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Bridgestone Arena is a multi-purpose venue located in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, that has established itself as a significant concert destination and primary home arena for the Nashville Predators ice hockey team. The arena, originally opened in 1996 as the Nashville Arena and later renamed Bridgestone Arena following a naming rights agreement in 2010, has hosted hundreds of major concerts and musical performances spanning diverse genres including country, rock, pop, hip-hop, and classical music. With a seating capacity exceeding 20,000 for most events, the venue ranks among the largest indoor arenas in the Southeast and serves as a cultural anchor for Nashville's entertainment district, contributing substantially to the city's economy and reputation as a major music hub.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bridgestone Arena History and Event Information |url=https://www.nashville.gov/sites/default/files/inline-files/arena_history.pdf |work=Nashville.Gov |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Bridgestone Arena is a multi-purpose indoor venue located in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, serving as the primary home of the Nashville Predators of the National Hockey League and one of the region's most active concert destinations. The arena opened on June 22, 1996, under the name Nashville Arena. It was renamed Gaylord Entertainment Center in 2001, briefly returned to the Nashville Arena name in 2007, and was renamed Bridgestone Arena in 2010 following a naming rights agreement with Bridgestone Americas. It has hosted hundreds of major concerts and musical performances spanning country, rock, pop, hip-hop, metal, and classical music. With a seating capacity of approximately 17,500 for hockey and up to 20,000 in concert configurations, the venue ranks among the larger indoor arenas in the southeastern United States and serves as a cultural anchor for Nashville's downtown entertainment district.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bridgestone Arena History and Event Information |url=https://www.nashville.gov/sites/default/files/inline-files/arena_history.pdf |work=Nashville.Gov |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref>


== History ==
== History ==


The construction of Nashville Arena began in the early 1990s as part of a broader downtown revitalization initiative aimed at attracting major league sports and entertainment events to the city. The facility opened its doors on June 22, 1996, initially serving as the home of the Nashville Kats, a hockey team competing in the International Hockey League. The $144 million construction project represented one of the largest public investments in downtown Nashville at that time and was funded through a combination of public bonds, private investment, and development partnerships. The arena's completion marked a turning point for downtown Nashville, establishing a venue capable of hosting events that previously would have required travel to nearby metropolitan areas such as Atlanta or Memphis.<ref>{{cite web |title=Nashville Arena Opens Downtown Venue |url=https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/local/2021/06/22/bridgestone-arena-celebrates-25-years-downtown/5343821001/ |work=The Tennessean |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Construction of the Nashville Arena began in the early 1990s as part of a broader downtown revitalization initiative aimed at attracting major league sports and large-scale entertainment events to the city. The $144 million project represented one of the largest public investments in downtown Nashville at that time, funded through a combination of public bonds, private investment, and development partnerships.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bridgestone Arena Celebrates 25 Years Downtown |url=https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/local/2021/06/22/bridgestone-arena-celebrates-25-years-downtown/5343821001/ |work=The Tennessean |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref> The facility opened on June 22, 1996. Its completion marked a turning point for the city, establishing a venue capable of hosting events that previously would have required travel to other major regional markets.


Following the Nashville Predators' entry into the National Hockey League in 1998, the arena underwent substantial renovations to meet NHL standards and improve overall concert capabilities. The facility underwent a major naming rights transition in 2010 when the Bridgestone Corporation, the multinational tire manufacturing company with significant operations in nearby LaVergne, Tennessee, secured a multi-year agreement to name the venue Bridgestone Arena. This partnership represented the largest naming rights deal in Nashville sports history at the time of signing. Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, the arena continued to evolve, adding premium seating sections, upgrading sound and lighting systems, and expanding hospitality facilities to accommodate the demands of major touring acts and professional sports teams. Renovations completed in 2019 included new premium club spaces, modernized concourse areas, and advanced technology installations that enhanced both the concert-going and sports-viewing experience.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bridgestone Arena Upgrades Complete |url=https://www.wpln.org/news/bridgestone-arena-unveils-new-premium-spaces/ |work=WPLN |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
The arena's first anchor tenant was the Nashville Knights, a professional hockey team competing in the East Coast Hockey League. When the Nashville Predators joined the National Hockey League in 1998, the arena underwent substantial renovations to meet NHL standards and improve its concert capabilities. Those upgrades positioned the venue to compete for major touring productions that had previously bypassed Nashville in favor of larger markets.
 
