flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Skanska completes primary construction work on Nashville’s largest ever mixed-use project

Mixed-Use

Skanska completes primary construction work on Nashville’s largest ever mixed-use project

Gresham Smith is serving as architect-of-record for the entire project and is part of the design team with Pappageorge Haymes and Gensler.


By David Malone, Associate Editor | February 24, 2021
Fifth + Broadway aerial at night

Images courtesy Gresham Smith

Over the past four years, Nashville’s first convention center has been undergoing a transformation into Fifth + Broadway, a new mixed-use development comprising 2.2 million sf. The development represents the largest single phase mixed-use project in Nashville’s history.

Fifth + Broadway is designed to be a live/work/play district in the heart of downtown Nashville. It includes a 415-foot, 386-unit apartment tower and a 24-story office tower that comprises 372,000 sf of Class A office space and amenities. The residential tower will be the tallest for-rent apartment tower in Tennessee while the office tower will include amenities such as a 19,000 sf indoor/outdoor amenity deck.

 

Fifth + Broadway office corner

 

The project will also feature 239,000 sf of entertainment, retail, and cultural space. This will include The National Museum of African American Music and Assembly Food Hall, a multi-level dining and entertainment destination with over 20 restaurants and a music venue. Additionally, 2,253 parking spots will be spread across three separate structures.

 

Fifth + Broadway metropolis corner

 

On Feb. 24, Skanska announced the completion of the core of its work as general contractor on Fifth + Broadway in advance of its March 4 opening of retail and dining. Below are some of the project’s statistical highlights:

— Approximately 250,000 pounds of explosives were used for excavation during the development phase—approximately the weight in July Fourth fireworks that Americans purchase annually.

— 15,408 tons of concrete and 3,875 tons of steel have been recycled from the demolition of the Convention Center. This total weight is equal to nearly two Eiffel Towers.

— 70,750 tons of material have been recycled from construction debris—approximately the weight of 353 blue whales.

— 98,500 cubic yards of concrete were used for this project—equal to 29 Olympic Swimming Pools.

— During the construction of Fifth + Broadway, Skanska worked through the 2019 NFL draft and CMA Fest, which brought a combined 680,000 fans to Nashville.

— 7,000 workers made this project possible, and they included 105 prime subcontractors and 61 small, minority-owned, women-owned and veteran subcontractors. The project is tracking more than $70 million to be spent on diverse businesses throughout construction.

— Skanska has logged 3.2 million work hours to date.

— If Fifth + Broadway’s three towers were stacked on top of each other, they would measure 894 feet high—equivalent to the Rockefeller Center in New York City.

— There are 1,600 stairs in Fifth + Broadway’s residential tower leading to 386 apartment units for rent.

— Fifth + Broadway’s parking garage can hold 2,145 cars, which, if parked bumper to bumper, would stretch from the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum to the Nashville Zoo.

 

Fifth + Broadway Aerial

 

Fifth + Broadway residential deck

 

Fifth + Broadway aerial photo

Tags

Related Stories

Adaptive Reuse | Aug 14, 2024

KPF unveils design for repositioning of Norman Foster’s 8 Canada Square tower in London

8 Canada Square, a Norman Foster-designed office building that’s currently the global headquarters of HSBC Holdings, will have large sections of its façade removed to create landscaped terraces. The project, designed by KPF, will be the world’s largest transformation of an office tower into a sustainable mixed-use building.

Products and Materials | Jul 31, 2024

Top building products for July 2024

BD+C Editors break down July's top 15 building products, from Façades by Design to Schweiss Doors's Strap Latch bifold door.

Casinos | Jul 26, 2024

New luxury resort casino will be regional draw for Shreveport, Louisiana area

Live! Casino & Hotel Louisiana, the first land-based casino in the Shreveport-Bossier market, recently topped off. The $270+ project will serve as a regional destination for world-class gaming, dining, entertainment, and hotel amenities.

MFPRO+ News | Jul 22, 2024

6 multifamily WAFX 2024 Prize winners

Over 30 projects tackling global challenges such as climate change, public health, and social inequality have been named winners of the World Architecture Festival’s WAFX Awards.

Senior Living Design | Jun 24, 2024

Not your grandparents’ senior living community: Redefining aging in place

Perkins Eastman’s Senior Living and Residential teams are putting a new face on home for seniors who don’t want to move away in retirement.

Mass Timber | Jun 10, 2024

5 hidden benefits of mass timber design

Mass timber is a materials and design approach that holds immense potential to transform the future of the commercial building industry, as well as our environment. 

Mixed-Use | May 22, 2024

Multifamily properties above ground-floor grocers continue to see positive rental premiums

Optimizing land usage is becoming an even bigger priority for developers. In some city centers, many large grocery stores sprawl across valuable land.

Senior Living Design | May 16, 2024

Healthy senior living campus ‘redefines the experience of aging’

MBH Architects, in collaboration with Eden Housing and Van Meter Williams Pollack LLP, announces the completion of Vivalon’s Healthy Aging Campus, a forward-looking project designed to redefine the experience of aging in Marin County.

MFPRO+ Special Reports | May 6, 2024

Top 10 trends in affordable housing

Among affordable housing developers today, there’s one commonality tying projects together: uncertainty. AEC firms share their latest insights and philosophies on the future of affordable housing in BD+C's 2023 Multifamily Annual Report.

Mixed-Use | Apr 23, 2024

A sports entertainment district is approved for downtown Orlando

This $500 million mixed-use development will take up nearly nine blocks.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021