List of tallest buildings in Nashville
| Skyline of Nashville | |
|---|---|
Nashville in 2023, looking south | |
| Tallest building | 333 Commerce (1994) |
| Tallest building height | 617 ft (188.1 m) |
| First 150 m+ building | 333 Commerce |
| Number of tall buildings (2025) | |
| Taller than 100 m (328 ft) | 30 |
| Taller than 150 m (492 ft) | 4 |
| Number of tall buildings — feet | |
| Taller than 300 ft (91.4 m) | 39 |
Nashville is the capital and largest city in the U.S state of Tennessee, with a metropolitan area of 2.1 million people. Nashville is home to 39 buildings with a height greater than 300 feet (91 m), four of which are taller than 492 feet (150 m), making it the largest skyline in Tennessee ahead of Memphis, and in the East South Central states. The tallest building in the city and the state is 333 Commerce, formerly and still commonly known as the AT&T Building, which rises 617 feet (188 m) in downtown Nashville and was completed in 1994.[1] Since the mid-2010s, Nashville has been undergoing an unprecedented skyscraper boom.
High-rise buildings first appeared in Nashville with the construction of the 12-story First National Bank Building (now the Downtown Courtyard Hotel) in 1905.[2] The city's skyline remained short until the completion of the modernist Life & Casualty Tower in 1957.[3] At 409 ft (125 m), it was much taller than any other building in Nashville at the time. From the 1970s to the mid-1990s, the city added several office and hotel skyscrapers downtown, culminating with the completion of the AT&T Building in 1994. Nicknamed the "Batman Building" due to its shape, it is one of Nashville's most recognizable icons.
The 2000s saw a construction boom in downtown, notable high-rises of which include Symphony Place and Viridian Tower. With continued population growth, Nashville's skyline overtook that of Memphis to become the largest in the state. In the mid-2010s, a much larger construction boom began that has significantly expanded Nashville's high-rise footprint. 27 of the city's 39 buildings over 300 ft (91 m)—over two thirds—have been built since 2015, including its second, third, and fourth-tallest buildings: Four Seasons Hotel and Residences, 505, and The Pinnacle. The Pinnacle is part of Nashville Yards, a 19-acre mixed-use development consisting of several high-rises, including two developed by Amazon. Construction on Paramount Tower began in 2025; it is expected to be complete in 2028, surpassing 333 Commerce as Nashville's tallest building at 750 ft (229 m).[4]
Most of Nashville's high-rises are in downtown, southwest of the Cumberland River that runs through the city. Before the 2010s, the core of the skyline was north of Broadway and east of Rosa L Parks Boulevard; since then, it has expanded southwards and westwards. The Gulch, on the southern end of downtown, has been dramatically transformed by new development.[5] The skyline has also extended past Interstate 40 towards Midtown. The two-tower Broadwest development, completed in 2022, are the tallest buildings there.
History
Number of buildings by height in Nashville by the end of each year, based on the list below. Click on the legend to toggle a specific height on or off. View chart definition.
Cityscape
Map of tallest buildings
The map below shows the location of every building taller than 300 feet (91 m) in Nashville. Each marker is numbered by the building's height rank, and colored by the decade of its completion.
All buildings taller than 300 ft (91 m) in Nashville.
- 1950s and before
- 1960s
- 1970s
- 1980s
- 1990s
- 2000s
- 2010s
- 2020s
1
333 Commerce2
Four Seasons Hotel and Residences3
5054
The Pinnacle at Nashville Yards5
Fifth Third Center6
Prime7
William R. Snodgrass Tennessee Tower8
Bridgestone Tower9
Amazon Tower Two10
The Emory11
Alcove12
Symphony Place13
Life & Casualty Tower14
Conrad Hotel and Residences15
Nashville City Center16
The Place at Fifth + Broadway17
James K. Polk State Office Building18
JW Marriott Nashville19
Renaissance Nashville Hotel20
1 Hotel and Embassy Suites21
Viridian Tower22
The Everett23
805 Lea24
501 Commerce25
One22One26
One Nashville Place27
UBS Tower28
The Pullman at Gulch Union29
SoBro30
Amazon Tower One31
222 2nd Avenue South32
Broadwest Office Tower33
Modera McGavock34
Olive at Peabody Union35
1200 Broadway36
Westin Music City37
Grand Hyatt Nashville38
West End Tower39
Sheraton Nashville DowntownTallest buildings
This list ranks completed buildings in Nashville that stand at least 300 feet (91 m) as of 2025, based on standard height measurement. This includes spires and architectural details but does not include antenna masts. The “Year” column indicates the year of completion. Buildings tied in height are sorted by year of completion, and then alphabetically.
