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January 2020 Volume 31, Issue 1 www.aceweekly.com @aceweekly
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JANUARY 2020 | VOLUME 31, ISSUE 1 | ACEWEEKLY.COM
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EDITRIX Rhonda Reeves CREATIVE DIRECTOR Tread Multimedia Designers AJ Mitchell Maggie Cardwell Contributing writers (online + print) Evan O. Albert, Kevin Faris, Brian Gardner, Bridget Wilkerson Johnson, Blair Montgomery Brian S. Powers, Raj Ranade, Nick Stump, Kakie Urch, Kristina Rosen, Tom Yates –––––––––– Display Advertising 859.225.4889, ext. 235 ads@aceweekly.com Classified Advertising 859.225.4889, ext. 237 ––––––––––– COPYRIGHT © 2019 Send Letters to the Editor: editor@aceweekly.com 250 words or less include full name and daytime phone. To submit a calendar listing for consideration, email acelist@aceweekly.com. —— Display Ad Deadlines are the 15th of each month for the next month’s issue: Email ads@aceweekly.com. Space reservation, production art, and payment should be delivered no later than by Noon. Distribution ACE is free, one per reader. Removal of more than one paper from any distribution point constitutes theft. Ace racks and boxes are private property. Distribution of any other publications in an Ace rack or Ace box constitutes criminal trespass (trespass includes but is not limited to: college publications, Yard Sale flyers, tagging, and so on).
Cover Photo by Austin Johnson
P8 WHAT’S COMING SOON IN 2020?
features
Morning Pointe is Your Care Partner
P6 COMMUNITY NEWS P16 FOOD BY CHEF TOM
a&e
P10 CENTERFOLD CALENDAR P12 GREAT MOMENTS IN SPORTS P13 HEALTH & OUTDOORS P14 ACE EATS OUT Lexington Restaurant News
P15 ACE DRINKS OUT Lexington Spirits News
P18 REAL ESTATE
Lexington (859) 554-0060 The Lantern at Morning Pointe, Lexington (859) 309-4867 Lexington-East (859) 721-0350
The Region’s Choice • morningpointe.com aceweekly.com | Jan 2020 | 3
Christmas Parade
4 | aceweekly.com | Jan 2020 Paul Martin Paul Martin
Austin Johnson
Austin Johnson
Paul Martin
Paul Martin
Austin Johnson
Paul Martin
Paul Martin
Paul Martin
Austin Johnson
Reindeer Ramble
Courtesy FCPS
Paul Martin
Out and About with Councilmember Preston Worley
BIA Cares Military Cheer
FDHS Cheer Wins State
Sophisticated STYLE.
In Hamburg behind Forcht Bank 2721 Old Rosebud Road 859.264.0923 | mftky.com
aceweekly.com | Jan 2020 | 5
COMMUNITY
Blue Grass Airport is best of the best Blue Grass Airport has been nominated for USA Today 10 Best Readers’ Choice Awards 2020 for Best Small Airport. Voters can vote online once per day until polls close on Monday, January 13 at noon. Winning airports will be announced on Friday, January 24.
Central Kentucky Job Club 2020 The Fayette County Cooperative Extension Service, UK Alumni Association, and UK Human Resources Staff Career Development have announced the Winter/Spring 2020 Central Kentucky Job Club schedule. The purpose of Job Club is to provide a positive environment for motivated job seekers to meet, connect, share, and learn through a free group that meets the second and fourth Tuesday of each month at the Fayette County Extension office from 9 am to 10:15 am. January 14: Job Search Q&A Session; January 28: Are Job Offers Negotiable? How Much Are You Leaving on The Table?
Commerce Lexington Top Ambassadors Congratulations to Greg Brown, Cheryl Eadens, Crystal Mount Newton, and Brooke Wheatley for being recognized as Commerce Lexington’s Top Ambassadors in 2019.
EKU President stepping down Effective January 6, EKU President, Michael Benson, is stepping down. He will continue to be an advisor to the board of regents during the transition for the next president.
6 | aceweekly.com | Jan 2020
Grand Slam The Lexington Legends baseball organization recently accepted the Bob Freitas Award from Baseball America. The Legends are a Single-A Affiliate of the Kansas City Royals.
GreenHouse17 awarded Junior League grant GreenHouse17 was chosen for the 95th Anniversary Grant from the Junior League of Lexington. GreenHouse17 is a local advocacy agency committed to ending intimate partner abuse in families and the community throughout 17 Kentucky counties.
LFD Receives Donation Field Operations Supervisor, Wes Felts, and Field Operations Senior Superintendent, Jarold Jackson, recently presented a firefighting support grant check to Lexington Fire Department’s Assistant Chief John Gosper. Since launching the grant program in 2011, Kentucky American Water has donated more than $72,000 to help fire departments in Kentucky.
J. Render’s Donates to FEED J. Render’s Southern Table & Bar donated $330 to Fayette Eating Education & Delivery (FEED). With this donation, over 55 more kids will get a weekend backpack this year. Weekend food bags typically contain shelf stable milk, fruit, vegetables, protein, grain, and a snack. One bag of food costs approximately $6, with shelf stable milk being the most expensive item.
Manchester Road Construction Update Lexington will replace a total of 1,900 feet of sewer lines along Manchester. Construction is expected to last until May of 2020, but businesses are still open during this construction.
COMMUNITY
What’s in store for Romany The former Kroger location on Romany Road has been acquired by Greer Companies and The Webb Companies. The developers are soliciting community input. Email contactus@thewebbcompanies.com.
aceweekly.com | Jan 2020 | 7
Top 20 for 2020
FEATURE
What’s in store for the roaring 20s in Lexington? BY KRISTINA ROSEN
W
hat a difference a decade makes. While the 80s and 90s were boom markets for Lexington, 2008’s economic crash devastated the local economy and led to lingering stagnation well into the early teens. The roaring 20s, on the other hand, are poised to come in like a lion in Lex.
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
F
rom hotels and movie theaters to brand new developments and expansions, construction will be an ongoing theme throughout Lexington in 2020, and well into the new decade.
City Center After 11 years, the $220 million downtown development formerly known as CentrePointe will finally come full circle. While three businesses (Jeff Ruby’s, Starbucks and Keeneland Mercantile) have already opened within the City Center, more is on tap for 2020. The 218-room Lexington Marriott City Center and the connecting 119-room extended stay Residence Inn will join the Hyatt and the Hilton as downtown destinations, along with 21C and the re-developed Sire at Gratz Park for more boutique style options. On top of City Center will be The Infinity: A Skybar and Cafe, the hotels’ signature restaurant featuring a glass wall and retractable roof.
8 | aceweekly.com | Jan 2020
Downtown Cinema While the Kentucky Theatre is a classic, historic venue that can never be replicated, downtown has never had a multiplex option for movies. The new 10-screen Krikorian movie theater will offer a sports bar, bourbon bar, bowling, arcade and dining options at the corner of High and Broadway. Krikorian Premiere Theatres, a California based company, announced this projected concept for Lexington years ago. Expect to see construction continue on the site in 2020.
