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Louisville, Kentucky's Bourbon Renewal

Evan Williams Bourbon Experience
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Evan Williams Bourbon Experience

What’s driving the recent wave of investment in Louisville’s historic whiskey district? Larry Kass, spokesman for Heaven Hill, says the bourbon renaissance began in the mid-'90s, when consumer interest in premium bourbons took off. Over the following decade, that interest spilled over into the places bourbon was made, with distillers such as Woodford Reserve, Heaven Hill, Maker’s Mark, and Jim Beam opening their doors for tours and tastings throughout the Kentucky countryside. Suddenly words like “terroir” were being used in the same room as bourbon. Now Louisville is looking to rebrand its long-languishing Whiskey Row past into a longer Bourbon Row theme trail along Main Street. The city is betting those whiskey-themed attractions will boost the goals of preserving historic architecture, adding jobs, boosting tourism, and luring ever more convention dollars downtown. “Kentucky is bourbon, bourbon is Kentucky, and Louisville is the center of it,” Valle Jones says.