of the century, 66 East 4th Street, known as Turin Hall, was a focal point for the German immigrant community, and the first Yiddish theater in New York, in what became the Yiddish Theater District. Next door, at 64 E. 4th, was the Labor Lyceum, where early advocates for unionizing gathered and the International Ladies Garment ...
On July 2, 2007, the Cordish Company, developers of Fourth Street Live!, announced that it would expand the mall southward by leasing the first floor (street-level) of the Starks Building. [11] The Baltimore-based developer has since abandoned plans to develop 20,000 square feet (1,900 m 2) of vacant street-level space in the Starks Building.
The Louisville Clock (often called the Derby Clock) was a 40-foot (12 m) high ornamental clock that was formerly located on Fourth Street in Louisville, Kentucky. [2] It was designed in the appearance like a gigantic wind-up toy, incorporating themes of Kentucky culture, especially the Kentucky Derby horse race. Eight ornamental columns ...