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U of L Athletics Facilities
• Facilities Home
• Bass-Rudd Tennis Center
• Cardinal Arena (Volleyball)
• Cardinal Boathouse (Rowing)
• The Cardinal Club (Golf)
• Cardinal Park
• Freedom Hall (Basketball)
• Lacrosse Stadium
• Tom Musselman Golf Center
• Papa John's Cardinal Stadium (Football)
• Jim Patterson Stadium (Baseball)
• Soccer and Track Stadium
• Trager Center (Indoor Practice Facility)
• Trager Stadium (Field Hockey)
• Ulmer Stadium (Softball)
• Ralph Wright Natatorium
• Yum! Center (Men's Basketball, Lacrosse, Volleyball offices)

The U of L Campus
• U of L Visitor's Guide
• U of L's Campus Tour
• Printable Campus Map
• Driving Directions to Campus
• Online Maps
• Prospective Students
• Cardinal Shuttle
• Campus Parking Information
• Parking Rules & Regulations
• Special Event Parking
• Campus Parking Maps
• Accessible Parking

Louisville, Kentucky
• Travel Center
• Hotels
• Restaurants & Dining
• Actors Theatre of Louisville
• Belle of Louisville
• Center for Performing Arts
• Churchill Downs
• Fourth Street Live!
• Frazier International History Museum
• Gheens Science Hall & Rausch Planetarium
• Heaven Hill Distilleries Bourbon Heritage Center
• Jim Beam American Outpost
• Huber's Orchard & Winery and Joe Huber's Family Farm & Restaurant
• Kentucky Derby Museum
• Louisville Ballet
• Louisville Bats (AAA Baseball Team)
• Louisville Fire Arena Football
• Louisville Orchestra
• Louisville Science Center & IMAX Theatre
• Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory
• Louisville Zoo
• Muhammad Ali Center
• Six Flags, Kentucky Kingdom
• Speed Museum
• National Weather Service
• 10-Day Forecast
• Airport Information
• Directions to the Airport
• Ground Transportation

The University of Louisville is home to one of the most storied athletics program in the nation. The Cardinals boast 6 national championships in men's sports, more than 59 team conference titles in men's and women's sports and hundreds of All-Americans.

The success of U of L's teams contribute to a sense of pride in the community and across the state. The very mention of the "Cardinals" evokes a sense of history, tradition and championships. Nationwide, U of L is synonymous with winning.

 
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The University of Louisville

The University of Louisville is a state supported research university located in Kentucky's largest metropolitan area. It was a municipally supported public institution for many decades prior to joining the university system in 1970. The University has three campuses. The 287-acre Belknap Campus is three miles from downtown Louisville and houses seven of the university's 11 colleges and schools. The Health Sciences Center is situated in downtown Louisville's medical complex and houses the university's health related programs and the University of Louisville Hospital. On the 243-acre Shelby Campus located in eastern Jefferson County are the National Crime Prevention Institute and the Information Technology Resource Center.

Louisville - Home of the Cardinals

"Named for King Louis XVI of France in appreciation for his assistance during the Revolutionary War, Louisville was founded by George Rogers Clark in 1778. While its initial growth was slow, the advent of the steamboat in the early 1800s sparked booming industrial development, and by 1830 Louisville had secured its place as the largest city in Kentucky.

During the Civil War, Louisville was an important Union base of operations and a major military supply center. In the postwar era, the city emerged even more prosperous than before, with merchant princes and manufacturers shaping the new economy. Owing to its strategic location at the Falls of the Ohio, Louisville was a major commercial center. River transportation was supplemented by the construction of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, which was chartered in 1850 and operated more than 1,800 miles of line in the state by 1920. Joseph E. Seagram and Sons opened the world's largest distillery in Louisville following the repeal of prohibition. Thanks to companies such as Dupont, the city became the world's largest producer of synthetic rubber during World War II.

Louisville was also a city of firsts. In the reform-minded progressive era of the 1880's the city was the first in the nation to introduce the secret ballot, significantly reducing vote fraud. It was the first city in Kentucky to adopt zoning and planning measures to control and shape urban growth. Home to the first bridge designed exclusively for motor vehicles to cross the Ohio River, Louisville was also the birthplace of Mary Millicent Miller, the first woman in the United States to receive a steamboat master's license.

The city has been home to a number of men and women who changed the face of American history. President Zachary Taylor was reared in surrounding Jefferson County, and two U.S. Supreme Court Justices, including Louis D. Brandeis, the first Jewish Justice, were from the city proper. John James Audubon was a local shopkeeper in the early years of his career, drawing birds in his spare time. Second Lt. F. Scott Fitzgerald, stationed at Camp Zachary Taylor during World War I, was frequently presence at the bar in the famous Seelbach Hotel, immortalized in the novel The Great Gatsby. Muhammad Ali, perhaps the greatest heavyweight boxer of all time, was born in Louisville and won six Golden Glove tournaments in Kentucky."

More Information
If you need further assistance, please view the University of Louisville Visitor's Center or Customer Care online.

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