Re: Nashville?
Posted: Sun Jan 31, 2021 5:03 pm
Are any of these developments incentivized?
I haven't seen anything if the ones I shared will have incentives attached to them. I know some other projects have included tax abatements and TIFs, but I haven't seen those mentioned much recently.
Nashville's proverbial ball is also speeding down the hill while we haven't even pushed ours over yet.kboish wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 10:12 pm This is an interactive map of the TIF projects in Nashville.
https://nashville.maps.arcgis.com/apps/ ... 90d384e886
Based on some googling, it sounds like Nashville has the same concerns about overuse of TIFs, abatements, and other business incentives. However, it also sounded like they didn't decide to stop handing them out.
Yeah, KC barley getting going and wanting to shut things down. Nashville has had like 20 tower cranes up for over ten years straight now. And they have the attention of the national development community who all want to build there now. They can probably start telling developers where to go now.normalthings wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 10:41 pmNashville's proverbial ball is also speeding down the hill while we haven't even pushed ours over yet.kboish wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 10:12 pm This is an interactive map of the TIF projects in Nashville.
https://nashville.maps.arcgis.com/apps/ ... 90d384e886
Based on some googling, it sounds like Nashville has the same concerns about overuse of TIFs, abatements, and other business incentives. However, it also sounded like they didn't decide to stop handing them out.
Big airport redevelopment and international flights. Their airport was well above STL pre-covidearthling wrote: ↑Sun Apr 18, 2021 6:05 am ^Though not surprising they have truly become the new Austin with some Atlanta thrown in. Helps to have music industry, major university, state capitol, many billionaires, above average natural beauty/winters. And like Austin, Nashville is now drawing jobs from W Coast tech companies, Oracle to invest $1.2B and bring 8500 jobs as well as Amazon actual tech jobs.
Well, after opposition from neighbors, and from some in City Planning as well, the Congress Group had the Second and Peabody project redesigned.The plan now calls for 3 towers with the tallest being 36 floors and 433ft in height. The other two towers are 32 floors/375ft and 18 floors/ 234ft. The Class A office component of the development has also been scrapped in favor of creative/co-working office space. The upper four floors of the taller building will be for sale condominiums. Miami and Boston Based Cube3 is the architect with Gresham Smith being the architect of record.Chris Stritzel wrote: ↑Sat Jan 30, 2021 7:48 pm 2nd and Peabody
Planned to become the tallest building in the State of Tennessee and City of Nashville, the 2nd and Peabody project will rise in the Rutledge Hill area of the City, which is just Southof SoBro and Downtown. The project will include two hotels, apartments, office space, 6 levels of underground parking, and retail space. The main tower will consist of the hotel and office components and stand 38-stories and 618ft in height. The shorter building will be a hotel and housing and stand 33-stories and 456ft. The Congress Group is the developer (and is the same developer doing the Four Seasons Hotel and Residences up the road). Nashville-based Gresham Smith (who designed the Nashville Yards project) will serve as the architect here. Exact numbers on hotel rooms, apartments/condos, office space and retail space is not yet available.
Renderings...
People on the Nashville forum pointed that out, but no real concerns were risen. I guess the same concern could be applied with the previous plan for the site but if the owner of that property with the radio tower didn't complain then, they most likely wont complain now.
My favorite of the three buildings is the hotel. Reminds me a little bit of the Hearst Tower in New York, just with curved windows at the corners.TheLastGentleman wrote: ↑Fri Jul 30, 2021 12:05 am This might be the first modern architecture I’ve ever seen proposed or built in nashville that I actually kinda like. It’s not a glass cube, so that alone is a step up
it was announced today that a developer from Chicago, partnered with a Nashville firm, bought the one block site for $34 million (or $10 million per acre). So the radio station is moving and a new development is planned there. No one knows the size yet.Chris Stritzel wrote: ↑Fri Jul 30, 2021 1:26 pmPeople on the Nashville forum pointed that out, but no real concerns were risen. I guess the same concern could be applied with the previous plan for the site but if the owner of that property with the radio tower didn't complain then, they most likely wont complain now.
Now we have renderings. Gensler is the architect of this one.Chris Stritzel wrote: ↑Thu Aug 05, 2021 12:49 amit was announced today that a developer from Chicago, partnered with a Nashville firm, bought the one block site for $34 million (or $10 million per acre). So the radio station is moving and a new development is planned there. No one knows the size yet.Chris Stritzel wrote: ↑Fri Jul 30, 2021 1:26 pmPeople on the Nashville forum pointed that out, but no real concerns were risen. I guess the same concern could be applied with the previous plan for the site but if the owner of that property with the radio tower didn't complain then, they most likely wont complain now.