Fountains at Palomar Palomar is preparing for its own version of The Summit at Fritz Farm. The new shopping center development near the intersection of Harrodsburg Road and Man o’ War Boulevard will potentially include a grocery store, several restaurants, and a hotel. Construction has already begun on the site and will continue into 2020.
Romany Road Kroger Greer Co. and Webb Co. have taken over the long-stagnant former Kroger location on Romany Road. They’re currently soliciting community input as to best uses for the vacant grocery space.
Rupp Arena In 2018, plans were announced to build and expand the Lexington Convention Center as well as Rupp Arena. The Jefferson Street Bridge was closed and demolished in 2019, re-routing traffic to Oliver Lewis Way. New UK Hospitality Clubs and a remodeled exterior design are part of the new concept. While the bleachers were swapped for seat-back chairs in 2019, the rest of the upgrades and expansion will be completed in phases so that Rupp Arena and the Conven-
tion Center can remain open during construction. What can Lexington expect to see in 2020? “A new 500-vehicle parking structure, new ground level loading docks for Rupp Arena and an elevated service yard and docks for the Exhibit Hall should be completed,” says Richard J. Polk, Jr., Principal at EOP Architects, the architecture and design firm behind the comprehensive renovation of Rupp Arena.
“The new 100,000 square foot Exhibit Hall, the adjacent Prefunction Corridor and High Street Lexington Convention Center entrance should be completed. An all new Central Utility Plant, which heats and cools the entire complex, has just come online and will be fully complete in early 2020. Construction of the Rupp Arena new south façade will be completed while construction on the new Ballroom, LCC Meeting Rooms and Main Street LCC entrance will begin. Demolition of the remainder of the old convention center along Main Street and the old retail/food court between Rupp and the Hyatt will begin in 2020. This demolition will make room for new Rupp Arena concourse expansions and the LCC Meeting Room Pavilion in 2021.”
Town Branch Commons “Construction will kick-off for the Town Branch Commons project in January 2020,” says project manager Mike Sewell. “With that comes all of the things you would expect from a transportation construction project, namely lane closures. Our design team has tried to be as thoughtful about how the construction project will roll-out to minimize negative impacts to daily commuters and businesses, but as with any project inside the right-of-way, there will still be phases of construction that will no doubt be frustrating. These temporary frustrations during construction though will yield an amazing project that will help to transform Lexington.” “By the end of 2020, the project will be substantially completed and you will be able to see the pieces coming together.” In Phase Two, the final plans for the park happen, which include raising an additional $10 million toward the overall fundraising goal of $31 million. The project is now a third of the way to the $31 million goal in private donations thanks in part to the $1 million donation to help build Town Branch Park from UK women’s basketball head coach, Matthew Mitchell, and wife, Jenna Mitchell.
Tates Creek High School School will be out this summer, but that’s when construction on the new Tates Creek High School will begin. The high school, which was built in 1965, hasn’t been renovated since 1993. With renovation projected to cost more than a rebuild, the Fayette County School Board decided to start from scratch.
“These temporary frustrations during construction though will yield an amazing project that will help to transform Lexington.” —Mike Sewell, project manager, Town Branch Commons
FEATURE
MARKETS & MIXED USE
2
020 will be the birth year of many mixed use developments in Lexington from indoor public markets to adaptive reuse projects, all of which aim to build community.
GreyLine Station For almost 100 years, the former historic Southeast Greyhound Building was home to bus and transit companies, and then sat vacant for decades. Upon opening this year, GreyLine Station will offer retail spaces for businesses and provide a unique experience for its tenants with the hope to bring new commerce and community opportunities to the North End.
Julietta Market Located inside GreyLine Station is the Julietta Market. A project that began in 2013, the indoor multi-vendor public market is expected to take shape this summer. “It’s a place that can be for our neighbors, by our neighbors and about our neighbors,” says Kris Nonn, Executive Director at NoLi CDC. “A place where people can come together, grow their prosperity, support each other, and share their stories… 2020 will see more temporary popup events and programming to continue to build interest and community buy-in leading up to the grand opening of Julietta Market in summer 2020.”
The MET Between Martine’s Pastries, Frank’s Donuts, and Spalding’s, East Third Street is all set for baked goods. A mixed-use development? That’s new in 2020.
The MET is a new three-story development named for its location on the corner of Midland and East Third. The new $22 million, 75,000 square foot, mixed-use facility is expected to include a highly-anticipated grocery, restaurant, and retail space, as well as 44 loft apartments. The plan is to bring more job opportunities to the East End through this redevelopment project.
Winslow Project What does campus need? More parking seems to be the ongoing consensus. The Kennedy Book Store, which was located on the corner of S. Limestone and Winslow Street since 1950, was demolished in 2019 to make room for a six-story development with 900 new parking spots. Known as the Winslow Project, the new development will include office, retail and innovation space on the ground floor with plans to open in August 2020.
MUSIC
I
t’s music to our ears knowing that quite a few music legends and Kentucky natives are making pit stops in Lexington throughout the year.
Concerts at Rupp Arena From KISS to Elton John and an appearance from the good lookin’ duo of Sturgill Simpson and Tyler Childers, Rupp Arena has a busy lineup in 2020. KISS arrives in February, as does the Sturgill Simpson and Tyler Childers tour, while Elton John brings his Farewell Yellow Brick Road to Rupp in June.
Kroger Field’s First Concert Down the street at Kroger Field, Chris Stapleton will headline the stadium’s first concert in April along with performances by Willie Nelson, Sheryl Crow, and Yola.
Railbird Returns Later in the summer, Railbird Festival will return to the historic grounds of Keeneland on August 22 through August 23.
rected by two women who are dedicated to reopening this N. Limestone staple in 2020.
LITERATURE & FILM Addicted to Perfect Vitale Buford’s upcoming memoir, Addicted to Perfect, details her real and raw journey through an addiction.
EAT AND DRINK
2
019 was a busy year for food news in Lexington, and 2020 is poised to deliver more, with rooftop dining topping the list.
20|20 Rooftop A new rooftop bar offering an elevated view is coming to the corner of Limestone and Church. The new bar will offer refined cocktails and monthly specialty events among created and owned by the founder and owner of Centro, Javier and Aimee Lanza, will open in the spring of 2020 featuring stylish interiors, authentic southern hospitality and unique views of downtown Lexington.
Italx Italx, a new avant garde Italian restaurant from the dynamic duo of Jonathan Lundy and TJ Cox, is opening this year. “This Italian concept has been in the making for about five years and I am excited to see it come to life,” says Jonathan Lundy. “Thanks to my partnership with TJ, Lee and our team we are finally prepared to move into a beautiful restaurant space in Lexington’s hottest new development.”
All-Vegan Restaurant There’s always room for more vegan options in Lexington, and Lucy Jones plans to open her all-vegan diner on Winchester Road later this year.