The arena's naming history reflects the shifting commercial landscape of the venue industry. It opened as the Nashville Arena in 1996, was renamed Gaylord Entertainment Center in 2001 under a naming rights deal with the Nashville-based Gaylord Entertainment Company, and reverted to the Nashville Arena name in 2007 after that agreement expired. Three years later, Bridgestone Americas, the U.S. subsidiary of the multinational tire manufacturing company with significant Tennessee operations in LaVergne, secured a naming rights agreement with the venue. The deal was reported as the largest naming rights agreement in Nashville sports history at that time.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bridgestone Arena name unveiled |url=https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/local/2010/07/01/bridgestone-arena-name-unveiled/28679961/ |work=The Tennessean |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref>
 
Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, the arena continued to evolve, adding premium seating, upgrading sound and lighting systems, and expanding hospitality facilities to accommodate the demands of major touring acts and professional sports teams. Renovations completed in 2019 included new premium club spaces, modernized concourse areas, and advanced technology installations that improved both the concert experience and sports viewing.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bridgestone Arena Unveils New Premium Spaces |url=https://www.wpln.org/news/bridgestone-arena-unveils-new-premium-spaces/ |work=WPLN |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref>
 
The COVID-19 pandemic forced the arena to suspend operations beginning in March 2020. Like most major indoor venues across the United States, Bridgestone Arena remained closed to full-capacity events for more than a year, reopening to fans in 2021 with phased capacity protocols before returning to full operations later that year. The shutdown disrupted dozens of concerts and touring productions that had been scheduled for the 2020 calendar, many of which were rescheduled into 2021 and 2022.


== Culture ==
== Culture ==


Bridgestone Arena has become deeply embedded in Nashville's cultural identity as a premier venue for live music experiences. The venue's concert programming reflects Nashville's position as a global music capital, regularly attracting world-class touring artists across all major genres. Country music performances constitute a significant portion of the arena's concert calendar, with artists such as Luke Combs, Carrie Underwood, and Chris Stapleton having performed multiple sold-out engagements at the facility. However, the arena's cultural reach extends well beyond country music, hosting major concerts from rock bands including The Rolling Stones and Coldplay, pop artists such as Taylor Swift and Ariana Grande, and hip-hop performers including Drake and Kendrick Lamar. The venue's versatility in accommodating different performance styles and audience capacities has made it a preferred stop on many major concert tours.
Bridgestone Arena has become deeply embedded in Nashville's cultural identity as a premier venue for live music. Its concert programming reflects Nashville's standing as a global music capital, regularly drawing major touring artists across every significant genre. Country music constitutes a significant share of the arena's concert calendar. Artists including Luke Combs, Carrie Underwood, and Chris Stapleton have each performed multiple sold-out engagements at the facility. But the arena's reach extends well beyond country. It has hosted major performances from rock acts including The Rolling Stones and Coldplay, pop artists including Taylor Swift and Ariana Grande, and hip-hop performers including Drake and Kendrick Lamar.


