Rabbit Hole Spirits spent $10.6 million in June 2022 to purchase the rest of the block bounded by Jefferson, Clay and Shelby streets and Nanny Goat Strut, Jefferson County property records show.
The Kentucky Court of Appeals ruled a historic building in downtown Louisville can be torn down.
In April, the Kentucky Supreme Court ruled that lower courts erred when they agreed the city properly removed the controversial John B. Castleman statue from Cherokee Triangle in 2020.
A fence has been up around the iconic structure for seven months. Now, a petition to demolish it has been filed over structural concerns.
Hogan's Fountain Pavilion closed in May over safety and structural concerns.
Renaissance on Broadway is a planned 55-unit housing development at 4422 West Broadway.
The monument in the Highlands was the center of controversy for years because its critics argue that Castleman is closely associated with the Confederacy and white supremacy.
On Thursday night, the council voted to strip the historic landmark designation from the building, which allows its owner, the Omni Hotel, to move forward with tearing it down.
The Omni Hotel, which contractually has control of the Odd Fellows Building's future, says it is old, has bad pipes, and isn't suitable for retail, so it intended to bulldoze it.