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Just east of this intersection, State Route 254 leaves Old Hickory Boulevard and becomes Bell Road, whence it continues as Bell Road past I-24 exit 59 to US 41/US 70S (Murfreesboro Pike). From that intersection, Bell Road continues on without a designation.
The two are distinct, however, as traffic continues from Old Hickory Boulevard straight onto Bell Road along SR 254 at an intersection about 0.6 miles (0.97 km) east of Nolensville Pike (US 31A/US 41A). Bell Road continues eastward and later northeastward along SR 254 until the termination of SR 254 at Murfreesboro Pike (US 41/US 70S).
SR 127 north (Aedc Road) – Hillsboro: Southern terminus of SR 127: Estill Springs: 25.0: 40.2: SR 279 east (Spring Creek Road) – Franklin County Park, Elk River Dam: Western terminus of SR 279: 26.5: 42.6: UTSI Road – University of Tennessee Space Institute, Arnold Air Force Base: Coffee: Tullahoma: 32.1: 51.7
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.
The most important business concentration in Antioch is around the Commons at the Crossings, formerly Hickory Hollow Mall, which opened in 1978.As Hickory Hollow Mall, it was a regional shopping mall with a gross leasing area of 1,107,476 sq ft (102,887.9 m 2), more than 140 stores, and 5,795 parking spaces.
Hickory Hollow Mall, later Global Mall at the Crossings, was a 1.1 million-square-foot (102,193-square-meter) regional indoor shopping mall in the Nashville neighborhood of Antioch, Tennessee, located just east of I-24 at exit 59 along Bell Road (Route 254). The shopping center was inaugurated on August 11, 1978, and flourished for three ...
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.
During the Civil War, the house was used by Confederate General John Bell Hood in his preparation before the Battle of Nashville of December 15–16, 1864. [3] In 1878, the cottage was purchased by James Erwin Caldwell, the president of the Cumberland Telephone and Telegraph Company, which installed the Bell System in the American South. [3]