What to know about the Old National Bank building where Louisville mass shooting occurred
The deadly April 10 shooting in downtown Louisville took place at a longtime tenant of an iconic Main Street building.
The Preston Pointe mixed-use building, 333 E. Main St., houses five floors of commercial space and two upper floors of condominiums.
Old National Bank is an original anchor of the building, occupying the first floor. A shooting at the bank branch was reported around 8:30 a.m. April 10, according to Louisville Metro police. When officers arrived, they encountered gun shots being fired within the bank.
Other occupants include venture capital firm Chrysalis Ventures, real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield Commercial Kentucky and valet service company Ready Valet.
Offices of Potter & Associates Architects, the designer of the building, are also located within the structure.
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The 76,000+ square-foot building, with its iconic pointed and sloping roof, was completed in 2004. It was built amid a blitz of redevelopment activity along East Main Street, including Slugger Field and Waterfront Park along the Ohio River, as well as various office and residential buildings.
The building sits on the eastern edge of Louisville's downtown, near the neighboring trendy East Market District, also known as Nulu.
Old National Bank opened in the Preston Pointe building in October 2004 with a staff of 18, occupying some 13,000-square-feet on the first floor, The Courier Journal reported at the time.
The bank was founded in Evansville, Indiana, and is co-headquartered there and in Chicago. It entered the Louisville market in late 2002 with a mortgage office on Dutchmans Lane.
Business reporter Matthew Glowicki can be reached at mglowicki@courier-journal.com, 502-582-4000 or on Twitter @mattglo.
This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Louisville Old National Bank shooting: What to know about the building