Be it a milestone birthday, a co-worker’s promotion, a nonprofit fundraiser; or maybe no reason at all except for an excuse to get friends together to celebrate being together, Downtown Louisville offers a slew of event spaces. Check out our selection below for seven of the coolest event spaces within Downtown’s corridor.

 

 

Cure CF hosted CRAFT Louisville under the Second

Street Bridge.

 

Under the Bridge Downtown

Clark Memorial Bridge

2nd Street Bridge Streetscape/ S.2nd St.

For the ultimate urban outdoor venue space go outside and under, yes under, the Clark Memorial Bridge (Second Street bridge streetscape at S. 2nd Street). Sure, you need the proper permits. But, don’t let that discourage you. Instead, imagine the possibilities of renting out the three-block area from Main Street to River Road directly underneath the Clark Memorial Bridge (adjacent to the Yum! Center).

In 2010, this $3 million streetscape improvement project resulted into an inviting promenade complete with a plaza, plantings, seats and pedestrian space perfect for small festivals and celebrations. Ample industrial light fixtures filled with colored glass keep the area brightly lit. Plus, the illuminated overpass provides cover from seasonal elements.

Wondering what type of events fit under a bridge? Louisville nonprofit Cure CF, Inc. hosted and will be hosting CRAFT Louisville, a pizza and beer festival fundraiser for cystic fibrosis on Oct.7, and The Flutag Block party also set-up shop under the bridge last year.

 

 

Louisville Palace

 

Party Like a Rock Star

Louisville Palace

625 S 4th St
Only at the Louisville Palace could My Morning Jacket perform to a sold-out crowd one night, and your sister’s son dances the Hora at his bar mitzvah at the same place the next night.

The Louisville Palace is known for stellar acoustics and concerts, but also for private events serving groups as small as 100 and as large as 2,700.

If sharing the same stage as Prince once did isn’t enticing enough, consider the history of the building with its beautiful architectural details. The Louisville Palace was built in 1927 and designed by theatre architect John Eberson. Painted frescos, ornate sculptures and a Spanish Baroque-themed lobby and grand foyer complete with arcades, balconies, and turrets decorate the venue. The interior theatre ceiling looks like a night sky complete with twinkling lights shining like all the Palace star performers past and future.

 

 

Mercury Ballroom private room.

Mercury Ballroom

 

Mercury Ballroom

611 S. Fourth St.
Steps away from The Louisville Palace is its younger sister, the Mercury Ballroom. The former Wright & Taylor Building, underwent an impressive renovation that redesigned the two-level, 16,000-square-feet venue into a one-of-kind rock royalty motif with the likes of Bryson Tiller, Sturgill Simpson, and Fitz & The Tantrums, to name a few, who have performed.

Special event options at the Mercury Ballroom include pre-or post-show dinners or parties after concerts. Budget permitting, staff can help you book party entertainment. Past parties have included performances by fire spinners, live karaoke bands, aerialist, and even a guest performance by Cheap Trick (In that case, the party planner knew the band).

 

Private dining room at Proof on Main in 21C Museum Hotel. Photo courtesy of 21C Museum Hotels.
“Asleep in the Cyclone” provides guests with an immersive art experience at 21C Museum Hotel. Photo courtesy of 21C Museum Hotels.

 

Party with Penguins

21C Museum Hotel

700 W. Main St.

For a completely immersive art experience 21C Museum Hotel isn’t just the South’s original art museum and hotel, but a unique event space, which can accommodate parties from 10 to 450.

Surround guests with thought-provoking, contemporary art, artisanal cocktails, and catering from the Proof on Main culinary team, and you’ll be sure to get guests talking.

21C Museum Hotel offers private dining rooms, atriums, and a rooftop apartment with more than 3,500 square feet of indoor and outdoor space and views of downtown.

Don’t forget about the penguins. You never know when and where these VIP mascots will make an appearance.

