The Columbia Building, originally named the Commerce Building, was Louisville, Kentucky's second skyscraper, designed by Cornelius Curtin and completed in 1890 at a cost of $1 million.
It was located at the northwest corner of Fourth and Main streets and built of pressed red brick in the Romanesque Revival style.
It was built just five years after the world's first skyscraper, the Home Insurance Building in Chicago.
It was demolished in 1966 as a part of a downtown redevelopment plan, and a 24-story highrise, now called the BB&T Building, was built on the site in 1972.
This article related to a building or structure in Louisville, Kentucky is a stub.