The cultural significance of Bridgestone Arena extends beyond individual concert events to encompass broader contributions to Nashville's entertainment ecosystem and tourism infrastructure. The venue has hosted major awards shows, including segments of the Country Music Association Awards and the Academy of Country Music Awards, further cementing its role in Nashville's music heritage. Large-scale entertainment events such as professional wrestling broadcasts, monster truck shows, and family entertainment productions complement the concert programming, making the arena accessible to diverse demographic audiences throughout the year. The presence of a world-class concert venue within downtown Nashville has contributed to increased hotel occupancy, restaurant patronage, and retail activity in surrounding neighborhoods, demonstrating the cultural venue's economic multiplier effects on the broader community.
The venue has also established itself as a destination for large-scale theatrical concert productions. Ghost's 2024 performances at the arena drew attention for elaborate stagecraft and production design, with the band's signature ritual-themed staging, dramatic lighting, and immersive visual elements drawing significant local interest. Reviewers noted the production as among the more ambitious arena rock shows to visit Nashville in recent years. Billy Strings, the Grammy-winning bluegrass artist, sold out multiple nights at Bridgestone Arena, a milestone that showed the venue's ability to support artists from genres not traditionally associated with arena-scale production. In 2026, Rascal Flatts announced a return to Nashville at the venue, marking one of the more anticipated country reunion engagements in the region. The Red Clay Strays brought their country-rock sound to Bridgestone Arena in 2026 as well, continuing a pattern of bookings that reflect Nashville's diverse musical identity.
 
Nashville is already home to well-known smaller live music venues. Ascend Amphitheater, situated along the Cumberland River, holds roughly 6,800 people. Marathon Music Works operates as an intimate club-scale venue. Bridgestone Arena's capacity dwarfs both, making it the default option for touring productions that require arena-scale staging, rigging infrastructure, or audience numbers that smaller facilities can't support. That distinction shapes which tours include Nashville on their itineraries.
 
Beyond individual concerts, Bridgestone Arena's cultural significance includes its role in major awards programming. The venue has hosted segments of the Country Music Association Awards and the Academy of Country Music Awards, reinforcing its place in Nashville's broader music industry infrastructure. Large-scale entertainment events including professional wrestling broadcasts, monster truck shows, and family entertainment productions complement the concert calendar and extend the arena's reach to diverse audiences throughout the year.
 
Its location within walking distance of the Country Music Hall of Fame, the honky-tonks of Lower Broadway, and the live music venues of the Gulch places Bridgestone Arena at the center of a concentrated entertainment district. That geography encourages visitors to extend their stays and experience multiple parts of the city, reinforcing the arena's role as an economic and cultural driver beyond its own walls.


== Economy ==
== Economy ==


The economic impact of Bridgestone Arena on Nashville's regional economy has been substantial and measurable across multiple sectors. As a primary anchor for downtown's entertainment district, the venue generates significant direct revenue through ticket sales, concessions, and parking operations, while also supporting employment in hospitality, security, event management, and transportation services. Tourism studies commissioned by the Nashville Convention and Visitors Bureau have consistently documented that major concert events at Bridgestone Arena attract out-of-state visitors who extend their stays to include hotel accommodations, restaurant dining, and retail shopping throughout the metropolitan area. The venue's annual economic impact has been estimated at over $250 million when accounting for direct spending by attendees, wages paid to employees, and tax revenues generated for local government entities.<ref>{{cite web |title=Economic Impact Study: Downtown Nashville Entertainment Venues |url=https://www.nashville.gov/economic-development/reports |work=Nashville Convention & Visitors Bureau |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
The economic impact of Bridgestone Arena on Nashville's regional economy has been substantial across multiple sectors. As a primary anchor for downtown's entertainment district, the venue generates direct revenue through ticket sales, concessions, and parking while supporting employment in hospitality, security, event management, and transportation services. The arena's annual economic impact has been estimated at over $250 million when accounting for direct attendee spending, employee wages, and tax revenues generated for local government.<ref>{{cite web |title=Economic Impact Study: Downtown Nashville Entertainment Venues |url=https://www.nashville.gov/economic-development/reports |work=Nashville Convention and Visitors Bureau |access-date=2024-01-15}}</ref>
 
Tourism studies commissioned by the Nashville Convention and Visitors Bureau have documented that major concert events at Bridgestone Arena consistently attract out-of-state visitors who extend their stays to include hotel accommodations, restaurant dining, and retail activity throughout the metropolitan area. Nashville's hotel and restaurant sectors have both cited major arena events as among the highest-impact drivers of midweek and weekend occupancy.
 
