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On the Nashville Historic Preservation list, this Belmont-Hillsboro home is remodeled and taking offers from buyers. Look inside the Foursquare home for sale in Nashville's Belmont-Hillsboro ...
The house is located at 908 Meridian Street in Nashville, the county seat of Davidson County, Tennessee. [1] [2] It is located opposite the Ray of Hope Community Church (formerly known as the Meridian Street United Methodist Church, built in 1925), [3] between Vaughn Street and Cleveland Street. [4]
June 14, 2013 (1800 Baptist World Center Dr. Nashville: 5: Archeological Site 40DV307: March 12, 2015 (Address Restricted: Nashville: 6: Archeological Site No. 40DV35
In 1989, a Vanderbilt Professor, Henry Teloh, and his wife, Mary, purchased the house, and continued the care and restoration of it. The Teloh family did extensive restoration of the house after it was heavily damaged by the April, 1998 F-4 Tornado that hit Nashville. Sally Teloh Lott, and her husband, Lee Lott, still own the house as of 2021.
The newest addition to the shining towers of Nashville's Church Street has hit the market. Prime, a unique 38-story apartment building developed by Nashville-based Giarratana and shaped like ...
In 2018, the News channel 5 Nashville reported that the neighborhood was becoming unaffordable. Developers had begun constructing expensive homes and residents were forced to pay higher property taxes. [3] A tornado destroyed a 108-year-old structure called the Hopewell Baptist Church in Buena Vista. It was subsequently rebuilt and it reopened ...
The Dr. Cleo Miller House, also known as Ivy Hall, is a historic mansion in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was designed and built during 1934–1936. [2] It is approximately 20 by 100 feet (6.1 m × 30.5 m) in plan. It was designed by Edwin A. Keeble in Tudor Revival architectural style. [2]
Cheekwood is a 55-acre (22 ha) historic estate on the western edge of Nashville, Tennessee that houses the Cheekwood Estate & Gardens. Formerly the residence of Nashville's Cheek family, the 30,000-square-foot (2,800 m 2) Georgian-style mansion was opened as a botanical garden and art museum in 1960.