“You don’t have to have an Adderall addiction to read this book,” says Buford. “It’s a message of hope, and I hope it inspires [readers] to be vulnerable in their own lives and tell their own story.”
Gone Tomorrow: The Story of Kentucky Ice Climbing Ice climbing in Kentucky? We’ll have to see it to believe it, but with a special screening at the Kentucky Theatre, now we can. Gone Tomorrow: The Story of Kentucky Ice Climbing is an adventure documentary that takes the audience for a bourbon-fueled ride deep into the bushy hollers of Appalachia with a crew of harmless misfits and a few surprises along the way. The film won’t be available online until 2021, so this special screening event in January is potentially the last chance to see the film again in Kentucky until next year. For full stories, photos, and videos visit aceweekly.com.
Sidecar The new multi-purpose event space that doubles as a bar has been resur-
aceweekly.com | Jan 2020 | 9
BRIDES
KIDS Fairytale Tour with Castle Princesses, 1 pm & 3 pm, Kentucky Castle
sun
5
6
WWE
DIY Bookmarks, 7 pm, Lexington Public Library Beaumont Branch
Fayette County Public Schools resume classes
SCHOOL
mon
7
HG LBAR
is under renovation, continue to enjoy the Cult Film Series at the Farish Theater, 7 pm
FILM While’s Al’s Bar
FILM Classic Horror Film Fest: Krampus, 6:30 pm, Tates Creek Library
tue
FILM
Comedy Night, 8 pm, Pivot Brewing
LAUGH
NEW YEAR!
8
HAPPY 1
wed
2
9
BIZ Tanya
the Library, 7 pm, Farish Theater
MUSIC Jazz: Live at
Big Turtle Talk, 6:30 pm, J&H Lanmark
OUTDOOR
Kentucky Invitational Truck & Tractor Pull, 7 pm, Alltech Arena (thru Sat)
TRUCK 9th Annual
Theatre, 7 pm, Kentucky Castle
EAT Mystery Dinner
School’s Out: Movies, 10 am, Farish Theater
MOVIES
thu
3
10
SHOW
gymnastics meet vs Mizzou, 6 pm, Rupp Arena
GYMNASTICS UK
Allegro Dance Project: Substance, 7 pm, The Lyric Theatre
DANCE
MX, 7 pm, Alltech Arena
BIKE TriState
Lexington Theatre Company: Concert with The Stars, 8 pm, Lexington Opera House
MUSIC
fri
4
11
STAGE Bees
with Special Guest Alix E. Harrow, 6 pm, JosephBeth Booksellers
LIT Erin Morgenstern
BRIDES Diamond Rings & Pretty Things Wedding Show VIP Event, 4 pm - 9 pm, Heritage Hall
Basketball vs. Alabama, noon, Rupp Arena
BALL UK Men’s
HG Free Trash Disposal Day, 6 am, Old Frankfort Pike
DRINKS Twelfth Night Ceili, 7 pm, Pivot Brewing
pm, The Lyric
STAGE Auditions: Love, Loss and What I Wore, 3
Painting, 2 pm, Kentucky Castle
ART Barrel Head
Basketball vs. Mizzou, 2 pm, Rupp Arena
BALL UK Men’s
Job Fair, 10 am, Beaumont YMCA
BIZ Summer
sat
12
Butterfly Lovers, 7 pm, Norton Center for the Arts (Danville)
DANCE Shanghai Ballet:
Awards, 6 pm, The Lyric Theatre
MUSIC 6th Lexi Music
Annual AHG Chili Cook-Off, 12:30 pm, Cathedral of Christ the King
26
pm, Rupp Arena
CONCERT Holiday Jam, 7
EAT 5th
13
WOODSONGS Hawktail and Appalachian Road Show, 6:45 pm, The Lyric
Monday Night Raw, 7:30 pm, Rupp Arena
27
Radio Hour, 6:45 pm, The Lyric
WOODSONGS Old-time
Conversations with Gurney Norman featuring Willie Davis, 5 pm, Hardymon Theater (Davis Marksbury Building, UK)
LIT
com for a full listing of events, including Prayer Breakfast, March, and more.
MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. DAY EVENTS See aceweekly.
19 20
New BrotherNew Sister, 4 pm, Baptist Health Lexington
HEALTH
Diamond Rings & Pretty Things Wedding Show, 11 am to 4 pm, Heritage Hall
14
EAT Soup & Bread, 5 pm,
Cinci’s 21c Museum Hotel museum manager and Morlan Gallery’s curator, “Resilience 101” 7 pm, Transy
SPEAK
Conversation with 11th District Councilmember Jennifer Reynolds, 6 pm, Good Foods Co-Op
COMMUNITY
16
Theater
The Story of Kentucky Ice Climbing, 6 pm, Kentucky
FILM Gone Tomorrow,
23
Women Leading Kentucky After Hours Networking, 5:30 pm, The Campbell House
BIZ
8 pm, Studio Players Lexington Community Theatre (thru January 19)
STAGE Look, No Hans!,
Basketball vs. Texas A&M, 6:30 pm, Memorial Coliseum
BALL UK Women’s
Torp from Step_By_Step is the guest speaker at the January Women Leading Kentucky Roundtable, noon, The Grand Reserve
SHOP University of Kentucky Surplus Public Auction, 7 am, 1247 Versailles Road
basketball vs. Vanderbilt, 6:30 pm, Rupp Arena
BALL UK men’s
7:15 pm, Comedy Off Broadway (thru Feb 1)
COMEDY Nicole Byer,
Commerce Lexington Annual Dinner, 5:30 pm, Lexington Center’s Bluegrass Ballroom
BIZ 2020
28 29 30 on Fire: Open Mic Series, 6 pm, Chocolate Holler
LIT House
Pivot Brewing
15
Creative Lecture and Film Screening of the documentaries Evelyn Williams and On Our Own Land with director Anne Lewis, 4 pm, Transy University
21 22
Men’s Basketball vs. Georgia, 7 pm, Rupp Arena
BALL UK
Workshop with Amanda Nighbert, 6 pm, Quantrell Volvo
HEALTH Nutrition
Series for Women with Cancer, 6 pm, Central Baptist Church
HEALTH Empowerment
Meetings, 5:30 pm, The Lyric
ART Public Art Input
Installation & Member Recognition Luncheon, 10:45 am, Keeneland
17
Reception for Body Language, 7 pm, UK Art
ART Public Opening
31 MUSIC Black Jacket Symphony, 8 pm, Lexington Opera House
Photography Lecture Series with Erica Larsen, 4 pm, UK Gatton Student Center
SPEAK R.C. May
Movie Tavern (Brannon Crossing)
The Lion King (1994),
MOVIES
Theater Company annual January Ball, 7:30 pm, The Signature Club of Lansdowne
STAGE AthensWest
Museum
18
Rupp Arena
Sturgill Simpson and Tyler Childers at
FEB 28
Valentine’s Day
FEB 14
KISS at Rupp Arena
FEB 13
AROUND THE CORNER
SHOW Professional Bull Riders Showdown, 6:45 pm, Rupp Arena
Children’s Theatre
STAGE The Princess and the Peas, 11 am, Lexington
Dinosaur World Live, 11 am, Lexington Opera House
KIDS
History at Shaker Village: Adventure Theatre, 6:30 pm, Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill
STAGE Mystery in
Women’s March, 2:30 pm, Robert F. Stephens Courthouse
MARCH Lexington
pm, Lexington Children’s Theatre
and Buds: A Garden Adventure, 2
24 25 Members Preview Party, 5:30 pm, UK Art Museum
ART
Lexington Opera House (thru Sunday)
STAGE The SpongeBob Musical, 7:30 pm,
Women’s gymnastics vs. North Carolina State, 7 pm, Memorial Coliseum
GYMNASTICS UK
Harlem Globetrotters perform at Rupp Arena, 7 pm
Sports & Rec
photos by Austin Johnson for Ace
12 | aceweekly.com | Jan 2020
Upcoming for 2020 JANUARY
APRIL
The 7th Annual Urban Mountain Challenge is Saturday, January 25 at 8:30 am at the Big Blue Building in downtown Lexington. Featuring two challenges: a stair climb of the 31 story Big Blue Building and a five story parking helix climb followed by a climb of the Big Blue Building. The race benefits Richmond-based charity For Those Who Would.