The employment ecosystem surrounding the arena includes hundreds of permanent and event-based positions. Full-time staff handle facility operations, maintenance, security, and administration, while event-day workers including ushers, concession staff, parking attendants, and security personnel supplement the workforce for each major event. Local businesses including catering services and technical production firms have developed specialized capabilities to support arena operations, creating indirect employment throughout the region. Real estate development and business expansion in the downtown core have also followed the venue's draw. Restaurant operators, retailers, and hotel developers have made location decisions based in part on the visitor traffic the arena generates consistently throughout the year.
 
== Venue Details and Policies ==
 
Bridgestone Arena's seating capacity varies depending on event configuration. Hockey games are held at approximately 17,500 seats. Concert configurations range from end-stage arrangements, which reduce usable capacity, to in-the-round setups that can accommodate crowds approaching 20,000. The specific configuration for any given event is typically disclosed through the venue's official ticketing channels.


The employment ecosystem surrounding Bridgestone Arena encompasses hundreds of permanent and event-based positions across multiple disciplines. Full-time staff members manage facility operations, maintenance, security, and administrative functions, while event-day employees including ushers, concession workers, parking attendants, and security personnel supplement the workforce for each major event. Local businesses including hospitality companies, catering services, and technical production firms have developed specialized capabilities to support arena operations, creating indirect employment opportunities throughout the region. The venue's presence has also encouraged real estate development and business expansion in the downtown core, with restaurant operators, retailers, and hotel developers making location decisions partially based on the venue's draw and visitor traffic patterns. Parking facilities, both public and private, have benefited from consistent demand generated by arena events, and transportation services including rideshare operations have expanded capacity to accommodate event-related demand.
Parking is available through several garages and surface lots in the immediate vicinity of the arena, including facilities managed by Nashville's downtown parking authority. Attendees are encouraged to confirm parking options and rates in advance, as availability during high-demand events can be limited. The arena is also accessible via Nashville's WeGo Public Transit bus network, and ride-share drop-off zones are designated near the main entrances.


== Attractions and Notable Events ==
For general admission concert events, the arena follows standard industry policy requiring attendees under the age of 18 to be accompanied by a parent or guardian unless otherwise specified for a particular event. Age restrictions and accompanying-adult requirements vary by show and are published on official event pages. Attendees are encouraged to review venue policies directly through the Bridgestone Arena website before purchasing tickets, as policies can differ based on event type, promoter requirements, and applicable local regulations.


Beyond serving as the primary home venue for the Nashville Predators, Bridgestone Arena regularly features prominent musical performances and entertainment events that distinguish it as a major regional attraction. The venue has hosted iconic performances by internationally recognized artists, major touring productions, and exclusive concert events that attract visitors from throughout the Southeast and beyond. Regular concert series programming includes genre-specific touring packages where multiple artists perform to enthusiastic crowds, establishing the arena as a desirable destination for music fans seeking live entertainment experiences. The arena's location within walking distance of the Honky Tonk Central, the Country Music Hall of Fame, and numerous live music venues on Broadway and in the Gulch creates a comprehensive entertainment district that encourages extended visitor stays and multi-venue experiences.
The venue's technical infrastructure supports productions requiring sophisticated staging, lighting rigs, and high-volume sound systems. That capability has made it a competitive stop for touring productions with demanding technical riders, including theatrical arena rock acts and large-format pop tours that require extended load-in periods and custom stage builds.


