
Fifty years ago, the city of Louisville approached architect E.J. Schickli with the idea of building a new shelter house and comfort station to replace a crumbling structure in Cherokee Park. Playing off the park’s name, Schickli designed the teepee-shaped Hogan’s Fountain Pavilion that is so familiar to visitors today. Last month, Schickli visited his creation for the first time in 15 years and he did not like what he saw. “That’s the problem with most public and semi-public entities,” Schickli laments as he looks at the pavilion’s deteriorating roof. “Money is often appropriated to build them but never to provide maintenance for them. It doesn’t matter if it’s this or any other structure. It’s a mindset I will never understand.”