Run with the horses in the Horse Capital Marathon & Half Marathon on Saturday, April 18 beginning at 7 am at The Club at UK’s Spindletop Hall. The race benefits Bluegrass Farms Charities, a unique nonprofit dedicated to providing health and human services to people working in Central Kentucky’s Thoroughbred industry.
MARCH The 3rd Annual Lucky Leprechaun Half Marathon, 10 Miler & 5K in historic Versailles, Kentucky is Saturday, March 7 at 8:30 am. The race will benefit The Foster Care Council of Kentucky and The Woodford Humane Society. Walk, shuffle or run during the Shamrock Shuffle 3K, a St. Patrick’s Day tradition presented by Relic Lexington and Stantec on Saturday, March 14 at 8 am, beginning and ending at Robert F. Stephens Courthouse Plaza. 100% of net proceeds benefit Lexington Habitat for Humanity.
MAY The Run For The Horses 5K is Saturday, May 16 at 8 am at the Maker’s Mark Secretariat Center at the Kentucky Horse Park. Race proceeds go to raise funds for the care and preparation for second careers and loving new homes for the off-track Thoroughbreds of the Maker’s Mark Secretariat Center.
The 3rd Annual DV8K Life Changing Run is on Saturday, August 15 starting at 7:30 am at Keeneland Barn 2 Area with the option to do the 8K (5 Miles) Run, 4K (2.5 Miles) Run/Walk, Kids 1K and Virtual Runner/Walker. The race benefits “Build a Life Changing Bakery” in Lexington and the DV8 Kitchen Vocational Training Foundation Inc.
AUGUST
SEPTEMBER
On Saturday, August 8, runners and walkers will take to the streets of downtown Lexington for A Midsummer Night’s Run presented by CHI Saint Joseph Health. The night begins with the Fastest Kid in Town race (ages 3-13 can participate) at 6 pm, followed by the One-Mile Fun Run/Walk at 7 pm, and concluding with the A Midsummer Night’s Run 5K at 8 pm.
The CASA Superhero Run combines a 5K for all ages, a children’s 1K and a festival on Saturday, September 5 at the Kentucky Horse Park with the 1K beginning at 8:30 am followed by the 5K at 9 am. The race supports CASA of Lexington’s mission to advocate for abused and neglected children.
JUNE Run for donuts in celebration of National Donut Day with the North Lime Donut Dash on Saturday, June 6 at Wellington Park beginning with the 3K at 8 am and the Kids 1K at 8:30 am. The race coincides with National Donut Day which is Friday, June 5th; so of course, all participants receive donuts at the finish line. A portion of proceeds will benefit The Salvation Army who invented the whole concept of National Donut Day years ago.
Paul Martin
We get an extra day in 2020 so let’s run with the inaugural Leap Year Day 4 Miler & 2.29 Miler on Saturday, February 29 beginning at 2:29 pm at White Hall State Historic Site in Richmond. This features a 4 Miler for runners only and a 2.29 Miler as the run/walk event. Both races will be chip timed and provide overall and age group awards. The race will benefit On The Move Art Studio, a nonprofit mobile art room created in a refurbished vintage trailer that travels to neighborhoods to host free arts classes for kids in Central Kentucky.
The 2020 Lexington More Than Pink Walk is scheduled for April 25.
OCTOBER The Bourbon Chase, a 200-ish mile running relay across the Bluegrass State through the historic Kentucky Bourbon Trail, is October 23-24. New for 2020, the lottery is gone and this race is first come first serve. Teams will come together in the city of Clermont at Jim Beam and end the race at the finish line in downtown Lexington. All runners must be 21 years and older to participate.
JULY
Austin Johnson
FEBRUARY
Run for ice cream in the 4th Annual Crank & Boom Sprint For Scoops 3K on Friday, July 17 at Wellington Park. The Kids 1K begins at 7:10 pm and Sprint for Scoops 3K at 7:30 pm. The race benefits a Fayette Eating, Education & Delivery (FEED) who help students in Lexington by providing weekend food bags when they aren’t in school.
Paul Martin
RUN FOR IT
HEALTH & OUTDOORS
The Bluegrass 10,000 is a certified 10,000 meter race through the main business and historic districts of downtown Lexington on the Fourth of July. The race is part of the Lexington’s Fourth of July Festival presented by Ball Homes and Central Bank and is sponsored by Lexington Parks & Recreation.
aceweekly.com | Jan 2020 | 13
A
EVENTS
new decade means new opportunities and possibilities for Lexington’s ever changing food scene, but for our full Food Year in Review 2019, Scan here. For an additional listing of restaurants which opened and closed in Lexington in 2019: Births, Resurrections, Obits, and Transitions visit aceweekly.com
Wednesday, January 1
Start the new year off at Drake’s (all three locations) with their build-yourown Bloody Mary bar and breakfast quesadilla on Wednesday, January 1 at 11 am.
Thursday, January 2
The Kentucky Castle is hosting a “Cooking Competition” Mystery Dinner in the Ballroom on Friday, January 2 at 7 pm. LaRosa’s Family Pizzeria celebrated the opening of their Southland Drive delivery/carry-out location with an official ribbon cutting last month.
NEWS Barista Social, which also owned Metropolitan Donuts, closed their only location on Malabu Drive in December.
Cathedral of Christ the King hosts their 5th Annual Chili Cook-Off on Sunday, January 26 at 12:30 pm with the option to enter as a group, team or individual.
Frank’s Donuts opened at 549 East Third Street.
Lexington native Jonathan Henderson has been named the new Chef of the Infinity: A Skybar & Cafe.
Sav’s Grill has reopened in its new East Main location in the former Subway site, after closing its South Limestone location in July.