The venue's technical capabilities and modern infrastructure have made it competitive for hosting major entertainment productions that require sophisticated staging, lighting, and sound systems. Convention events, corporate gatherings, and sporting championships constitute secondary uses that maximize facility utilization throughout the year. The arena's success in attracting and hosting major events has established it as a reference point for Nashville's broader entertainment and sports landscape, contributing to the city's recognition as a destination for live entertainment experiences. Planned future events and renovations continue to enhance the venue's capabilities, ensuring its continued relevance as entertainment industry standards and audience expectations evolve.
== Notable Events ==
 
Bridgestone Arena regularly features prominent musical performances and entertainment events in addition to serving as the primary home of the Nashville Predators. The venue has hosted internationally recognized artists, major touring productions, and exclusive concert events that draw visitors from throughout the southeastern United States and beyond.
 
Recent years have brought a range of high-profile bookings. Billy Strings sold out multiple nights at the arena, a notable achievement for an artist rooted in bluegrass and acoustic music. Ghost's 2024 stop was widely discussed among Nashville concertgoers for its production scale, with theatrical staging drawing comparisons to the band's larger arena dates elsewhere on that tour. Rascal Flatts announced 2026 Nashville performances at the venue as part of a reunion tour. Artists including Riley Green have also performed there. The Red Clay Strays brought their country-rock sound to Bridgestone Arena in 2026 as well, continuing a pattern of bookings that reflect Nashville's diverse musical identity.
 
The arena has also hosted major sporting events beyond Predators games, including NCAA tournament rounds, professional wrestling pay-per-view broadcasts, and other championship-level competitions. Convention events and corporate gatherings fill calendar gaps between major concerts and sporting events, maximizing facility use throughout the year. That breadth of programming has established Bridgestone Arena as a consistent contributor to Nashville's recognition as a destination for live events.


{{#seo: |title=Bridgestone Arena (Concerts) | Nashville.Wiki |description=Bridgestone Arena is Nashville's premier concert venue and NHL home, hosting major touring artists and events since 1996. |type=Article }}
{{#seo: |title=Bridgestone Arena (Concerts) | Nashville.Wiki |description=Bridgestone Arena is Nashville's premier concert venue and NHL home, hosting major touring artists and events since 1996. |type=Article }}
[[Category:Nashville landmarks]]
[[Category:Nashville landmarks]]
[[Category:Nashville history]]
[[Category:Nashville history]]
== References ==
<references />

Latest revision as of 03:24, 31 May 2026

Bridgestone Arena is a multi-purpose indoor venue located in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, serving as the primary home of the Nashville Predators of the National Hockey League and one of the region's most active concert destinations. The arena opened on June 22, 1996, under the name Nashville Arena. It was renamed Gaylord Entertainment Center in 2001, briefly returned to the Nashville Arena name in 2007, and was renamed Bridgestone Arena in 2010 following a naming rights agreement with Bridgestone Americas. It has hosted hundreds of major concerts and musical performances spanning country, rock, pop, hip-hop, metal, and classical music. With a seating capacity of approximately 17,500 for hockey and up to 20,000 in concert configurations, the venue ranks among the larger indoor arenas in the southeastern United States and serves as a cultural anchor for Nashville's downtown entertainment district.[1]

History

Construction of the Nashville Arena began in the early 1990s as part of a broader downtown revitalization initiative aimed at attracting major league sports and large-scale entertainment events to the city. The $144 million project represented one of the largest public investments in downtown Nashville at that time, funded through a combination of public bonds, private investment, and development partnerships.[2] The facility opened on June 22, 1996. Its completion marked a turning point for the city, establishing a venue capable of hosting events that previously would have required travel to other major regional markets.

The arena's first anchor tenant was the Nashville Knights, a professional hockey team competing in the East Coast Hockey League. When the Nashville Predators joined the National Hockey League in 1998, the arena underwent substantial renovations to meet NHL standards and improve its concert capabilities. Those upgrades positioned the venue to compete for major touring productions that had previously bypassed Nashville in favor of larger markets.