 

 

8UP Private Dining Room. Photo Courtesy of 8UP Elevated Drinkery and Kitchen.
8UP bar. Photo Courtesy of 8UP Elevated Drinkery and Kitchen

 

View From the Top

8UP: Elevated Drinkery and Kitchen

350 W. Chestnut St.

When 8UP: Elevated Drinkery and Kitchen opened in 2016, it quickly became the go-to place, due to its spectacular rooftop views of the city atop the eighth floor of the Hilton Garden Inn. Picture fire tables, floating bar, and a large expanse of glass rail overlooking 4th Street Live that provides an obstructed view of Downtown. In addition to hosting an event atop the rooftop bar, 8UP also offers private or semi-private party spaces for events and gatherings that should not be dismissed. For example, the “Boardroom” features glass retractable walls. Interior bar lounges provide comfy, customizable seating and contemporary decor. Another 8UP perk: Park in the Hilton Garden Inn garage and the private 8Up elevator takes guests directly to the party.

 

 

The Rathskeller Photo Courtesy of Seelbach Hotel/Bisig Impact Group

 

If Tiles Could Talk

The Rathskeller

The Seelbach Hilton

500 South 4th Street
What’s cooler than hosting an event at a favorite spot of both Al Capone and F. Scott Fitzgerald? At the Rathskeller, a 1907 addition to the Seelbach Hilton, you can. Just head down to the lower level of the hotel through the clandestine doorways, and you’ve reached an entirely unique room offering 4,200 square feet of space in a medieval setting. It is the only surviving room in the world completely encrusted in handmade Rookwood pottery, made by the famous Rookwood Pottery Company of Cincinnati.

Fifty to 150 guests may dine under the red-tinted, terra-cotta ceiling, and gaze up at Rookwood-Pottery pelicans — a sign of good luck. Tile designs depict walled cities in the Rhenish region of Germany, where the hotel’s founders, Otto and Louis Seelbach, were born. Coming from German, the term “Rathskeller,” means “council’s cellar” and is a common name in German-speaking countries that refers to a bar or restaurant located in the basement of a city hall.

The Rathskeller definitely takes visitors back in time. If these walls could talk, there’s no telling what stories the tiles of the Rathskeller would share.

 

 

Actors Theatre Sara Shallenberger Brown Lobby. Photo Credit: First Light Image
Photo Credit: Bill Brymer

 

Suitable for the Bard

Actors Theatre of Louisville

316 West Main St.

Actors Theatre Louisville’s is the city’s top performing arts theaters and home of the Humana Festival of New American Plays. When it’s not paying tribute to the Bard or the next big playwright it serves as an original event venue. Think a seated dinner for 150 in the lobby or a seminar for 600 in the theatre.

There’s a lot of history in this building, too. The Sara Shallenberger Brown Lobby was the former Bank of Louisville building. Built in 1837, this is one of the oldest buildings in Louisville, the oldest on Main Street and the first to have Greek revival architecture. In 1998, restoration of the theatre’s main Sara Shallenberger Brown Lobby refurbished the original colors and allowed new lighting arrangements. Today, the Sara Shallenberger Brown Lobby is a breathtaking ballroom with its rounded ceiling and gold leaf accents. Perfect for a dramatic celebration.

 

Indoor, outdoor, underground, under bridges or even on rooftops—Downtown has no shortage of impressive, out-of-the-box venues for any type of event.

 

 

 

 

 

A Cleveland native turned Louisville resident by way of Chicago, Melanie brings 20 years publishing experience to Louisville Distilled. After graduating from Indiana University Bloomington with degrees in English and Journalism, Melanie has worked as an editor on staffs at national magazines based in Chicago and Los Angeles. She moved to Louisville in 2004 where she launched a successful freelance editing and writing career. Her award-winning articles have appeared in Draft, Chef, The National Culinary Review, Pizza Today, Complete Woman, Louisville Magazine, Business First, Her Scene, Medical News and more. She lives in the East End with her husband, Sean, two children and dog. Passionate about the arts (and an adventurous foodie) Melanie loves eating her way through Louisville’s food scene and supporting the local arts and music scene.

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