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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 18 January 2025. There is 1 pending revision awaiting review. Capital city of Tennessee, United States "Nashville" and "Music City" redirect here. For other uses, see Nashville (disambiguation) and Music City (disambiguation). State capital and consolidated city-county in Tennessee, United States ...
This list of the tallest buildings in Nashville ranks skyscrapers in Nashville, in the U.S. state of Tennessee, by height. The tallest building in the city and the state is the AT&T Building , which rises 617 feet (188 m) in downtown Nashville and was completed in 1994. [ 1 ]
The Nashville metropolitan area (officially the Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro–Franklin, TN Metropolitan Statistical Area) is a metropolitan statistical area in north-central Tennessee. Its principal city is Nashville, the capital of and largest city in Tennessee. With a population of over 2 million, it is the most populous metropolitan ...
A parking lot view of 201 Cowan St. in Nashville, Tenn., Wednesday, March 13, 2024. The developer that owns this lot is suing Metro for holding his permits to build a 350-unit apartment complex ...
Map of early federal--"interstate" highway system in Tennessee, circa 1927. Prior to 1915, the state had no central authority governing construction and maintenance of roads. The governor, legislature, other road associations, and local governments all attempted to serve these tasks, leading to a lack of planning and management.
Interstate highway [1] [2] Additional information I-24: A major west-east interstate that enters the Metro Nashville-Davidson County area near Joelton.It enters the city on its northern side, passes the east side of downtown, goes southeastward towards Antioch, and exits the city when reaching Rutherford County.
James Robertson Parkway is a four-lane major thoroughfare in Nashville, Tennessee.It is a bypass route within the downtown Nashville area that includes portions of the alignments of three U.S. Highways, two of them with unsigned Tennessee state highway designations.
Davidson County Courthouse, also known as Metropolitan Courthouse, is an Art Deco building built during 1936–37 in Nashville, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1987. [1] It is an eight-story steel-frame building sheathed with light beige Indiana limestone and gray-green granite as trim at entrances.