The arena's naming history reflects the shifting commercial landscape of the venue industry. It opened as the Nashville Arena in 1996, was renamed Gaylord Entertainment Center in 2001 under a naming rights deal with the Nashville-based Gaylord Entertainment Company, and reverted to the Nashville Arena name in 2007 after that agreement expired. Three years later, Bridgestone Americas, the U.S. subsidiary of the multinational tire manufacturing company with significant Tennessee operations in LaVergne, secured a naming rights agreement with the venue. The deal was reported as the largest naming rights agreement in Nashville sports history at that time.[3]

Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, the arena continued to evolve, adding premium seating, upgrading sound and lighting systems, and expanding hospitality facilities to accommodate the demands of major touring acts and professional sports teams. Renovations completed in 2019 included new premium club spaces, modernized concourse areas, and advanced technology installations that improved both the concert experience and sports viewing.[4]

The COVID-19 pandemic forced the arena to suspend operations beginning in March 2020. Like most major indoor venues across the United States, Bridgestone Arena remained closed to full-capacity events for more than a year, reopening to fans in 2021 with phased capacity protocols before returning to full operations later that year. The shutdown disrupted dozens of concerts and touring productions that had been scheduled for the 2020 calendar, many of which were rescheduled into 2021 and 2022.

Culture

Bridgestone Arena has become deeply embedded in Nashville's cultural identity as a premier venue for live music. Its concert programming reflects Nashville's standing as a global music capital, regularly drawing major touring artists across every significant genre. Country music constitutes a significant share of the arena's concert calendar. Artists including Luke Combs, Carrie Underwood, and Chris Stapleton have each performed multiple sold-out engagements at the facility. But the arena's reach extends well beyond country. It has hosted major performances from rock acts including The Rolling Stones and Coldplay, pop artists including Taylor Swift and Ariana Grande, and hip-hop performers including Drake and Kendrick Lamar.

The venue has also established itself as a destination for large-scale theatrical concert productions. Ghost's 2024 performances at the arena drew attention for elaborate stagecraft and production design, with the band's signature ritual-themed staging, dramatic lighting, and immersive visual elements drawing significant local interest. Reviewers noted the production as among the more ambitious arena rock shows to visit Nashville in recent years. Billy Strings, the Grammy-winning bluegrass artist, sold out multiple nights at Bridgestone Arena, a milestone that showed the venue's ability to support artists from genres not traditionally associated with arena-scale production. In 2026, Rascal Flatts announced a return to Nashville at the venue, marking one of the more anticipated country reunion engagements in the region. The Red Clay Strays brought their country-rock sound to Bridgestone Arena in 2026 as well, continuing a pattern of bookings that reflect Nashville's diverse musical identity.

Nashville is already home to well-known smaller live music venues. Ascend Amphitheater, situated along the Cumberland River, holds roughly 6,800 people. Marathon Music Works operates as an intimate club-scale venue. Bridgestone Arena's capacity dwarfs both, making it the default option for touring productions that require arena-scale staging, rigging infrastructure, or audience numbers that smaller facilities can't support. That distinction shapes which tours include Nashville on their itineraries.

Beyond individual concerts, Bridgestone Arena's cultural significance includes its role in major awards programming. The venue has hosted segments of the Country Music Association Awards and the Academy of Country Music Awards, reinforcing its place in Nashville's broader music industry infrastructure. Large-scale entertainment events including professional wrestling broadcasts, monster truck shows, and family entertainment productions complement the concert calendar and extend the arena's reach to diverse audiences throughout the year.

Its location within walking distance of the Country Music Hall of Fame, the honky-tonks of Lower Broadway, and the live music venues of the Gulch places Bridgestone Arena at the center of a concentrated entertainment district. That geography encourages visitors to extend their stays and experience multiple parts of the city, reinforcing the arena's role as an economic and cultural driver beyond its own walls.

