Schuster Building | |
Location | 1500 Bardstown Rd, Louisville, Kentucky |
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Coordinates | 38°13′54″N 85°42′33″W / 38.23173°N 85.70914°W |
Area | Deer Park neighborhood |
Built | 1927 |
Architect | Nevin, Wischmeyer & Morgan |
Architectural style | Colonial Revival |
NRHP reference No. | 80001618[1] |
Added to NRHP | October 18, 1980 |
The Schuster Building is a mixed-use structure at the intersection of Bardstown Road and Eastern Parkway in the Highlands area of Louisville, Kentucky. Added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 as a "significant example" of Colonial Revival architecture as applied to commercial buildings, the Schuster building is one of Louisville's most prominent examples of that style.
The Colonial Revival style was part of an emerging trend in American design at the time the building was completed in 1927, and was later popularized by the restoration of Colonial Williamsburg.
In the years following the completion of the Schuster Building, several prominent structures in the same style were built in Louisville, such as the University of Louisville Administration Building in 1929, and Norton and Mullins halls of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in 1930.[2]