Was the tallest building in Nashville upon completion
| Rank | Name | Image | Coordinates | Height | Floors | Year | Purpose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 333 Commerce | 36°09′45″N 86°46′37″W / 36.162399°N 86.776955°W | 617 (188.1) | 33 | 1994 | Office | Tallest building in Nashville and the state of Tennessee. Formerly and still commonly known as the AT&T Building. Also nicknamed The Batman Building due to its roof and spires resembling the Batman symbol. Tallest building completed in Nashville in the 1990s.[6][7] | |
| 2 | Four Seasons Hotel and Residences | 36°09′37″N 86°46′25″W / 36.160316°N 86.773621°W | 542 (165.2) | 40 | 2022 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use hotel and residential building. Located at 151 First Avenue South, the skyscraper offers 236 hotel rooms in addition to private residences. Tallest building completed in Nashville in the 2020s so far.[8] | |
| 3 | 505 | 36°09′46″N 86°46′49″W / 36.162834°N 86.78038°W | 522 (159.1) | 46 | 2018 | Residential | Tallest residential building in Tennessee. Tallest building completed in Nashville in the 2010s.[9][10][11][12] | |
| 4 | The Pinnacle at Nashville Yards | 36°09′35″N 86°47′08″W / 36.159683°N 86.78566°W | 504 (153.6) | 37 | 2025 | Office | The tallest high-rise in the multi-tower Nashville Yards project.[13][14][15] | |
| 5 | Fifth Third Center | 36°09′50″N 86°46′49″W / 36.16378°N 86.780174°W | 490 (149.4) | 30 | 1986 | Office | Originally known as the Third National Financial Center. Tallest building completed in Nashville in the 1980s.[16][17] | |
| 6 | Prime | 36°09′41″N 86°47′03″W / 36.161282°N 86.784065°W | 456 (139) | 39 | 2024 | Residential | One of the two Giarratana Towers.[18] | |
| 7 | William R. Snodgrass Tennessee Tower | 36°09′50″N 86°47′06″W / 36.163895°N 86.784889°W | 452 (137.8) | 31 | 1970 | Office | Originally the National Life Center. Tallest building in Nashville from 1970 to 1994. Tallest building completed in Nashville in the 1970s.[19][20] | |
| 8 | Bridgestone Tower | 36°09′32″N 86°46′31″W / 36.158752°N 86.775299°W | 444 (135.2) | 31 | 2017 | Office | The headquarters of Bridgestone for the Americas. Also known as Bridgestone Americas Tower.[21][22] | |
| 9 | Amazon Tower Two | 36°09′41″N 86°47′13″W / 36.16146°N 86.78696°W | 420 (128)[i] | 28 | 2023 | Office | One of two towers located in the Nashville Yards mixed-use development. Houses Amazon's Operations Center of Excellence.[23][24] | |
| 10 | The Emory | 36°09′36″N 86°47′03″W / 36.159907°N 86.784057°W | 420 (128) | 35 | 2025 | Residential | One of multiple Nashville Yards residential towers. Offers for-purchase condos.[25][26] | |
| 11 | Alcove | 36°09′42″N 86°47′06″W / 36.161575°N 86.78492°W | 419 (127.8) | 34 | 2023 | Residential | First of three Giarratana-led residential towers located on the fringe of the Nashville Yards development.[27][28] | |
| 12 | Symphony Place | 36°09′37″N 86°46′29″W / 36.160275°N 86.774818°W | 417 (127.1) | 29 | 2010 | Office | Also known as The Pinnacle at Symphony Place.[29] | |
| 13 | The Place at Fifth + Broadway | 36°09′38″N 86°46′48″W / 36.160637°N 86.780037°W | 415 (126.5) | 34 | 2020 | Residential | Tallest for-rent residential building in Tennessee.[30] | |
| 14 | Life & Casualty Tower | 36°09′48″N 86°46′45″W / 36.16338°N 86.779068°W | 409 (124.7) | 30 | 1957 | Office | Commonly referred to as the L & C Tower, and is considered a quality example of modernist high-rise design. Tallest building in Nashville from 1957 to 1970. Tallest building completed in Nashville in the 1950s.[31][32] | |
