Nashville’s Construction Gets National Attention

 

Nashville, courtesy Nashville Convention and Visitor's Bureau

Photo courtesy of VisitMusicCity.com

The construction cranes in Nashville have caught the eye of the New York Times, which published a story today (Oct. 14) about the changes in the city’s skyline.

Much of the article’s focus covers the growth in the Gulch and downtown, although other neighborhoods are spotlighted as well. In the piece written by Keith Schneider, the story notes:

Even Music Row, the renowned neighborhood of recording studios and understated 20th-century music industry office buildings, has been affected. At the center of the temperate enclave, which once was set apart from the escalating construction clamor, is a 96,000-square-foot, five-story, $31 million office building nearing completion that will serve music production companies and talent representatives, including SESAC, a performing rights group that is moving from its old headquarters a block away.

Read the full story at the New York Times website.

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Craig Shelburne is the General Manager at MusicRow.

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