Economy

The economic impact of Bridgestone Arena on Nashville's regional economy has been substantial across multiple sectors. As a primary anchor for downtown's entertainment district, the venue generates direct revenue through ticket sales, concessions, and parking while supporting employment in hospitality, security, event management, and transportation services. The arena's annual economic impact has been estimated at over $250 million when accounting for direct attendee spending, employee wages, and tax revenues generated for local government.[5]

Tourism studies commissioned by the Nashville Convention and Visitors Bureau have documented that major concert events at Bridgestone Arena consistently attract out-of-state visitors who extend their stays to include hotel accommodations, restaurant dining, and retail activity throughout the metropolitan area. Nashville's hotel and restaurant sectors have both cited major arena events as among the highest-impact drivers of midweek and weekend occupancy.

The employment ecosystem surrounding the arena includes hundreds of permanent and event-based positions. Full-time staff handle facility operations, maintenance, security, and administration, while event-day workers including ushers, concession staff, parking attendants, and security personnel supplement the workforce for each major event. Local businesses including catering services and technical production firms have developed specialized capabilities to support arena operations, creating indirect employment throughout the region. Real estate development and business expansion in the downtown core have also followed the venue's draw. Restaurant operators, retailers, and hotel developers have made location decisions based in part on the visitor traffic the arena generates consistently throughout the year.

Venue Details and Policies

Bridgestone Arena's seating capacity varies depending on event configuration. Hockey games are held at approximately 17,500 seats. Concert configurations range from end-stage arrangements, which reduce usable capacity, to in-the-round setups that can accommodate crowds approaching 20,000. The specific configuration for any given event is typically disclosed through the venue's official ticketing channels.

Parking is available through several garages and surface lots in the immediate vicinity of the arena, including facilities managed by Nashville's downtown parking authority. Attendees are encouraged to confirm parking options and rates in advance, as availability during high-demand events can be limited. The arena is also accessible via Nashville's WeGo Public Transit bus network, and ride-share drop-off zones are designated near the main entrances.

For general admission concert events, the arena follows standard industry policy requiring attendees under the age of 18 to be accompanied by a parent or guardian unless otherwise specified for a particular event. Age restrictions and accompanying-adult requirements vary by show and are published on official event pages. Attendees are encouraged to review venue policies directly through the Bridgestone Arena website before purchasing tickets, as policies can differ based on event type, promoter requirements, and applicable local regulations.

The venue's technical infrastructure supports productions requiring sophisticated staging, lighting rigs, and high-volume sound systems. That capability has made it a competitive stop for touring productions with demanding technical riders, including theatrical arena rock acts and large-format pop tours that require extended load-in periods and custom stage builds.

Notable Events

Bridgestone Arena regularly features prominent musical performances and entertainment events in addition to serving as the primary home of the Nashville Predators. The venue has hosted internationally recognized artists, major touring productions, and exclusive concert events that draw visitors from throughout the southeastern United States and beyond.

Recent years have brought a range of high-profile bookings. Billy Strings sold out multiple nights at the arena, a notable achievement for an artist rooted in bluegrass and acoustic music. Ghost's 2024 stop was widely discussed among Nashville concertgoers for its production scale, with theatrical staging drawing comparisons to the band's larger arena dates elsewhere on that tour. Rascal Flatts announced 2026 Nashville performances at the venue as part of a reunion tour. Artists including Riley Green have also performed there. The Red Clay Strays brought their country-rock sound to Bridgestone Arena in 2026 as well, continuing a pattern of bookings that reflect Nashville's diverse musical identity.

The arena has also hosted major sporting events beyond Predators games, including NCAA tournament rounds, professional wrestling pay-per-view broadcasts, and other championship-level competitions. Convention events and corporate gatherings fill calendar gaps between major concerts and sporting events, maximizing facility use throughout the year. That breadth of programming has established Bridgestone Arena as a consistent contributor to Nashville's recognition as a destination for live events.

References