Tuesday, March 23, 2010

LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY : MARCH 2010 : ATTRACTIONS

Me and some public art with the Louisville skyline

I really loved Louisville, although I might be partially biased since it was the beginning of Spring and the first warm and sunny days after a long, snowy winter. I found the downtown area very walkable, although I did also take advantage of the covered walking tunnels that connected some of the hotels with the convention center. We were there so my husband could attend and present at a conference. Louisville has a large convention center and several of the hotels also have large meeting rooms. While he was attending the conference, I checked out the local attractions.

Dragon bike rack
West Main Street : Many of Louisville’s museums are located within a few blocks on West Main St. between 5th and 9th Street. This area was just under a mile from our motel and I walked it several times. I thought it was the most interesting section of the downtown. The street was narrow so one side of the street was usually shaded and there were several examples of interesting architecture, little shops and public art, including the posts that go around the sidewalk trees and the bike rack sculptures (the Visitor’s Center has a map of bike rack sculpture locations). There is metered parking on the street and most of the museums/attractions close by 5 pm so plan accordingly.

The building to the right with the baseball on it says
"Kentucky Mirror and Plate Glass"

Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory : A must for baseball fans and also very kid friendly. The factory tour shows how bats are made, but they don’t produce bats every day so you might want to check ahead of time. The museum is informative and hands-on and the architecture is interesting. Scott’s favorite part was the batting cages where you can hit balls using bats made to the specifications of certain baseball players. He used Ken Griffey Jr.’s bat and also Babe Ruth’s bat, which he really enjoyed. There is a fee for the tour and museum and a separate charge for the batting cages.

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Glassworks Glassblowers

Glassworks : OK, this isn’t a museum and it’s actually on Market St. (behind the Slugger Museum) but it has art that you can see being made. It is home to 3 working glass studios including glassblowers who shape art from molten glass, flameworkers who use a torch to manipulate the glass into delicate pieces of art, and architectural glass designers who create large-scale sculptures. They offer a guided tours on Saturday and self-guided tours the rest of the week. I’ve seen glass blowers before, but never seen flameworkers which was interesting. I’d never heard of architectural glass designers, and while there wasn’t actual work to see, they had several small models of their larger works and that was really neat.


Model of the architectural glass sculpture at Main and 4th St. in downtown Louisville

They also have classes, quickies (not as in-depth as the classes) and walk-in workshops where you can create your own art. Most of the workshops require kiln firing and you have to wait a few days to pick up your art, so if you’re interested in doing this, you might want to do it on the first day of your trip, or you can have your art shipped to you. I made these 2 magnets and it was a lot of fun! If you want to take glass art home with you but don’t want to make it yourself, they have a gift shop with amazing glass art.

The magnets I made

Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft : This is an exhibition space that has different rotating exhibitions. There is a fee for the museum, but the gift shop is free. There were many wonderful items made by Kentucky artists in the gift shop.

Frazier International History Museum and the Louisville Science Center : I didn’t get a chance to go to these museums which looked interesting. The Science Center looked like it was hands-on and kid friendly.

Pyro Gallery : This is an artist co-op gallery and they have rotating member exhibits in their first floor gallery and art from all members in their downstairs gallery. Lucky for me the two artists exhibiting this time, Bette Levy and Melinda Snyder, were both fiber artists with an emphasis on quilting, although I saw it during the last weekend of the show.
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East Market Street : There are several art galleries including on East Market Street between Hancock and Wenzel Streets. There is metered parking and free parking on the side streets. Here are some of the highlights:

Joy Ley Antiques (left) and Flamerun

Flame Run : a glass studio and gallery where they demo glass blowing and also offer classes.

Muth’s Candies : A family-owned candy store. If you go, I’m fond of the Dutch Mints.

Joe Ley Antiques : antiques, architectural salvage, fountains, urns, mannequins (and spare parts), neon signs, stuffed animals (the kind that used to be real animals), sporting equipment, musical instruments, autographed memorabilia, circus, toys, Halloween creeps, all in an building that used to be an old, three story school house. It might be easier to list what they don’t have, although I can’t think of what that might be. If you need it, they probably have it.

Their pricing system is a little odd…when you enter they give you a piece of paper with “Brush Clean” written on it and the numbers 1-0 written below. If the tag reads “UH” that means it’s $35. If there another number after that, like -10, that is how much of a discount they’ll take off, so “UH-10” would be $25. I’m not sure I’d want to make it difficult for my customers to figure out the price of an item, but I guess it works for them.
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Historic Louisville : is a few miles south of downtown.

St. James fountain in Historic Louisville

Louisville Historic Tours : they offer a few different walking and bus tours of Historic Louisville specializing in architecture or ghosts. If you’re lucky, you might even get a tour led by David Domine, who wrote the books “Ghosts of Old Louisville” and “Phantoms of Old Louisville.” (We did the “Grand Walking Tour” which we enjoyed quite a bit--thanks, Peter!).

The entrance to the Conrad-Caldwell House

Conrad-Caldwell House : This large, historic mansion boasts some impressive architecture, although I was very interested in the parquet floors which used several quilt block patterns. They have a virtual tour on their website but the photos don’t really do the house justice.

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A few miles outside of downtown :

Historic Locust Grove : located a few miles east of downtown, this home is a National Historic Landmark on 55 acres of the original 694 acre farm established by William and Lucy Clark Croghan in 1790. Lucy Clark was the sister of George Rogers Clark, founder of Louisville and Revolutionary War hero. The large home was one of the first brick homes built in this part of the country, and there are several reconstructed out buildings on the property. Since this was the beginning of Spring and some of the first warm weather of the year, I found the location to be very relaxing.

