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Stop 3 of 13

The Arcade and Peanut Shop

If you seek a variety of options and a quick meal, drink, or snack—Nashville’s Arcade, located across the street from Woolworth on 5th, is the place for you. For decades, Nashvillians saw Fifth Avenue as the most popular shopping area in the city. At its peak in the early twentieth century, department stores lined the street, and the Arcade was the center of it all. 

Running though the middle of the block between Fourth and Fifth Avenues, this space was originally a rose garden called Overton Alley. In 1903, Daniel C. Buntin funded the construction of a two-story indoor shopping venue designed by the architectural firm Thompson, Gibel and Asmus. Modeled after the famous Galleria Vittorio Emmanuele in Milan, Italy, the Arcade features a glass-gabled roof, reinforced with steel beams made in East Nashville. When the city celebrated the Arcade’s opening, approximately 40,000 people gathered for shopping, music, and mingling. Shop owners and businesses in Nashville’s Arcade have changed over time, and the second floor mezzanine currently boasts art galleries that participate in the free Downtown Nashville First Saturday Art Crawl. 

The street level promenade offers over twenty food stops with pizza, deli sandwiches, tacos, Chinese food, coffee, pastries, and more. The plethora of affordable options allows customers to find the perfect meal while taking in the architecture of this hidden gem. The oldest store in the building, The Peanut Shop, opened in 1927. Owned by Planters Peanuts until 1960, the store has run independently for over fifty years. Much of the decoration here is original, so make sure you look around if you stop in for a treat. 

Exit the shopping center at the exit opposite of where you entered. Directly in front of the exit, you will see a crosswalk allowing you to cross Fifth Avenue North. After you cross the street, turn LEFT. Woolworth's will immediately be on your right.

Tour Stops
Full Record & Citation
Title The Arcade
Creator Nashville Historical Foundation
Author Sarah Williams, MTSU Student; 2018
Date 1903
Address 65 Arcade Alley, Nashville, TN 37219
Description The Arcade opened in 1903 as Nashville’s first enclosed shopping area, meeting the demands of business owners and consumers alike. For the first time, customers did not have to worry about rain, traffic, and dirty streets when shopping, and the design allowed for more businesses to open within the space. There were two primary areas of the structure: the street level promenade and the second story mezzanine. When it opened, forty business including bakeries, jewelers, fruit sellers, and novelty shops opened their doors to shoppers. After a period of disrepair, the Acade became the center of Fifth Avenue of the Arts with over fifteen galleries located in the building as of 2019. Other tenants include shops, restaurants, and the historic Peanut Shop. The Arcade was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1983 as part of the Fifth Avenue Historic District.
Type Building
Coverage Area 1
Source Thompson, Gibel and Asmus, architecture firm
Contributor Daniel C. Buntin; Edgefield and Nashville Manufacturing Company; Nashville Bridge Company
Subject Architecture; Art; Downtown; Food; New South; National Register of Historic Places
Keywords American Cuisine, Buildings, Casual Dining, International Cuisine, Restaurants, Retail, National Register District, The Arcade
Rights CC BY-NC 4.0
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