| 15 | The Everett | 36°09′35″N 86°47′05″W / 36.159628°N 86.784713°W | 409 (124.7) | 34 | 2025 | Residential | The smaller of two residential twin towers in Nashville Yards.[33] | |
| 16 | Conrad Hotel and Residences | 36°09′16″N 86°47′40″W / 36.154423°N 86.794434°W | 404 (123) | 34 | 2022 | MIxed-use | Tallest building in Midtown. Part of the Broadwest development and located at 1600 West End Avenue, this building offers a 14-floor hotel component in addition to 220 condominiums. Also known as The Residences at Broadwest.[34][35] | |
| 17 | Nashville City Center | 36°09′50″N 86°46′54″W / 36.163914°N 86.781792°W | 402 (122.5) | 27 | 1988 | Office | [36][37] | |
| 18 | James K. Polk State Office Building | 36°09′53″N 86°46′54″W / 36.164646°N 86.781784°W | 392 (119.5) | 24 | 1981 | Office | [38][39] | |
| 19 | JW Marriott Nashville | 36°09′23″N 86°46′52″W / 36.156456°N 86.781029°W | 386 (117.6) | 35 | 2018 | Hotel | [40][41] | |
| 20 | Renaissance Nashville Hotel | 36°09′39″N 86°46′52″W / 36.160744°N 86.781105°W | 385 (117.3) | 35 | 1987 | Hotel | [42][43] | |
| 21 | 1 Hotel and Embassy Suites | 36°09′27″N 86°46′49″W / 36.157623°N 86.780159°W | 384 (117) | 26 | 2022 | Residential | Located across Demonbreun Street from the Nashville Convention Center, the Embassy Suites building is one of three hotel structures sitting adjacent to one another (with 1 Hotel and Cambria Hotel as the two others).[44][45][46] | |
| 22 | Viridian Tower | 36°09′47″N 86°46′46″W / 36.163155°N 86.779396°W | 378 (115.2) | 31 | 2006 | Residential | Tallest building completed in Nashville in the 2000s.[47] | |
| 23 | 805 Lea | 36°09′14″N 86°46′48″W / 36.153912°N 86.780106°W | 370 (112.7) | 31 | 2021 | Residential | Located in downtown's SoBro district, this tower offers 354 residential units.[48][49] | |
| 24 | 501 Commerce | 36°09′41″N 86°46′46″W / 36.161457°N 86.779396°W | 361 (110) | 26 | 2020 | Office | [50][51] | |
| 25 | One22One | 36°09′21″N 86°47′18″W / 36.155884°N 86.788292°W | 360 (109.7) | 26 | 2023 | Office | [52][53] | |
| 26 | One Nashville Place | 36°09′46″N 86°46′41″W / 36.162838°N 86.777962°W | 359 (109.4) | 23 | 1985 | Office | [54][55] | |
| 27 | UBS Tower | 36°09′57″N 86°46′47″W / 36.165848°N 86.779587°W | 354 (107.9) | 28 | 1974 | Office | [56][57] | |
| 28 | The Pullman at Gulch Union | 36°09′17″N 86°47′13″W / 36.154761°N 86.786925°W | 348 (106) | 31 | 2024 | Residential | Located at 1222 Demonbreun.[58][59] | |
| 29 | SoBro | 36°09′34″N 86°46′26″W / 36.15958°N 86.774025°W | 345 (105.2) | 32 | 2016 | Residential | Also known as Placemaker Premier SoBro.[60][61][62][63] | |
| 30 | Amazon Tower One | 36°09′39″N 86°47′12″W / 36.16075°N 86.78660°W | 344 (105)[i] | 21 | 2020 | Office | Located at 1010 Church Street, in the Nashville Yards Development, this is the first of two towers developed for Amazon's Operations Center of Excellence.[64] | |
| 31 | 222 2nd Avenue South | 36°09′35″N 86°46′24″W / 36.159634°N 86.773315°W | 326 (99.4) | 26 | 2017 | Office | [65][66] | |
| 32 | Broadwest Office Tower | 36°09′17″N 86°47′36″W / 36.15459°N 86.79345°W | 325 (99) | 21 | 2022 | Office | Located at 1600 West End Avenue in the Broadwest development, this tower offers 21 floors of class A office space.[67] | |
| 33 | Modera McGavock | 36°09′20″N 86°47′17″W / 36.155422°N 86.78797°W | 325 (99) | 29 | 2025 | Residential | [68] | |
| 34 | Olive at Peabody Union | 36°09′32″N 86°46′10″W / 36.158932°N 86.76931°W | 325 (99)[ii] | 27 | 2025 | Residential | Located at 30 Peabody Street, the tower sits adjacent to a six-story office building owned by Eakin Partners and completed in 2019.[69][70] | |
