Louisville Museum Plaza was a 62-story skyscraper that was planned for Louisville, Kentucky, United States. By August 1, 2011, despite the expenditure of public funds on its behalf, its developers had officially announced that they were abandoning plans to build it. The 703-foot (214 m) tall skyscraper was projected to cost $490 million and contain a 1-acre (0.40 ha) public plaza and park, condominiums, lofts, a hotel, retail shops and a museum. If built, it would have replaced the AEGON Center as the tallest building in Kentucky. The avant-garde design of the skyscraper was chosen by New York City REX architect Joshua Prince-Ramus. A groundbreaking ceremony was held on October 25, 2007, and construction at that time was expected to be complete by 2010. Delays disrupted the project. Prior
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdf:type
| |
rdfs:label
| - Museum Plaza (fr)
- Louisville Museum Plaza (en)
|
rdfs:comment
| - Louisville Museum Plaza was a 62-story skyscraper that was planned for Louisville, Kentucky, United States. By August 1, 2011, despite the expenditure of public funds on its behalf, its developers had officially announced that they were abandoning plans to build it. The 703-foot (214 m) tall skyscraper was projected to cost $490 million and contain a 1-acre (0.40 ha) public plaza and park, condominiums, lofts, a hotel, retail shops and a museum. If built, it would have replaced the AEGON Center as the tallest building in Kentucky. The avant-garde design of the skyscraper was chosen by New York City REX architect Joshua Prince-Ramus. A groundbreaking ceremony was held on October 25, 2007, and construction at that time was expected to be complete by 2010. Delays disrupted the project. Prior (en)
- Le Louisville Museum Plaza était un gratte-ciel en construction situé dans la ville de Louisville aux États-Unis. La construction a été suspendue, puis annulée, à cause de problèmes financiers. L'immeuble de 62 étages et de 214 mètres de haut aurait dû être terminé en 2011. À ce moment-là, il aurait été le plus haut gratte-ciel de la ville, et même du Kentucky, en détrônant l'AEGON Center qui domine la ville depuis 1993. (fr)
|
foaf:name
| |
name
| |
geo:lat
| |
geo:long
| |
foaf:depiction
| |
dcterms:subject
| |
Wikipage page ID
| |
Wikipage revision ID
| |
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
| |
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
| |
sameAs
| |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
thumbnail
| |
architect
| |
building type
| - Residential, commercial, retail, museum, University of Louisville Master of Fine Arts program, public park (en)
|
developer
| - Steve Wilson and Laura Lee Brown, Steve Poe, Craig Greenberg (en)
|
floor count
| |
image size
| |
location
| - Intersection of Seventh St. and Washington St., between River Road and Main St. (en)
|
map type
| |
start date
| |
status
| |
structural engineer
| |
georss:point
| - 38.25833333333333 -85.76166666666667
|
has abstract
| - Louisville Museum Plaza was a 62-story skyscraper that was planned for Louisville, Kentucky, United States. By August 1, 2011, despite the expenditure of public funds on its behalf, its developers had officially announced that they were abandoning plans to build it. The 703-foot (214 m) tall skyscraper was projected to cost $490 million and contain a 1-acre (0.40 ha) public plaza and park, condominiums, lofts, a hotel, retail shops and a museum. If built, it would have replaced the AEGON Center as the tallest building in Kentucky. The avant-garde design of the skyscraper was chosen by New York City REX architect Joshua Prince-Ramus. A groundbreaking ceremony was held on October 25, 2007, and construction at that time was expected to be complete by 2010. Delays disrupted the project. Prior to announcing that the project had been abandoned, Craig Greenberg, one of the projects four developers, had stated that he was "hopeful that construction will start this year [2010]" and that he also expected the project to be completed by late 2012. The location of Museum Plaza would have been between River Road, Main Street, 7th Street and 6th Streets in downtown within the West Main district, adjacent to the Muhammad Ali Center. (en)
- Le Louisville Museum Plaza était un gratte-ciel en construction situé dans la ville de Louisville aux États-Unis. La construction a été suspendue, puis annulée, à cause de problèmes financiers. L'immeuble de 62 étages et de 214 mètres de haut aurait dû être terminé en 2011. À ce moment-là, il aurait été le plus haut gratte-ciel de la ville, et même du Kentucky, en détrônant l'AEGON Center qui domine la ville depuis 1993. Le projet était estimé à 490 millions de dollars. Il devait contenir des appartements, un musée, un hôtel, des magasins et des bureaux. Une cérémonie d'ouverture de chantier avait eu lieu le 25 octobre 2007. (fr)
|
gold:hypernym
| |