place

Louisville Sinking Fund Building

1891 establishments in KentuckyFire stations on the National Register of Historic Places in KentuckyGovernment buildings completed in 1891Government of Louisville, KentuckyNational Register of Historic Places in Louisville, Kentucky
Richardsonian Romanesque architecture in KentuckyTowers in Kentucky
Louisville Sinking Fund Building
Louisville Sinking Fund Building

The Sinking Fund Building, also known as Firehouse No. 2, is an historic building in downtown Louisville, Kentucky. Located on Jefferson Street between Louisville Metro Police Headquarters and the Louisville City Hall Annex building, it is part of the municipal office complex that comprises several neighboring blocks and originally housed the Louisville Division of Fire. The building currently houses the office of the Louisville Metro Revenue Commission, the primary municipal taxing authority for the city-county government. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Louisville Sinking Fund Building (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Louisville Sinking Fund Building
West Jefferson Street, Louisville

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Louisville Sinking Fund BuildingContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 38.25454 ° E -85.76125 °
placeShow on map

Address

West Jefferson Street 617
40202 Louisville
Kentucky, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Louisville Sinking Fund Building
Louisville Sinking Fund Building
Share experience

Nearby Places

500 West Jefferson
500 West Jefferson

500 West Jefferson, previously known as PNC Plaza for several decades until renamed in 2020, and now also called 500W or 500 West by its owners, is a skyscraper in Downtown, Louisville, Kentucky and located at 500 West Jefferson Street. Previously owned by Pittsburgh-based PNC Bank and currently owned by SomeraRoad Inc, the 31-story, 420-foot (128 m) high structure was designed by architect Welton Becket and was completed in 1971. A notable feature of the building is the pattern of pre-cast concrete panels on the exterior of its windows. The building, originally named Citizens Fidelity Plaza, was named after Citizens Fidelity Bank and renamed PNC Plaza when Citizens Fidelity was acquired by PNC Bank.It was the tallest building in the state of Kentucky when it was completed in 1971, but lost that distinction a year later when National City Tower was completed in 1972. PNC now has offices in both buildings due to its own acquisition of National City Corp. in an unrelated move, however, it does not own National City Tower. The Jefferson Club, a private city club, was located on the top floor of the building, until closing in February 2010.The building was purchased by Optima International, a firm based in Miami and run by Chaim Schochet, for a $77 million cash and mortgage assumption deal that closed on September 21, 2011.In 2019, Milwaukee-based financial services firm Baird purchased Louisville financial services firm Hilliard Lyons and became the anchor tenant, renovating and moving workers to the top five floors.In August 2020, Federal prosecutors filed a lawsuit claiming that the Ukrainian owners were laundering billions of dollars over more than ten years.In November 2020, the New York–based private equity firm SomeraRoad bought the tower for $22.5 million, renamed it to "500W", and began renovation plans. Vice President of SomeraRoad Andrew Marchetti said "What we're doing is going to change the trajectory of 500 West. And it'll be noticeable," saying the company hopes to attract new tenants with these amenities and updates. Spending $16 million, changes include a new entrance and lobby, a tenant lounge, a conference center, and fitness center. Ev's Deli is currently the only café or restaurant in the building. In September 2022, Tennessee-based Barista Parlor announced that it planned to open a new location in the atrium of the building, but did not say when that would happen.