| 35 | 1200 Broadway | 36°09′24″N 86°47′17″W / 36.156754°N 86.787987°W | 324 (98.8) | 26 | 2019 | Mixed-use | This office and residential mixed-use high-rise offers a ground-level Whole Foods grocery store.[71][72] | |
| 36 | Westin Music City | 36°09′18″N 86°46′51″W / 36.155125°N 86.780746°W | 323 (98.5) | 27 | 2016 | Hotel | [73][74][75][76] | |
| 37 | Grand Hyatt Nashville | 36°09′29″N 86°47′06″W / 36.158085°N 86.78508°W | 305 (93) | 25 | 2020 | Hotel | Part of Nashville Yards.[77] | |
| 38 | West End Tower | 36°08′49″N 86°48′26″W / 36.146957°N 86.807106°W | 305 (93) | 20 | 2021 | Residential | Located on the western edge of the Vanderbilt University campus and overlooking West End Avenue. The Collegiate Gothic-style features student apartments.[78] | |
| 39 | Sheraton Nashville Downtown | 36°09′48″N 86°46′59″W / 36.163326°N 86.783089°W | 300 (91.4) | 27 | 1975 | Hotel | [79][80] |
Tallest under construction or proposed
Under construction
The following table ranks buildings under construction in Nashville that are expected to be at least 300 ft (91 m) tall as of 2025, based on standard height measurement. The “Year” column indicates the expected year of completion. Buildings that are on hold are not included.
| Name | Height | Floors | Year | Purpose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paramount Tower | 750 (229) | 60 | 2028 | Residential | Will become Nashville and Tennessee's tallest building upon completion. Located at 1010 Church Street. Nashville based Giarratana Development is developing the site with a tower with 500 residential units. In early August 2025, the company landed a $340 million loan and full-scale construction began in early September 2025.[81] |
| Pendry Hotel and Residences | 388 (118) | 30 | 2027 | MIxed-use | Mixed-use residential and hotel building. Full scale work started in July 2025.[82] |
| Ray Nashville | 360 (110) | 32 | 2027 | Mixed-use | Located at 601 Lafayette St., this future high-rise will offer 411 residential units, 373 parking spaces, and 6,000 square feet of retail.[83] |
| 1100 Porter Marriott Edition Hotel | 355 (108) | 28 | 2027 | Mixed-use | Scale, use, and height have been updated as 12 floors were added to the project. Will now include both the hotel and condos. |
| Albion Music Row Tower One | 350 (107) | 29 | 2027 | Residential | Topped out. Located at 14th and McGavock in Midtown, this will be the taller of two residential towers planned for the site and will offer 458 units.[84] |
| Voce | 303 (92) | 25 | 2027 | Mixed-use | To be located at intersection of Hayes and 18th in Midtown. Will include a 16 suite hotel, 194 condo units, 60,000 sq. ft. of office, 11,000 sq. ft. of retail, a 4,000-square foot restaurant, and a 700 capacity garage. Preliminary site work was undertaken in late 2024 and $130 million construction loan has been secured. Full scale work is to start by 2025's end. |
| The Motley
Tower One |
300 (91) | 26 | 2027 | Residential | Located at 1401 Church St (14th and Church), this is the first of a planned three-tower residential complex collectively called The Motley. The north tower, construction on which continues, will offer 326 units and 14,00 square feet of retail space.[85][86] |
Proposed
This table ranks approved and proposed skyscrapers in Nashville that are planned to be at least 300 ft (91 m) tall as of 2025, based on standard height measurement. The “Year” column indicates the expected year of completion. A dash “–“ indicates information about the building is unknown or has not been released.