Tyler Donahue has been named Pastry Chef of the Lexington Marriott City Center. Donahue will be creating the menus and guiding the pastry team for The Greatroom Restaurant, Infinity Sky Bar, and the meeting and events of the hotels.
A new rooftop bar is planned for the George’s Deli location at the corner of N. Limestone and Church Street. Centro owners Javier and Aimee Lanza plan to turn the deli into a restaurant when the business owner of George’s Deli retires. Drake’s opened a second Lexington location in Hamburg on Justice Drive.
14 | aceweekly.com | Jan 2020
Talon Winery’s 6th annual Chili Challenge is Saturday, January 18 beginning at noon. Admission ticket allows you to sample all entries and cast a vote for the winner.
Sunday, January 26
Epping’s on Eastside was named one of the best new restaurants in the country in 2019 by OpenTable who “looked into which restaurants provided the best culinary experiences, the coziest ambiance, the most impressive service, integration into the local community, and affordable prices.” National cupcake chain Gigi’s Cupcakes announced a collaboration with Food Network star, Jason Smith.
Saturday, January 18
To submit a Lexington, Kentucky food, wine, or spirits news item for consideration in Ace Eats Out, email acelist@aceweekly. com. For restaurant advertising, call Ace Advertising at 859.225.4889 ext229 or email ads@aceweekly.com.
W
Joyce and Autumn Nethery from Jeptha Creed on Friday, January 10 at 7 pm.
NEWS
Mind the Gap! Pivot Brewing is releasing fresh batches of two English style beers: flagship beer Winchester, an Extra Style Bitter and newest beer, an English IPA.
elcome to Ace Drinks Out for January 2020 in Lexington, Kentucky — Ace’s highly curated and selective list of drink news and events throughout Lexington’s booming spirits scene.
Sunday, January 12
Join Ethereal Brewing for a new book club beginning Sunday, January 12 at 7 pm. They will meet monthly to talk about books and enjoy a little beer. Please contact Katie at ksmith@lexpublib.org if interested.
Tuesday, January 21
Four Roses lost Al Young over the holidays. Young spent 52 years with Four Roses. In 1990 he was made Distillery Manager and in 2007 was named Four Roses Brand Ambassador. In 2010 he published a book called Four Roses: The Return of a Whiskey Legend and was inducted into the Whiskey Magazine Hall of Fame and became a member of the Kentucky Distillery’s Association Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame in 2015.
EVENTS Wednesday, January 8
The Kentucky Castle and Distilled Living host KY Bourbon School: “Bourbon Basics” on Wednesday, January 8 at 6 pm. This class will launch the third annual year-long class series led by Bourbon-Steward in Residence Tim Knittel and Executive Bourbon Steward Aften Locken of Distilled Living with a new theme offered each month.
Friday, January 10
The Ripy House (Lawrenceburg, KY) is hosting a unique bourbon tasting, featuring mother-daughter duo
Soup & Bread Lexington, a weekly pay-what-you-can soup dinner made for and by the community through the winter, is at Pivot Brewing on Tuesday, January 21 from 5 pm to 8 pm.
Saturday, January 25
The Wizards Beer Festival is coming to Manchester Music Hall on Saturday, January 25 for a night of magic, debauchery and mischief.
Tuesday, January 28
Coles 735 Main is hosting a Wine Pairings Dinner featuring Silver Oak Cellars on Tuesday, January 28 at 6:30 pm featuring guest speaker Jeff Flood from Silver Oak and Twomey.
To submit a Lexington, Kentucky beer, wine, or spirits news item for consideration in Ace Drinks Out, email acelist@aceweekly.com. For advertising, call Ace Advertising at 859.225.4889 ext229 or email ads@aceweekly.com.
BREWERIES OFFER WEEKLY FITNESS
B
reweries are making your New Year’s resolutions easier to maintain this year with a variety of fitness classes. From yoga to running, local breweries are offering fun ways to burn some calories, build community and enjoy a well-deserved drink with weekly workout opportunities. Country Boy Brewing offers weekly yoga at the Georgetown taproom on Tuesdays at 6:30 pm. Mirror Twin Brewing Running Group meets every Monday at 6 pm to run followed by $1 off flagships. Pivot Brewing offers Community Yoga Classes taught by a rotation of local teachers who all have their own style of teaching and practice every Monday at 6:30 pm. Check each week to see who the instructor is, what kind of practice the class will be, and for any other special announcements. All yoga classes are pay-as-you-can, donationsbased. Since 2012, the West Sixth Running Club meets every Tuesday between 5:30 pm to 6:30 pm at the brewery on 501 West Sixth Street for a jog, walk or run around town.
Along with running, West Sixth Brewing provides free yoga in a community setting through West Sixth Yoga. An hour-long yoga class followed by a (optional) pint of beer every Wednesday from 6 pm to 7 pm at Coolvain Park (when weather permits) or inside the beer garden at the brewery. If yoga or running isn’t your thing, grab your bike, spandex or skinny jeans, and join West Sixth Brewing for a bike ride on Saturday mornings. Education sessions begin at 9 am and rides begin at 10 am with the option to do an organized group ride, or pick up a map and do your own thing. If you record the number of miles you ride, each mile will earn $0.20 for the charity of the day. Wise Bird Cider Co. hosts a donation-based yoga class on Saturday mornings at 10 am taught by a combination of Casey Sleeper, Christina Morales, and Brooke Williams followed by sipping cider, sangria, or slushies and enjoying bites from Great Bagel.
West Sixth Running Club
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Come Inside
FOOD
The Winter Market has surprises BY TOM YATES
E
arly last Saturday morning, I planned to quietly slip out of the house for a quick trip to the indoor winter farmers’ market. Although it’s a fairly short walk from our house, I decided to drive because it was freezing outside. I grabbed my Martha Stewart market-designated canvas tote bag and drove down our driveway. I love the serenity of the winter farmers’ market. It was calm and quiet with gentle guitar music humming through hidden speakers. It felt great to be back at the market after the holidays. Quarles Farm had canned vegetables, salsas, chow-chows, relishes, breads, and coffee cakes. Even at 9 am, I couldn’t resist a taste of their stewed beef wafting heavenly aromas from cranked up slow cookers. Samples? Sure. Elmwood Farm offered the motherload. They had the usual suspects: baskets of watermelon radishes, beets, turnips, black radishes, sweet potatoes, collard greens, winter squash, gorgeous celeriac, garlic, organic eggs, and chicken. I was totally surprised by bags of fresh English Bordeaux spinach. Really? In January? With deep green lacy leaves highlighted by bright red veins and stems, the spinach reminded me of delicate swiss chard. Apparently, it’s a hardy variety that grows
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profusely until temperatures dip into the teens. I filled my bag with organic eggs, spinach, Stripetti squash, garlic, and sweet potatoes before driving home. It’s been a while since our kitchen countertops were covered with market bounty. I was giddy and couldn’t wait to play with my stash.
