Historic Front Street Warehouses
Category: History and Architecture Tour
Details
National Register of Historic Places
By the mid-nineteenth century, Nashville was the second largest city west of the Appalachian Mountains. Steamboats lined the dock below Fort Nashborough, and wholesale grain, cotton, and tobacco merchants built warehouses in the blocks between Market Street (now Second Avenue) and Front Street (now First Avenue). The block-deep Victorian warehouses handled bulk quantities of dry goods, hardware, and groceries, shipped down the Cumberland River, unloaded and received in the Front Street entrances facing the river, and sold from the storefronts on Market Street. As shipping on the Cumberland declined, the buildings fell into disuse or were used only as warehouses. During the 1970s, Nashville’s interest in renovation and restoration led to the opening of restaurants and shops in the century-old buildings. More recently, resurgence in downtown living has seen many of the upper floors converted to loft apartments or condominiums.
- Leon's Candy138 2nd Ave N (128 feet SW)
- Coyote Ugly Saloon154 2nd Ave N (178 feet W)
- DraftKings Sports & Social128 2nd Ave N (223 feet S)
- The Lounge @ 2nd139 2nd Ave N (315 feet SW)
- Leon's Candy138 2nd Ave N (128 feet SW)
- Boot Barn144 2nd Ave N (149 feet SW)
- Agora International Jewelry & Gifts138 2nd Ave N (189 feet SW)
- Freebird150 2nd Ave N (208 feet W)
- French's Shoes & Boots126 2nd Ave N (265 feet SW)
- The Escape Game162 3rd Ave N (505 feet W)
- Wander Nashville100 1st Ave S (538 feet SE)
- Gray Line Tennessee108 1st Ave S (544 feet SE)
- Nashville City Tour Bus by Gray Line Tennessee108 1st Ave S (544 feet SE)
- Commerce B210 Commerce St (359 feet W)
- Commerce A310 Commerce St (573 feet SW)
- 211 Commerce Garage211 Commerce St (594 feet SW)
- Third Lot204 3rd Ave N (744 feet NW)