Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Since then, the concept has expanded to include another spot in Chattanooga, Tennessee, another in Lexington, and of course, the Louisville location on Whiskey Row. The interior of Nic and Norman ...
In 1857, the buildings [which?] were built and used to store whiskey barrels that had been produced from the distilleries nearby. [2] On a list of Louisville Most Endangered Historic Places, the buildings were slated for demolition in 2011, [3] but an agreement between the city, local developers, and preservationists saved Whiskey Row.
Evan Williams Bourbon Experience, [30] located on Louisville's Whiskey Row, featuring bourbon history and tastings, and interprets Louisville's wharf history in the 1790s; Heaven Hill Distilleries Bourbon Heritage Center [31] Jim Beam American Stillhouse [32] Oscar Getz Museum of Whiskey History
Twenty years ago, the future of downtown Louisville, Kentucky's Whiskey Row was hard to see. The block-long stretch of historic buildings dating back to the mid-to-late 1800s was largely empty ...
Main Street downtown Louisville is getting another bourbon-focused tenant. Green River Distilling Co. plans to open a tasting room at 714 W. Main St.
In 1997, the Kentucky Towers was the largest residential building in downtown Louisville, [5] and in 2015, just south of downtown, The 800 Apartments started undergoing a more than $10 million modernization. [6] In 2007 downtown Louisville became Jefferson County's tenth Multiple Listing Service zone.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us