I
wanted to try something different with the small sweet potatoes, so I adapted a recipe from Fine Cooking and threw together individual sweet potato and goat cheese galettes. Crazy, right? Goat cheese and sweet potatoes? Weird, fascinating, fabulous, and a far cry from sweet potato casserole. Before getting started, I slushed through our snow-covered back deck to snip handfuls of fresh thyme and chives. I pulled out my mandolin and sliced the sweet potatoes into thin rounds. After buttering small individual ramekins, I filled them with alternating layers of sweet potatoes, parmigiano reggiano, crumbled goat cheese, fresh thyme, salt, and pepper before ending with a final layer of goat cheese. After preheating the oven to 375 degrees, I placed the galettes onto a foil-lined sheet pan and slid them into the oven to bake alongside a pan of
roasting whole grape tomatoes. Because the individual galettes were small, I checked on them frequently. I burn stuff...a lot. Really. After 45 minutes, they were beautifully browned and tender, so I pulled them from the oven to rest. After a glass of wine or three, I gave the snow-kissed spinach a quick rinse before sauteing it in olive oil with minced garlic, shallots, and julienned red bell peppers. I plated the wilted spinach and nestled the sweet potato goat cheese galettes into the spinach nests. After scattering fresh julienned red peppers over the spinach and galettes, I slid tart sticky pomegranate glazed pork chops onto our plates before tumbling roasted grape tomatoes to the side. Lemon zest and sliced chives finished them off.
It was a ridiculous riot of flavor. Really. The earthy spinach balanced the tart sweet moistness of the pork chops with bits of pungent garlic, sweet red pepper, and meltingly soft shallots. The sweet potato goat cheese galettes were ridiculous — delicate, soft, and sweet. The nutty parmigiano added subtle saltiness while the fresh thyme provided floral undertones. The goat cheese profoundly elevated the simple galettes to another level. Suspended between layers of thinly sliced sweet potatoes, the soft goat cheese had the mouthfeel of tangy soft marshmallows. Check out the winter farmers’ market. It’s full of surprises.
FREE WILL ASTROLOGY by Rob Brezsny ARIES (March 21-April 19): Nazi Germany invaded and occupied Denmark during World War II. In 1943, Hitler ordered all Danish Jews to be arrested as a first step in his plan to send them to concentration camps. But the Danish resistance movement leapt into action and smuggled virtually all of them to safety via fishing boats bound for Sweden. As a result, 8,000+ Danish Jews survived the Holocaust. You may not have the opportunity to do anything quite as heroic in 2020, Aries. But I expect you will have chances to express a high order of practical idealism that could be among your noblest and most valiant efforts ever. Draw inspiration from the Danish resistance. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): When she was 31, Taurus writer Charlotte Bront finished writing her novel Jane Eyre. She guessed it would have a better chance of getting published if its author was thought to be a man. So she adopted the masculine pen name of Currer Bell and sent the manuscript unsolicited to a London publisher. Less than eight weeks later, her new book was in print. It quickly became a commercial success. I propose that we make Bront one of your role models for 2020, Taurus. May she inspire you to be audacious in expressing yourself and confident in seeking the help you need to reach your goals. May she embolden you, too, to use ingenious stratagems to support your righteous cause. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): 2020 can and should be a lyrically healing year for you. Here’s what I mean: Beauty and grace will be curative. The “medicine” you need will come to you via poetic and mellifluous experiences. With this in mind, I encourage you to seek out encounters with the following remedies. 1. Truth Whimsies 2. Curiosity Breakthroughs 3. Delight Gambles 4. Sacred Amusements 4. Redemptive Synchronicities 5. Surprise Ripenings 6. Gleeful Discoveries 7. Epiphany Adventures 8. Enchantment Games 9. Elegance Eruptions 10. Intimacy Angels 11. Playful Salvation 12. Luminosity Spells CANCER (June 21-July 22): “There are years that ask questions and years that answer,” wrote author Zora Neale Hurston. According to my astrological analysis, Cancerian, 2020 is likely to be one of those years that asks questions, while 2021 will be a time when you’ll get rich and meaningful answers to the queries you’ll pose in 2020. To ensure that this plan works out for your maximum benefit, it’s essential that you formulate provocative questions in the coming months. At first, it’s fine if you generate too many. As the year progresses, you can whittle them down to the most ultimate and important questions. Get started!
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The Roman Emperor Vespasian (979 AD) supervised the restoration of the Temple of Peace, the Temple of Claudius, and the Theater of Marcellus. He also built a huge statue of Apollo and the amphitheater now known as the Colosseum, whose magnificent ruins are still a major tourist attraction. Vespasian also created a less majestic but quite practical wonder: Rome’s first public urinals. In accordance with astrological omens, I invite you Leos to be stimulated by his example in 2020. Be your usual magnificent self as you generate both inspiring beauty and earthy, pragmatic improvements. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): When Virgo author Mary Shelley was 18 years old, she had a disconcerting dream-like vision about a mad chemist who created a weird human-like creature out of non-living matter. She set about to write a book based on her mirage. At age 20, she published Frankenstein, a novel that would ultimately wield a huge cultural influence and become a seminal work in the “science fiction” genre. I propose we make Shelley one of your role models for 2020. Why? Because I suspect that you, too, will have the power to transform a challenging event or influence into an important asset. You’ll be able to generate or attract a new source of energy by responding creatively to experiences that initially provoke anxiety. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Libra-born mystic poet Rumi (12071273) wrote that he searched for holy sustenance and divine inspiration in temples, churches, and mosques but couldn’t find them there. The good news? Because of his disappointment, he was motivated to go on an inner quest and ultimately found holy sustenance and divine inspiration in his own heart. I’ve got a strong feeling that you’ll have similar experiences in 2020, Libra. Not on every occasion, but much of the time, you will discover the treasure you need and long for not in the outside world but rather in your own depths. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Among his many accomplishments, Scorpio rapper Drake is an inventive rhymer. In his song “Diplomatic Immunity,” he rhymes “sacred temple” with “stencil.” Brilliant! Other rhymes: “statistics” with “ballistics”; “Treaty of Versailles” with “no cease and desist in I”; and my favorite”Al Jazeera” (the Qatar-based news source) with “Shakira” (the Colombian singer). According to my analysis of the astrological omens in 2020, many of you Scorpios will have Drake-style skill at mixing and blending seemingly disparate elements. I bet you’ll also be good at connecting influences that belong together but have never been able to combine before.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sagittarian poet Rainer Maria Rilke (18751926) embodied a trait that many astrology textbooks suggest is common to the Sagittarian tribe: wanderlust. He was born in Prague but traveled widely throughout Europe and Russia. If there were a Guinness World Records’ category for “Time Spent as a Houseguest,” Rilke might hold it. There was a four-year period when he lived at fifty different addresses. I’m going to be bold here and hypothesize that 2020 will NOT be one of those years when you would benefit from being like Rilke. In fact, I hope you’ll seek out more stability and security than usual. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Fifteenth-century Italian metalworker Lorenzo Ghiberti worked for 28 years to turn the Doors of the Florence Baptistry into a massive work of art. He used bronze to create numerous scenes from the Bible. His fellow artist Michelangelo was so impressed that he said Ghiberti’s doors could have served as “The Gates of Paradise.” I offer Ghiberti as inspiration for your life in 2020, Capricorn. I think you’ll be capable of beginning a masterwork that could take quite some time to complete and serve as your very own “gate to paradise”: in other words, an engaging project and delightful accomplishment that will make you feel your life is eminently meaningful and worthwhile. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You’re wise to cultivate a degree of skepticism and even contrariness. Like all of us, your abilities to say NO to detrimental influences and to criticize bad things are key to your mental health. On the other hand, it’s a smart idea to keep checking yourself for irrelevant, gratuitous skepticism and contrariness. You have a sacred duty to maintain just the amount you need, but no more even as you foster a vigorous reservoir of receptivity, optimism, and generosity. And guess what? 2020 will be an excellent time to make this one of your cornerstone habits. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Dante Alighieri (12651321) finished writing The Divine Comedy in 1320. Today it’s considered one of the supreme literary accomplishments in the Italian language and a classic of world literature. But no one ever read the entire work in the English language until 1802, when it was translated for the first time. Let’s invoke this as a metaphor for your life in the coming months, Pisces. According to my visions, a resource or influence that has previously been inaccessible to you will finally arrive in a form you can understand and use. Some wisdom that has been untranslatable or unreadable will at last be available.