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Us at Churchill Downs

Churchill Downs and the Kentucky Derby Museum : both located a few miles south of downton. We were fortunate that one of the conference vendors hosted a party at Churchill Downs, and while there weren’t any horses there at the time, we did get free food and drinks (yes, including Mint Juleps) in one of the suites with fantastic views of the track. There are walking tours of Churchill Downs offered including a “behind the scenes” tour which sounded interesting. The Kentucky Derby Museum was closed due to reconstruction after a flood, but it’s supposed to open in April, 2010.

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Howard Steamboat Museum & Mansion : located just across the Ohio River in Jeffersonville, Indiana, this 22-room brick home was built for James Howard, the owner of Howard Shipyard, by the steamboat builders that worked in the shipyard. It features original furnishings and stained glass windows and has several displays of model steamboats that the shipyard then made.

Falls of the Ohio : Being from Ohio, the name of this was a little confusing to us until we realized it was the Ohio River they were referring to. The falls are actually rapids that make part of the Ohio River very shallow at this spot, which is one of the reasons that Louisville was founded as the people traveling on the river had to either portage around the rapids or stop and wait for the water to rise. It also seems that there is a large fossil bed at this part of the river. Since it was Spring and between the snow melt and the recent rains, the river was up fairly high so we couldn’t see any of this.

The falls are a state park located in Clarksville, Indiana, just across the river from Louisville. There are walking trails and an interpretive center. Their website also notes that “some GPS units will direct you to a subdivision in Charlestown. If your device doesn’t place us along the river, enter the street address: 201 W. Riverside Dr., Clarksville, IN.” I noticed that Google wanted to take me to the Falls of the Ohio Foundation, which is also not located along the river.

Dee’s : This is a family-owned art and craft supply shop and it’s located a few miles east of Louisville and across from a mall. Since Louisville hosts the Kentucky Derby and fashionable women who attend the derby like to wear large, decorated hats, this is the place to get your supplies to make your hat. I’m not a hat wearer, but I was impressed with the amount of beads and scrapbooking items they had for sale. There wasn’t much of a fabric section, and since it was all half-price I suspect they might be downsizing it. This is my candy store.

Some of the other places that looked interesting but I didn’t get to were the Speed Art Museum (located on the University of Louisville campus) and the Carnegie Center for Art & History (located across the Ohio River in New Albany, Indiana).

LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY : MARCH 2010 : LODGING + DINING

Reflections of other buildings in the glass of the Kentucky Center for Performing Arts
Louisville is only 3 hours from Yellow Springs, so we were wondering why we hadn't been before...but there's a good chance we might go back sometime!

Louisville Accommodations :
The Louisville Marriott Downtown and the Hyatt Regency Louisville are both connected to the Convention Center and although I only saw their lobbies and meeting rooms, they seem like nice, luxury hotels. The Galt House, which is also connected to the Convention Center also seemed really nice.

This is the walkway which connects the two buildings that make up the Galt House. The walkway has a lounge area with a bar that is also a giant aquarium.


We stayed at the Econo Lodge Downtown which was a budget motel. The car traffic was a little noisy, but it was clean, functional and close enough to the Convention Center that Scott could walk from the motel to the conference and back while I drove the car to the attractions.

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The 21c Museum Hotel's limo that doubles as public art.

If money were really no object, I might have chosen the 21c Museum Hotel because it looks artsy and unique. It’s located in the museum district on West Main St. If you’ve stayed there, let me know what it’s like. They also have a contemporary art museum and a gift shop, although I wasn’t able to find it. If you really want some fun, you can rent the 21c Pip Mobile and drive around the city in a piece of art. I did find this, parked on the street. And no, it's not a typo, the pips are the little red glass pieces attached to the car.

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Louisville Dining :
We were fortunate that some of the conference vendors had parties in the evenings so we didn’t have to pay for dinners some nights.

Inside Fourth Street Live.

Fourth Street Live: Located a few blocks from the convention center and connected by the covered walk ways, this is the place to go for nightlife. Part of the street is covered by a large, glass pyramid and the brick street is often blocked during events and weekend nights. They have upscale dining, fast food, a comedy club and a dueling piano bar (we didn’t go to either, so if you go, let me know what you think). We did go to the Ri Ra Irish Pub and got a generous order of fish and chips, and they have Guiness and Smithwick's on draft. Fourth Street Live is located on 4th Street (obviously) between Liberty and Muhammad Ali Blvd.

Louisville Pies :

Yes, pies have their own section. We only tried one, the Derby Pie (R) which I got at the A Taste of Kentucky store. It’s a pie with chocolate and nuts and it was yummy!


PACK UP THE CAR!


Photo: Pam and Scott at Long Point State Park on Cayuga Lake in New York state.

Early in our marriage, perhaps as soon as the Honeymoon, we discovered that we are different types of travelers. I like to plan out everything ahead of time and he'd rather pick a direction and go. So we compromised. I'll see what attractions are there and we'll decide on a day-by-day basis which of those things we want to go see.

This blog is a reference for myself and for others. I'll include photos from our travels and also tips on attractions, lodging and food (including pies when appropriate). It might be a while between posts as we can only go on so many trips in a year, but I'll try to catch up on places we've been before this blog was started.

I'll include links to as many places as I can, but you'll have to check and see if they're still in business and what their hours and rates are.

If you've been to any of these places and discovered something we missed, add a comment!