| Name | Height | Floors | Year | Purpose | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| St. Regis Hotel and Condominiums | 651 (198) | 46 | – | Mixed-use | Approved | Mixed-use residential and hotel building. To be built on the park lot next to the JW Marriott. Groundbreaking sought for 2025. |
| 319 Peabody St. | 636 (194) | 53 | 2028 | Mixed-use | Approved | Mixed-use residential and hotel building. The tower is slated to offer 405 hotel rooms, 104 condos and around 11,000 square feet of retail space.[87] |
| Ritz Carlton Hotel & Residences | 569 (173) | 46 | – | Mixed-use | Proposed | Mixed-use residential and hotel building. Site at 12th and Demonbreun being eyed for project that previously was planned for SoBro Roundabout. |
| 11 North, Tower One | 525 (160) | 47 | 2033 | Residential | Proposed | Tallest of three residential towers planned for a 10 year build out. |
| The Motley, Tower Three | 500 (152) | 44 | – | Residential | Proposed | Four tower project at the old dairy processing lot in midtown. |
| The Autograph Hotel by White Lodging | 485 (148) | 35 | 2028 | Hotel | Approved | Will be developed by a firm from Indiana. Located across the street from the JW Marriott Hotel and Music City Center. |
| Reed Tower One | 473 (144) | 40 | – | Mixed-use | Proposed | Located at 1525 Church Street, The Jim Reed redevelopment will have 6 towers over 20 stories. It will have 1.5 million square feet of office space, 100,000 square feet in retail, 1,000 residential units and 350 hotel rooms. Eyeing a start mid 2023 |
| 531 Second Ave., Tower One | 433 (132) | 36 | – | Residential | Approved | 531 Second ave. The Boston developer who is developing the 40 story Four Seasons hotel. The developer has downgraded to 38 stories now 36 stories and has added a 18-story building to the proposal.[88] |
| 10th & Clark Residential, Tower One | 409 (125) | 37 | – | Residential | Proposed | 10th + Clark Residential will be a two tower project. Tower one will stand 37 stories/409’ and yield 414 units. The site encompasses 2.16 acres at 810 Lea Ave. and 905 Clark Place, just to the west of The Westin Hotel. |
| Rutledge Hill, Tower Two | 400 (122) | 35 | – | Residential | Proposed | Tallest of a three tower project proposed for a new culinary arts district in Southbank. |
| The Motley, Tower Two | 393 (120) | 32 | – | Residential | Proposed | Four tower project at the old dairy processing lot in midtown. |
| 531 Second Ave. Tower Two | 375 (114) | 32 | – | Residential | Approved | Located at 531 Second ave.[88] |
| 901 Dr Martin Luther King Blvd | 375 (114) | 33 | – | Residential | Approved | Newest Tony Giarratana's residential project. There will be an affordable housing component included. |
| Gulch Union Tower Three | 372 (113) | 28 | – | Residential | Approved | Located at 1207 McGavock Street. Demolition of the existing building on the site is in progress. |
| 10th & Clark Residential, Tower 2 | 354 (108) | 34 | – | Residential | Proposed | 10th + Clark Residential will be a two tower project. Tower Two will stand 32 stories/354’ and yield 354 units. The site encompasses 2.16 acres at 810 Lea Ave. and 905 Clark Place, just to the west of The Westin Hotel. |
| Paseo South Gulch, Tower Four | 350 (107) | 22 | – | Residential | Proposed | Is a new addition to the Paseo South development. Will include plans of 1,500 parking spaces, 396 units, 11,180 of retail square feet.[89] |
| Reed, Tower Two | 330 (101) | 27 | – | Mixed-use | Proposed | Located at 1525 Church Street, The Jim Reed redevelopment will have 6 towers over 20 stories. It will have 1.5 million square feet of office space, 100,000 square feet in retail, 1,000 residential units and 350 hotel rooms. Eyeing a start mid 2023 |
| Reed, Tower Three | 330 (101) | 27 | – | Mixed-use | Proposed | Located at 1525 Church Street, The Jim Reed redevelopment will have 6 towers over 20 stories. It will have 1.5 million square feet of office space, 100,000 square feet in retail, 1,000 residential units and 350 hotel rooms. Eyeing a start mid 2023 |
| Reed, Tower Four | 330 (101) | 27 | – | Mixed-use | Proposed | Located at 1525 Church Street, The Jim Reed redevelopment will have 6 towers over 20 stories. It will have 1.5 million square feet of office space, 100,000 square feet in retail, 1,000 residential units and 350 hotel rooms. Eyeing a start mid 2023 |
| 125 11th Ave North Tower | 322 (98) | 26 | 2027 | Residential | Proposed |
125 11th Ave. North will be a 26-story, 322' residential tower featuring 387 units, 17,000 sq. ft. of ground level restaurant/retail, and internal garage (2 levels below grade, 2 above) with about 425 spaces. It is being developed by Flank, Inc., and will serve as a companion tower to their 21-story Gibson Residences currently U.C. directly to the west. There will be an upper patio/plaza that connects the two over Comer's Alley and fronting the Church Street Viaduct.[90] |
| Reed Tower Five | 320 (98) | 26 | – | Mixed-use | Proposed | Located at 1525 Church Street, The Jim Reed redevelopment will have 6 towers over 20 stories. It will have 1.5 million square feet of office space, 100,000 square feet in retail, 1,000 residential units and 350 hotel rooms. Eyeing a start mid 2023 |
| 11 North, Tower Two | 313 (95) | 28 | 2033 | Residential | Proposed | Second tallest of a three tower residential project with 1,475 total units. |
| 11 North, Tower Three | 311 (95) | 29 | 2033 | Residential | Proposed | Third of a three tower residential project off Church St with a total of 1,475 units. |
Timeline of tallest buildings
This lists buildings that once held the title of tallest building in Nashville. The first skyscraper in the city was the First National Bank Building, now the Courtyard Hotel, from 1905 until 1908. This table excludes the Tennessee State Capitol, which if counted, would have been the tallest building in Tennesse at 206.6 ft (63.0 m) tall from 1859 to 1957.