HELP WANTED Marketing Manager (NicholasvilleKY) sought by a Thoroughbred sales Company to implement and coordinate a marketing strategy (across all functions) for positioning within key stakeholders, including relationships with hippodromes, within the LATAM and Florida-US markets. Requirements: Bachelor degree in Marketing or Business Administration (with a major in Marketing) or foreign equivalent, 2 years of experience: in the job offer or related occupation, Google Analytics, Google Ads or Google Adwords, Marketing experience in the thoroughbred industry. National & International (LATAM) travel 50% of the time. Send resume to: Taylor Made Sales Agency, Inc. at 2765 Union Mill Road, Nicholasville KY 40356, ATT: J. FELIX
Pet Pick Mango
Photo by Regi Goffinet
2 years old 50 lbs Pit Bull Mix
Mango sees the world with a puppy-level joy and enthusiasm that’s downright infectious! He’s an energetic guy who’s looking for a home with no cats - but he would love a family with older kids or maybe a dog or two to zoom around the yard with full-time! Mango’s three big loves in life are toys, treats, and adventures, so if you can keep him stocked with all three you’re definitely someone he wants to meet. Don’t leave him hanging: stop by the Adoption Center or call 859.873.5491 to find out more about him! Ace Weekly and the Woodford Humane Society remind you to spay and neuter your pets.
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HOME & GARDEN
NEWS Recycle your Christmas tree Only natural trees with no ornaments, lights, decorations, or tensile can be recycled in Lexington until January 31. All you have to do is place your tree on the curb next to your carts for pick up. You can also recycle natural wreaths and garland by placing in your grey yard waste cart. For those who use private garbage collection services, you can drop your natural tree off at Jacobson Park with the Kentucky Division of Fish and Wildlife until January 17 at the paddle craft parking lot. The trees will be turned into a habitat for the fish around Kentucky.
BIA Cares hosted their annual Operation Military Cheer Toy drive in December.
Donate your artificial tree Paul Martin
Habitat for Humanity’s ReStore locations on Southland Drive and Winchester Road are taking artificial trees in good condition until January 31. Save them from ending up in the landfill.
Wiseway Supply hosted a Grand Reveal of their Lexington showroom.
BIA Members were invited to a Christmas Tree & Wreath Charity Auction at Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting Gallery.
REAL ESTATE: Properties recently sold in Fayette Co. 40502
06-Nov-19................. 1567 LAKEWOOD CT ................$1,000,000 06-Dec-19 .................421 ANDOVER DR ........................$865,000 29-Nov-19................. 1371 STRAWBERRY LN ................$815,000 22-Nov-19................. 2408 THE WOODS LN ..................$770,000 15-Nov-19................. 208 WOODSPOINT RD ................$750,000 25-Nov-19................. 403 CHINOE RD ...........................$740,000 18-Nov-19................. 308 CLINTON RD ..........................$675,000 13-Nov-19................. 616 AUTUMN LN......................... $640,000 29-Nov-19................. 496 SEELEY DR .............................$585,000 18-Nov-19................. 1347 STRAWBERRY LN................ $580,000 22-Nov-19 .................1728 FAIRWAY DR........................ $530,000 23-Nov-19................. 3141 LAMAR DR ..........................$525,000 29-Nov-19................. 320 DESHA RD .............................$520,000 02-Dec-19.................. 221 CHENAULT RD .......................$518,000 15-Nov-19 .................466 HART RD................................ $500,000 26-Nov-19................. 3336 OVERBROOK DR................ $500,000 30-Oct-19 ..................1388 FONTAINE RD ......................$455,000 11-Nov-19 .................190 COCHRAN RD ........................$435,000 15-Nov-19................. 105 OLD CASSIDY AVE .................$430,000 08-No-19 ..................920 CHINOE CT .............................$400,000 25-Nov-19 .................188 LOUISIANA AVE ......................$395,000 27-Nov-19................. 411 QUEENSWAY DR ...................$350,000 27-Nov-19................. 3418 WOODSTOCK CIR ...............$345,000 30-Oct-19 ..................3365 OVERBROOK DR .................$295,000 18 | aceweekly.com | Jan 2020
40503
25-Nov-19................. 637 CARDIGAN CT .......................$888,000 25-Nov-19 .................634 CROMWELL WAY ...................$888,000 18-Nov-19 .................351 GREENBRIAR RD ...................$376,000 05-Dec-19.................. 3486 SAYBROOK RD ...................$364,150 12-Nov-19................. 3481 LANNETTE LN ......................$360,000 07-Nov-19 .................108 SHAWNEE PL .........................$350,000 22-Nov-19 .................114 ELAM PARK............................ $307,500 13-Nov-19 .................3512 NICHOLASVILLE RD ............$300,000 22-Nov-19 .................611 ARCADIA PARK...................... $289,000 31-Oct-19 ..................226 GLENDOVER RD.................... $281,000 22-Nov-19 .................3441 KEITHSHIRE WAY ................$266,000 13-Nov-19 .................122 WABASH DR ..........................$245,000 26-Nov-19 .................646 LONGVIEW DR....................... $239,000 08-Nov-19 .................1989 MOUNTJOY PL ....................$235,000 22-Nov-19 .................362 PASADENA DR .......................$220,000 06-Dec-19 .................648 GALATA DR .............................$220,000 02-Dec-19 .................2032 BLACKHORSE LN ................$218,000 22-Oct-19 ..................441 SEVERN WAY .........................$216,450 27-Nov-19 .................656 DARDANELLES DR................. $205,000 18-Nov-19 .................636 LONGVIEW DR .......................$204,000 15-Nov-19 .................1304 GRAY CT ...............................$200,000 25-Nov-19 .................685 DARDANELLES DR .................$199,900 15-Nov-19 .................3462 BRUNSWICK RD................. $194,000 15-Nov-19 .................728 NAKOMI DR ...........................$187,500
40504
