The
Herald-Leaders new office and production plant facility was completed in September 1980 at a cost of $23 million. It was a structure that featured 14 Goss Metro offset presses that had the capacity to produce 600,000 newspapers in a typical week. The plant is on a lot at the corner of East Main Street and Midland. The $23 million cost was divided into $7,804,000 for architecture, $750,000 for interiors and $8,500,000 for production equipment and presses. In June 2016, it was announced that the
Herald-Leader would cease its printing operations in Lexington, contracting them out to
Gannett from the Louisville facilities for the
Courier Journal. As a result of the move, 25 full-time and 4 part-time employees would be laid-off. It was also announced that the plant would be put up for sale, with the Fayette County property valuation administrator assessing the property at $6.84 million for tax purposes. The first issue of the Louisville-printed
Herald-Leader published on August 1, 2016. The last issue of the Lexington Herald-Leader to be printed in Lexington was printed on July 31, 2016. It marked the end of 229 years of newspaper printing in Lexington. In turn, the Louisville facility was shut down in 2021 as part of Gannett's own consolidation of its printing facilities, and like the
Courier Journal, the paper is now printed out-of-state in Tennessee from the
Knoxville News Sentinels facility, meaning that stories and sports scores occurring in the early evening are not within the print edition. The
Herald-Leader building has been proposed as a new city hall for the
Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government. Remaining staff will be relocated to a smaller office space upon the sale of the building. On August 5, 2024, the print edition was reduced to being printed on Wednesday, Friday and Sunday, with carrier delivery being discontinued for mail delivery exclusively. ==See also==