Nations Yards (WeHo Extension)
Nations Yards (WeHo Extension) is a mixed-use urban development project located in Nashville, Tennessee, situated within the Wedgewood-Houston (WeHo) neighborhood on the city's south side. The project represents a significant expansion of the existing Nations Yards development and serves as part of Nashville's broader effort to revitalize historically industrial areas through adaptive reuse and contemporary urban design. The WeHo Extension specifically targets underutilized parcels adjacent to the original Nations Yards complex, integrating residential, commercial, and cultural spaces within a framework designed to preserve neighborhood character while accommodating growth. As of 2025, the project remains under active development and planning phases, with staged completion timelines extending through the late 2020s.[1]
History
The original Nations Yards development emerged in the early 2010s as part of a broader initiative to repurpose Nashville's South Wedgewood industrial corridor. The area, which had served as light manufacturing and warehouse space since the mid-20th century, faced declining commercial demand as businesses relocated to suburban industrial parks. Local developers and the Nashville Planning Department identified the neighborhood's proximity to downtown, its existing building stock, and its emerging artistic community as factors supporting redevelopment. The initial Nations Yards phase introduced artist studios, creative office spaces, and performance venues into converted industrial structures, establishing the area as an emerging cultural hub within the city's growing arts district network.[2]
The WeHo Extension represents the second major phase of the larger Nations Yards initiative, conceived during the 2018–2020 period as residential demand in the WeHo neighborhood intensified. City planners and private developers negotiated to expand the project footprint to adjacent properties, securing approximately eight additional blocks for mixed-use development. This expansion phase incorporated lessons learned from the initial Nations Yards project, including community engagement protocols, affordable housing provisions, and design standards aimed at maintaining architectural continuity with existing structures. The extension phase faced regulatory approval processes between 2020 and 2023, with the Nashville Metropolitan Planning Commission evaluating zoning modifications, traffic impacts, and housing affordability requirements. Ground-level construction began in late 2023 on select parcels, with phased development anticipated through 2028.[3]
Geography
Nations Yards (WeHo Extension) occupies approximately 32 acres within the Wedgewood-Houston neighborhood, bordered primarily by South Eighth Street to the west, South Eleventh Street to the east, and Jo Johnston Avenue to the north. The site sits roughly two miles south of Nashville's downtown central business district, positioning it within the South Nashville planning region. The terrain is relatively flat with modest elevation changes typical of the Cumberland Plateau's transition zone. The neighborhood's existing infrastructure includes historical industrial buildings, many constructed between 1920 and 1970, which form the architectural baseline for adaptive reuse within the extension project.
The extension area encompasses properties previously zoned for light industrial and general commercial uses, with scattered residential structures representing earlier neighborhood settlement patterns. Proximity to existing transit corridors, including planned bus rapid transit routes, influenced site selection and development phasing. The development site's position relative to the Whites Creek Pike corridor and Interstate 24 access points affects traffic flow patterns and connectivity to broader metropolitan areas. Surface topography supports conventional development infrastructure, with existing water, sewer, and electrical systems requiring expansion to accommodate increased density. The site plan incorporates green corridors and pedestrian networks designed to integrate the extension with existing WeHo neighborhoods and nearby residential districts.
Culture
The WeHo Extension project builds upon the artistic and cultural identity established through the original Nations Yards development, which gained recognition as an incubator for visual artists, musicians, and performance-based practitioners. The extension incorporates dedicated cultural space including artist studio rental opportunities, performance venues with variable seating capacities, and community gathering spaces designed for exhibitions and events. Design guidelines emphasize permeable ground-floor frontages with visible creative activities, supporting the neighborhood's emerging reputation as an alternative cultural district within Nashville's arts ecosystem.
Community engagement processes undertaken during the extension's planning phases included extensive consultation with existing residents, artist collectives, and neighborhood organizations. The Nashville Arts Commission and local community development organizations participated in design charrettes establishing cultural programming priorities and accessibility standards. The extension incorporates affordable studio space allocation targets, addressing displacement pressures observed in other gentrifying neighborhoods. Monthly events, artist markets, and cultural festivals hosted within the extension's public realm seek to maintain accessibility for broader publics while supporting economic viability for cultural practitioners. Educational partnerships with local arts organizations and Watkins College of Art, Design and Film situate the extension within broader citywide creative networks.[4]
Economy
The WeHo Extension's economic model incorporates mixed-income residential development, commercial office and retail space, and creative enterprise infrastructure as revenue-generating components. Residential units planned for the extension include market-rate apartments, workforce housing units, and permanently affordable units meeting inclusionary zoning requirements. The extension's commercial programming targets small businesses, service providers, and creative enterprises, with ground-floor retail and restaurant spaces designed to activate pedestrian circulation and generate streetscape vitality. Economic projections estimate the extension will generate approximately 450 permanent jobs across retail, service, office, and creative sectors upon full buildout.
The development process involved substantial public and private investment coordination, with the city contributing infrastructure improvements, tax increment financing mechanisms, and regulatory streamlining. Private capital sources included institutional real estate developers, Nashville-based investment groups, and venture capital partnerships focused on mixed-use urban development. The extension's economic impact extends beyond direct project spending to include induced spending from workers and residents, supporting adjacent retail corridors and service businesses. The project incorporates community benefit agreements specifying minority business enterprise participation targets, workforce development provisions, and community investment commitments. Market analysis suggests the extension's completion will increase assessed property values across the extended WeHo neighborhood, generating incremental property tax revenues for the city and Metro Nashville Public Schools.
Transportation
The Nations Yards (WeHo Extension) development incorporates comprehensive transportation planning addressing vehicular access, transit connectivity, pedestrian infrastructure, and bicycle accommodation. The site plan intersects with planned bus rapid transit routes, including the South Corridor BRT initiative designed to connect WeHo with downtown Nashville and southern Metro employment centers. Parking strategies incorporate shared facilities and structured parking to minimize surface parking, supporting walkability and site density objectives. Traffic impact analyses completed during the approval process identified necessary intersection improvements and signal modifications to accommodate projected traffic generation.
Pedestrian connectivity within the extension prioritizes walkable street networks with widened sidewalks, street trees, and crosswalk enhancements. Bicycle infrastructure incorporates dedicated lanes on selected streets and bicycle parking facilities at major destinations. Transit access to the extension includes planning for dedicated transit stops and facilities serving bus rapid transit and conventional bus service. The development encourages alternative transportation modes through pricing mechanisms, transit pass subsidies, and land use patterns that reduce dependence on private vehicles. Coordination with the Nashville Department of Transportation and Public Works ensures compatibility with citywide multimodal transportation planning objectives and the broader South Nashville mobility framework.