15-Nov-19 .................1867 PARKERS MILL RD ...............$925,000 21-Nov-19 .................2417 CHINQUAPIN LN .................$450,000 27-Nov-19 .................1212 COLONIAL DR ......................$350,000 15-Nov-19................. 1789 HEADLEY GREEN ................$255,000 06-Nov-19................. 720 LYNN RD ................................$251,000 26-Nov-19 .................1829 NORMANDY RD ..................$220,000 22-Nov-19................. 1560 BEACON HILL RD ................$219,000 03-Dec-19 .................1796 CHANDLER LN .....................$210,000 06-Dec-19 .................1158 ATHENIA DR .........................$200,000
40505
14-Nov-19 .................2205 PATCHEN LAKE LN ...............$590,000 22-Nov-19 .................1908 GENERAL WARFIELD WAY ...$580,000 14-Nov-19................. 2171 PATCHEN LAKE LN ..............$500,000 01-Nov-19 .................1813 WAYLAND DR ......................$205,000 27-Nov-19 .................1681 MARGATE DR .......................$184,900 25-Nov-19 .................517 BRYANWOOD PKWY............ $179,000 12-Nov-19 .................331 EASTIN RD............................. $171,000 02-Dec-19 .................604 WALDO WAY ..........................$162,000
40507
18-Nov-19................. 231 N MILL ST ............................$2,200,000 29-Nov-19................. 499 E HIGH ST STE 201 ...............$209,500
REAL ESTATE: Properties recently sold in Fayette Co. 40508
19-Sep-19 .................697 GEORGETOWN ST ...............$1,420,000 22-Nov-19 .................177 WALTON AVE......................... $285,200 22-Nov-19................. 559 MARYLAND AVE ....................$280,000 02-Dec-19.................. 622 W MAIN ST UNIT 114 ...........$269,900 27-Nov-19................. 222 MIDLAND AVE UNIT 3105 ...$245,000 21-Nov-19 .................320 HAMPTON CT .........................$210,000
40509
04-Dec-19 .................2141 WINNING COLORS LN ........$815,000 14-Nov-19................. 2513 PASCOLI PL......................... $620,000 12-Nov-19................. 582 GINGERMILL LN ....................$580,000 18-Nov-19................. 550 GINGERMILL LN ....................$575,000 08-Nov-19................. 208 MOUSAS WAY .......................$654,500 08-Nov-19................. 210 MOUSAS WAY .......................$654,500 08-Nov-19................. 222 MOUSAS WAY...................... $654,500 08-Nov-19................. 228 MOUSAS WAY .......................$654,500 08-Nov-19................. 230 MOUSAS WAY...................... $654,500 08-Nov-19................. 232 MOUSAS WAY...................... $654,500 08-Nov-19................. 234 MOUSAS WAY .......................$654,500 05-Dec-19.................. 1197 SHEFFIELD PL .....................$615,000 25-Nov-19................. 2341 ROCKMINSTER RD .............$465,000 01-Nov-19................. 3309 BRIGHTON PLACE DR ........$440,000 18-Nov-19................. 2441 CORONEO LN..................... $425,000 29-Oct-19 ..................4517 VERBENA PARK ...................$400,000
18-Nov-19................. 2444 ASTARITA WAY .....................$392,000 02-Dec-19.................. 3577 TRANQUILITY PT ..................$383,281 22-Nov-19................. 3233 POLO CLUB BLVD ...............$358,000 22-Nov-19................. 1404 GADSTEN CT....................... $355,555 14-Nov-19................. 1143 GRIMBALL TRCE .................$345,000 29-Nov-19................. 768 MAIDENCANE DR .................$345,000 03-Oct-19 ..................2189 PUTLEDGE AVE ....................$339,900 22-Nov-19................. 1752 HEMP HILL DR ....................$335,731 31-Oct-19 ..................4736 FOXGLOVE PT ......................$327,000 21-Nov-19................. 308 JANE BRIGGS AVE ................$325,000 03-Dec-19.................. 853 EAGLES LN ............................$320,000 02-Dec-19.................. 4405 LEVI TODD BLVD .................$315,000 19-Nov-19................. 4159 STARRUSH PL .....................$310,000 15-Nov-19................. 1224 MOON RISE WAY ...............$308,000 15-Nov-19................. 936 ANDOVER GREEN .................$300,000
40513
15-Nov-19 .................3240 LINVILLE LN .........................$765,000 02-Dec-19 .................2148 CAROLINA LN ......................$590,000 06-Nov-19 .................3001 OLD FIELD WAY ...................$470,000 18-Nov-19 .................2537 SUNGALE CT ........................$448,000 04-Nov-19 .................3367 MANTILLA DR ......................$375,000 25-Nov-19 .................2144 MANGROVE DR ...................$365,000 22-Nov-19 .................2161 SOVEREIGN LN ....................$329,000 07-Nov-19 .................2017 ERMINE CT ...........................$292,000
22-Nov-19 .................2604 ASHBROOKE DR .................$205,000 26-Nov-19 .................3475 LYON DR UNIT 66 ................$200,000 11-Nov-19 .................2069 GLADE LN ............................$170,000
40514
25-Nov-19 .................1024 WEDGEWOOD RD ..............$888,000 15-Nov-19 .................784 FOUNTAIN VIEW CV.............. $388,531 15-Nov-19 .................4666 ROSETTE WAY...................... $344,940 22-Nov-19 .................2405 DOUBLETREE CT.................. $305,000 15-Nov-19 .................740 SUNNY SLOPE TRCE.............. $299,999 26-Nov-19 .................2101 WATKINS CT......................... $295,000 25-Nov-19 .................1228 WYNDHAM FOREST CIR .....$275,900 29-Oct-19 ..................912 SUNNY SLOPE TRCE ..............$269,500 04-Dec-19.................. 3817 WINTHROP DR ...................$260,000 31-Oct-19 ..................3696 WINTHROP DR ....................$250,000 25-Nov-19................. 3924 WINTHROP DR ...................$236,500 02-Dec-19.................. 541 MILLPOND RD ......................$236,000 19-Nov-19................. 564 TOWNSEND RIDGE.............. $235,000 15-Nov-19................. 409 JOSEPH BRYAN WAY ............$232,500 04-Dec-19.................. 3773 WINTHROP DR ...................$223,000 27-Nov-19................. 3836 GLADMAN WAY ..................$220,000 05-Nov-19................. 4281 FORSYTHE DR .....................$216,000 15-Nov-19................. 653 TWIN PINES WAY ..................$207,000 04-Dec-19.................. 357 SILVERBELL TRCE ..................$195,500 08-Nov-19................. 532 BAYLOR PL .............................$192,500 aceweekly.com | Jan 2020 | 19
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