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Housed in a massive century-old warehouse that was originally a cotton mill, Louisville
Antique Mall is near the downtown area. The inventory in this 80,000 square foot cavernous
building is both vast and impressive. Plan to have a gourmet lunch at The Caf¨¦, which is on the
mall's second floor.
For over 35 years, Joe Ley Antiques has showcased 2 acres of eclectic antiques on 4 floors of a renovated 1890 schoolhouse near the downtown area. Inventory also includes a huge selection of items useful for construction and restoration projects, including about 5,000 doors.
Derby City Antique Mall, which is housed in a 1920s school in the Buechel neighborhood, offers a variety of desirable antiques and collectibles from over 150 dealers. There's also a caf¨¦ open for lunch.
Louisville's newest antique mall, Stadium Antique and Decorators' Mall, is located a few blocks from Louisville International Airport and the Kentucky Fair & Exposition Center. It offers a varied inventory from over 100 dealers.
Many eclectic individual shops are clustered with eclectic boutiques, trendy art galleries and ethnic restaurants on Bardstown Road in the Highlands and on Frankfort Avenue in Louisville's
Crescent Hill neighborhood. Louisville's largest shopping malls, Mall St. Matthews and
Oxmoor Center, are in the east end neighborhood of St. Matthews. East of St. Matthews,
Summit Lifestyle Center has 60 upscale retailers & restaurants clustered in a Mediterranean
style village.
Plan to take home a souvenir that is uniquely Kentucky. Internationally known Louisville Stoneware and Hadley Pottery are both housed in historic old buildings near the downtown area. Both offer tours that show visitors the entire process from potter's wheel to kiln. There's also a chance to buy unique pottery pieces ranging from dinnerware to birdhouses. Nearby, purchase quality Kentucky crafts at The Kentucky Museum of Arts + Design, which also houses over 20 special displays each year. Watch resident glassblowers at work at Glassworks Gallery before checking out works of art for sale. Make your selection from small paperweights to large vases created by both local and national artists.
Completed in 1810, Farmington is a 14 room Federal style home created from plans designed by Thomas Jefferson. Unique features include two octagonal rooms and a hidden staircase. A formal garden and blacksmith shop are outside. Locust Grove, the last home of General George Rogers Clark, is a Georgian brick house built around 1790. Both homes, which are in the east end, are meticulously restored with outstanding period antiques.
Visitors to Riverside, the Farnsley-Moreman Landing, enjoy a spectacular view of the Ohio River from this 300 acre site. The pre-Civil War farmhouse is furnished as it would have been from 1830 to 1860. Don't miss the Visitors Center to learn more about the important role the river had for the residents of this house and this community.
Thomas Edison lived in a small 1850s shotgun house while employed by Western Union after the Civil War in 1866 and 1867. Now located in the Butchertown neighborhood near downtown, the home has many of his inventions on display.
The J. P. Speed Art Museum is located in the south end near the University of Louisville campus. Its superb collection of all types of decorative arts spans 6,000 years. There are also distinguished special exhibits.
Put on your walking shoes and take a nine block walking tour down historic Main Street. You'll see the second largest collection of cast-iron facades as you pass Actors Theatre, Kentucky Museum of Arts + Design, Kentucky Center for the Arts, and Louisville Science Center. If walking's not your thing, catch a trolley or enjoy a horse drawn carriage ride through the downtown area.
Two of the newest museums are also downtown. Louisville Slugger Museum offers baseball enthusiasts a chance to learn more about America's favorite game and the bats used by most professional players. Opened in 2004, the Frazier Historical Arms Museum is a regal walk through a thousand years of world history. Expect to see upscale exhibits, including some on loan from the Royal Armouries in Britain, and not just guns in glass cases.
No visit to Louisville is complete without checking out the Kentucky Derby Museum, which is located next to Churchill Downs in the south end. View dynamic exhibits to learn more about the famous horse race which is nicknamed "the fastest two minutes in sports." Note: This museum is closed every Derby Day and Oaks Day, which is the Friday before Derby Day.
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