Commodore Apartment Building | |
Location | Bonnycastle Louisville, Kentucky |
---|---|
Coordinates | 38°13′57.5″N85°42′2.5″W / 38.232639°N 85.700694°W |
Built | 1929 |
Architect | Joseph & Joseph |
Architectural style | Late 19th And 20th Century Revival |
NRHP reference No. | 82002709 [1] |
Added to NRHP | April 29, 1982 |
The Commodore Apartment Building, also called Commodore Apartments, is a luxury condominium complex located in Louisville, Kentucky's Bonnycastle neighborhood. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [1]
The 11-story 120 ft (37 m) high rise Commodore Apartment Building was opened in 1929 and designed by the architectural firm of Joseph & Joseph in 1928. [2] The architects designed four other buildings in the Louisville area including the Republic Building (1916) and the Elsby (1918) in New Albany, Indiana. [3] The building is located near Cherokee Park.
The building is built on land that was once owned by Isaac Everett, one of the founders of the Galt House. [4] Everett purchased about 150 acres (0.61 km2) of land for $25,000 (USD). The land then was used to build himself a mansion. The estate passed down to his daughter Harriet, who later married and became Harriet Bonnycastle. After her husband's death, she donated land to Louisville to build Cherokee Park to spur future developments in 1891. [4] Harriet would sell parcels of land for over the next twenty years and eventually in the late 1920s the Commodore Apartments went up.
After surviving the Great Depression, and continuing as a luxury apartment building, it was sold for $650,000 and restored for another $125,000 in 1978 by Louisville native, actor and entrepreneur Roger Davis. [5] Davis sold the Commodore in 1980 for $1,000,000 to Jack MacDonald of Acre Realty, Chicago [6] which converted the Commodore from an apartment building to a condominium complex of 59 units.
The building's passenger elevators are among the few remaining that require an elevator operator. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 29, 1982.
Cherokee Park is a 409-acre (166 ha) municipal park located in Louisville, Kentucky, United States and is part of the Louisville Olmsted Parks Conservancy. It was designed in 1891 by Frederick Law Olmsted, the father of landscape architecture along with 18 of Louisville's 123 parks. Beargrass Creek runs through much of the park, and is crossed by numerous pedestrian and automobile bridges.
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Downtown Louisville is the largest central business district in the Commonwealth of Kentucky and the urban hub of the Louisville, Kentucky Metropolitan Area. Its boundaries are the Ohio River to the north, Hancock Street to the east, York and Jacob Streets to the south, and 9th Street to the west. As of 2015, the population of downtown Louisville was 4,700, although this does not include directly surrounding areas such as Old Louisville, Butchertown, NuLu, and Phoenix Hill.
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Louisville, Kentucky is home to numerous structures that are noteworthy due to their architectural characteristics or historic associations, the most noteworthy being the Old Louisville neighborhood, the third largest historic preservation district in the United States. The city also boasts the postmodern Humana Building and an expanding Waterfront Park which has served to remove the former industrial appearance of the riverfront.
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