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The Houchens Center is a cultural and educational center for the Bowling Green, Kentucky community, and a meeting place for clubs, associations, and the individual patrons who make up the membership. The center is also available to non-members for club meetings, workshops, retreats, receptions, parties and weddings.
A violent incident involving a group of youths at the Warren Regional Juvenile Detention Center in Bowling Green last weekend caused “a significant amount of damage to the facility,” state ...
The B.G.M.U. Water Tower atop Reservoir Hill is a local landmark visible from many parts of Bowling Green. The Warren County Justice Center is the center of the local court system. Bowling Green is a city and the county seat of Warren County, Kentucky, United States. [3]
Warren Regional Juvenile Detention Center (WRJDC), Bowling Green; Youth Development Centers. These are places for adjudicated (convicted of juvenile crimes) youth who ...
Warren County is a county located in the south central portion of the U.S. state of Kentucky.As of the 2020 census, the population was 134,554, [1] making it the fifth-most populous county in Kentucky.
WBGS-LD (channel 34) [1] is a low-power television station in Bowling Green, Kentucky, United States, affiliated with the Spanish-language network Telemundo.Owned by Gray Media alongside ABC/Fox/CW+ affiliate WBKO (channel 13), it also functions as a translator for the main subchannel of its full-power sister station.
The Warren County Justice Center, 1001 Center Street, center for county government operations and the Warren County Courthouse. Bowling Green Ballpark (from 2009), 300 East 8th avenue, home of Bowling Green's only professional sports team, the Bowling Green Hot Rods (baseball). Important tourist attraction and source of revenue for downtown.
The theatre doors were closed in 1967 after showing movies for over three decades. The building sat vacant for over 10 years and in 1977 was purchased by a group of citizens formerly known as the Bowling Green-Warren County Arts Commission. The Capitol Arts Center was reopened in September 1981 after a $1.3 million renovation project. [3]