Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The East Bank encompasses a whopping 550 acres along the bank of the Cumberland River, bordered by Interstate 65 to the west and Interstate 24 to the east. Metro Nashville owns more than 100 acres ...
I Believe in Nashville (also, I Believe in Nashville Mural ) is a series of painted murals started in 2012 by the artist Adrien Saporiti, a Nashville native. The mural, which started in one location, has since been replicated on several walls throughout the city of Nashville. It has become a popular tourist destination and scene to pose for ...
East Nashville, Tennessee. Coordinates: 36.189216°N 86.733629°W. A wall mural previously in the 5 Points area of East Nashville. East Nashville is an area east of downtown Nashville in Tennessee across the Cumberland River. The area is mostly residential and mixed-use areas with businesses lining the main boulevards.
By 1765, his son, David McGavock, acquired 640 acres of land East of the Cumberland River, though he did not live here. (Another son, Randal McGavock, who served as the mayor of Nashville from 1824 to 1825, built the Carnton plantation in Franklin, Tennessee.) The estate was divided into two sections for each of his two sons: John McGavock ...
The Tennessee Titans broke ground on a new, $2.1 billion stadium Thursday with a target opening date in April 2027. And if a proposed deal between Metro and development firm The Fallon Company is ...
U.S. Rep. John Rose, R-TN District 6, called the development "transformative for East Nashville" and said he is "committed to finding more ways to support more housing."
James A. Cayce Homes. Coordinates: 36.1671°N 86.7562°W. The James A. Cayce Homes is a housing project in East Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1939-1941 as a white-only community. By the 2000s, it was the lowest-income locality in Nashville. It is the largest housing project in Nashville.
Land marked with a red outline depicts a total 30 acres of Metro-owned land on Nashville's East Bank slated for initial development. The full Metro campus is outlined in black.