Kentucky Places: The Louisville List
Downtown Louisville as seen from Indiana |
Now, my friend is planning for an early June trip to a concert at the Yum! Center and a few days' stay in downtown Louisville. She's never been to Louisville before, and wants to get a sense of the city. There are so many attractions within walking/easy driving distance that this trip virtually plans itself. Even though it's the middle of winter, talk of a Downtown Louisville summer puts me in the mood for Proof's gelato, a ride on the Belle, and a seat on Molly Malone's patio. -- HCW
The Yum Center and Downtown Museums
The Ali Center |
The guys on the trip will probably want to see the
Louisville Slugger Museum. If baseball's your thing, the
RiverBats - the Minor League team - play downtown.
The Frazier Museum has a lot of historical war/arms stuff.
The Muhammad Ali Center is also quite neat -- it's kind of a walking tour of The Champ's life, as well as a cultural center that supports a lot of education and charity events. There are also some very cute galleries/museums up and down Main Street, near Slugger, Frazier and the Ali.
Hotels
The Seelbach lobby |
The Seelbach is way more traditional with four-poster cherry beds, marble lobbies, etc. I feel like a princess every time I stay there. It has some really cool little bars, the best Starbucks in town, and an amazing day spa. It also boasts the only five-diamond restaurant in the state. They're even dog-friendly, and treated Max like a visiting dignitary. Fitzgerald actually got thrown out of the Seelbach for public drunkenness and then set Daisy's wedding there when he wrote The Great Gatsby.
Outside Jeff Ruby's |
Food/ Entertainment
My very favorite breakfast in the world is at
Toast on Market. The
Blueberry-Lemon Pancakes are insane, as are the
pancakes that are dressed out like a pot roast sandwich. Their hash brown casserole is incredible as well. Also on Market is
Garage Bar, which is a high-end wood-fired pizza place that also includes a great oyster bar.
Max visits Fourth Street Live. |
The Belle of Louisville |
Oh, and if the weather permits, you can go out on a steamboat. The
Belle of Louisville and the Spirit of Jefferson do lunch and dinner cruises and little sightseeing excursions. It's a very neat way to see downtown from the river.
The Highlands
Molly Malone's |
I absolutely love the
Louisville Stoneware factory--they do tours, paint-your-own, etc., and their big summer sale should be going on. There are also several really cute Irish Pub kind of places in the Highlands --
Molly Malones and
O'Shea's are the kind of places where everyone from college kids to Congressmen go -- very laid-back and fun.
Churchill Downs
The one thing that would be worth driving out of downtown would be
Churchill Downs. The summer meet will be in full-force by early June. For just a regular weekend race, you should be able to get tix -- you'd be fine to just dress like you would for an afternoon wedding or a "coat and tie rather than suit" church. If you're in town on the right weekend, I'd hit up Downs After Dark, which is a fun night-racing event.
Louisville in general
Louisville is a really fun city. It can be a little more Midwestern than the rest of Kentucky -- people talk and walk a little faster and sure do drink in public more than they do anywhere else in the state. I think y'all will really like it, though. It's beautiful in the spring and summer! Also, it has really easy roads to navigate for a city its size; you really can get from one part of town to another pretty rapidly.
The biggest drawback to Louisville in the late spring/early summer is the weather. It's located right along the Ohio river and gets a lot of the river basin storms/tornado watches.
What about y'all, dear readers? What's on your "Must-See Louisville" list??
(All photos are my own.)
What about y'all, dear readers? What's on your "Must-See Louisville" list??
(All photos are my own.)