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Location of Kenton County in Kentucky. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Kenton County, Kentucky, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map ...
Bingham Park [5] — Originally known as Clifton Park (Locals called it Coral Park) Walking trails in Central Park, located in the Old Louisville neighborhood. Boone Square; Central Park; Chickasaw Park; Churchill Park [6] Elliott Square [7] Seneca Park; Shelby Park [8] William B. Stansbury Park [9] — Originally known as Triangle Park [10 ...
Like many older American cities, Louisville has well-defined neighborhoods, many with well over a century of history as a neighborhood. The oldest neighborhoods are the riverside areas of Downtown and Portland (initially a separate settlement), representing the early role of the river as the most important form of commerce and transportation.
The parkway system of Louisville, Kentucky, also known as the Olmsted Park System, was designed by the firm of preeminent 19th century landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted. The 26-mile (42 km) system was built from the early 1890s through the 1930s, and initially owned by a state-level parks commission, which passed control to the city of ...
The Louisville Loop has construction underway, as of 2023, for McCrawly Lake, connecting the Middletown section to the Beckley Creek Park section, and the rest of Algonquin Parkway. Jefferson Memorial Forest portions are being designed, as well as a route along all of the Parkways, a section on River Road near the Water Company, and a connector ...
This MSA is included in the Louisville-Elizabethtown-Scottsburg, KY-IN Combined Statistical Area (CSA), which also includes the Elizabethtown, KY MSA (composed of Hardin and LaRue Counties) as well as the Scottsburg, IN Micropolitan Statistical Area. Louisville's Metro Area was expanded more than any other in the country during a March 2003 ...
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Contemporary Louisville leaders of the time wanted the entire area depopulated and replaced with a park called Point Park Project, which was done to the extreme northern part of the area, now called Thruston Park. This remained the preferred urban public park throughout the 1940s and 50s.