Starks Building

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Starks Building
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Starks Building from Muhammad Ali Boulevard
Starks Building from Muhammad Ali Boulevard
Location: Louisville, Kentucky
Coordinates: 38°15′4″N 85°45′24″W / 38.25111, -85.75667Coordinates: 38°15′4″N 85°45′24″W / 38.25111, -85.75667
Area: Downtown Louisville
Built/Founded: 1913
Architect: Daniel Burnham
Architectural style(s): Beaux Arts, Chicago School
Added to NRHP: July 11, 1985
NRHP Reference#: 85001508 [1]
Governing body: Private

The Starks Building is a landmark 14-story building on Fourth Street and Muhammad Ali Boulevard in Downtown Louisville, Kentucky. It was built in 1913 on a site that had been the First Christian Church of Louisville. It was commissioned by local businessman John Starks Rodes and designed by the Daniel Burnham firm of Chicago. It is 202 feet tall (62 meters).[2] It was listed as the 11th largest office complex in Louisville in 2004 by the newspaper Business First.[3]

It was built in the Chicago School of architecture with Beaux Arts details. Cream-colored bricks are one of its signature features. It is decorated with classical motifs, including acanthus leaves, lion's heads and urns. It was originally a "U" shaped structure, but a 1926 addition designed by the firm Graham, Anderson, Probst & White added a new wing to create a rectangular shape with a central sunlight well. At the bottom of the central atrium was a courtyard, and until 1984 it was covered with a Plexiglas skylight.

Main entrance and detail of stonework
Main entrance and detail of stonework

In 1953, the building was renovated to add a parking garage - the first in the city - to the building. The 700+ space garage was built on an adjoining lot and fronts Third Street. The Starks Building is mixed use, with retail, dining and office space. When it was sold in 1997 the building included about 350,000 square feet of leasable space.[4] In the 1990s and 2000s the owners had trouble finding tennants, with over half of the space vacant in 2006.[5]

Notable long-time tenants include the Colonnade Cafeteria, Seng Jewelers and Rodes Men's and Women's Clothing. Colonnade Cafeteria moved into the Starks Building basement in 1926 and remained until 2006.[5] Rodes Clothing, founded by the building's financier John Starks Rodes himself, was located in the building from 1914 until the company relocated to the suburbs in 2004.[6]

It was owned by the Starks family until the mid-1980s when it was sold to an investment group, which resold the building in 1997 to Empire State Collateral. Empire State defaulted on the mortgage and ownership was taken over by Allstate in 2004. The building was sold again in 2006 to Hertz Investment Group. The Starks Building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.[4] It is connected by skyway to Fourth Street Live!, an entertainment mall adjacent on the North side.[7] On July 2, 2007, the Cordish Company, developers of Fourth Street Live!, announced that it will expand the mall southward by leasing the first floor of the Starks Building.[8]

[edit] References

  1. ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2007-06-11).
  2. ^ Starks Building, Louisville. Emporis Buildings.
  3. ^ "Starks Building owner notifies tenants of impending sale", Business First. Retrieved on 2007-06-11. 
  4. ^ a b "Gills sell Starks Building, garage for $21.55 million", Business First, 1997-03-14. 
  5. ^ a b Pieroni, Carolyn. "California group purchases Calif. group to purchase Starks Building", Courier-Journal, 2006-06-10. 
  6. ^ Goetz, David. "Rodes to end 90-year downtown tradition", The Courier-Journal, 2004-01-09. 
  7. ^ Realtor's page for the Starks Building. Retrieved on 2007-06-11.
  8. ^ Davis, Alex. "Major expansion of 4th Street Live planned; Owner leases part of Starks Building", The Courier-Journal, 2007-07-02. Retrieved on 2007-07-02. 

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Columbia Building
Tallest Building in Louisville
1914-1927
Succeeded by
Heyburn Building