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The Steam Engine Company No. 7 building is a historic firehouse located in Louisville, Kentucky, United States.The two-story, brick structure was built in 1871. It is an excellent example of the application of Victorian design principles to a utilitarian public building, and is stylistically related to contemporary buildings in the Limerick neighborhood.
The most prominent of the firehouses built in the 1890s was the Fire Department Headquarters built in Downtown Louisville at 617 W. Jefferson Street in 1891. It is Richardsonian Romanesque in style, as it was designed by the McDonald Brothers, who also designed the Kentucky National Bank and Norton's Warehouse buildings in downtown Louisville. [1]
The Louisville Division of Fire, commonly known as the Louisville Fire Department or Louisville Fire & Rescue (abbreviated LFD or LFR), is the sole fire suppression agency for the city of Louisville, Kentucky and is one of eight fire departments within the Louisville-Jefferson County, Kentucky metropolitan area. The Louisville Division of Fire ...
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The Sinking Fund Building, also known as Firehouse No. 2, is an historic building in downtown Louisville, Kentucky.Located on Jefferson Street between Louisville Metro Police Headquarters and the Louisville City Hall Annex building, it is part of the municipal office complex that comprises several neighboring blocks and originally housed the Louisville Division of Fire.
The 500W building at 500 W. Jefferson St. has previously been known as Citizens Plaza, PNC Bank Building and PNC Plaza in downtown Louisville. Address : 500 W. Jefferson St. Year Opened : 1971
The former chief of an Eastern Kentucky volunteer fire department has admitted to stealing more than $76,000 that was supposed to be used for equipment for firefighters and other needs.
Fire Department Headquarters, Louisville, 1937 Fiscal Court Building, Louisville, 1938 Fisher-Klosterman Building (former Bernheim Distillery Bottling Plant), Louisville, 1937