| Name | Image | Street address | Years as tallest | Height | Floors | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First National Bank Building | 170 Fourth Avenue North | 1905–1908 | 170 (52) | 12 | [2] | |
| The Stahlman | 211 Union Street | 1908–1957 | 180 (55) | 12 | [91] | |
| Life & Casualty Tower | 401 Church Street | 1957–1970 | 409 (125) | 30 | [31] | |
| William R. Snodgrass Tennessee Tower | 312 Rosa L. Parks Boulevard | 1970–1994 | 452 (138) | 31 | [92] | |
| 333 Commerce | 333 Commerce Street | 1994–present | 617 (188) | 33 | [93] |
References
- General
- "High-rise Buildings of Nashville". Emporis.com. Archived from the original on March 22, 2015. Retrieved November 14, 2008.
- Specific
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- ^ a b "Courtyard Nashville Downtown". Emporis.com. Archived from the original on March 3, 2007. Retrieved November 15, 2008.
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- ^ "1010 Church Street - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com. Retrieved October 11, 2025.
- ^ Kaler, Tracy (July 12, 2025). "A Neglected Nashville Railyard Is Now One of the City's Hottest Neighborhoods". www.mansionglobal.com. Retrieved October 11, 2025.
- ^ "Home". 333 Commerce. Cushman & Wakefield. Retrieved August 17, 2024.
- ^ "AT&T Building". Retrieved September 2, 2025.
- ^ Bowles, Laken (March 18, 2019). "Four Seasons hotel, private residences coming to downtown Nashville". NewsChannel5.com. Retrieved March 20, 2019.
- ^ Williams, William (September 16, 2015). "Mid-November groundbreaking slated for 505 skyscraper". Nashville Post. Archived from the original on September 21, 2015. Retrieved September 16, 2015.
- ^ Sichko, Adam (April 2, 2015). "Giarratana lands more money for downtown skyscraper — with a new look". Nashville Business Journal. Archived from the original on April 7, 2015. Retrieved April 7, 2015.
- ^ Ward, Getahn (April 2, 2015). "Giarratana raises $60M for 505 tower, releases renderings". The Tennessean. Archived from the original on April 7, 2015. Retrieved April 7, 2015.
- ^ "505". The Skyscraper Center. Retrieved October 15, 2024.
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- ^ Patricia, Wilson (March 18, 2022). "The Yards Nashville: A Complete Guide". NashvilleNownext. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
- ^ "What's Now & Next Along Platform Way At Nashville Yards". CITY NOW NEXT. March 18, 2022. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 29, 2021.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Fifth Third Center - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
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- ^ "Work set to resume on second Amazon tower". April 12, 2021.
- ^ Mazza, Sandy. “New Designs Presented for Nashville Yards, the City's Biggest Development.” USA Today, Gannett Satellite Information Network, 27 Jan. 2020, www.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/01/06/nashville-yards-new-designs-reveal-plans/2806296001/.
- ^ "Emory - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
- ^ Broadus, Jessica. "New High Rise Condos in Nashville | Luxury Living Downtown". jessica broaddus Real estate.
- ^ "Alcove by Giarratana".
- ^ "Alcove - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
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- ^ "Fifth + Broadway apartment tower topped". Nashville Post. July 31, 2019. Retrieved July 31, 2019.
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- ^ "Life & Casualty Tower". SkyscraperPage.com. Retrieved January 1, 2009.
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- ^ Mazza, Sandy. "At Broadwest, Nashville scores another luxury hotel: 'It's going to be absolutely beautiful'". The Tennessean. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
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- ^ "Nashville City Center - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com. Retrieved October 10, 2025.
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