Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum main entrance. Image courtesy of MHCF.
Stop 18 of 19
Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum
The Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum was built in 2001 to replace the museum’s original location on Music Row, which had opened in 1967. The new building, designed by Tuck Hinton Architects, is composed of three principal sections: the conservatory, the museum, and the Hall of Fame. The building’s exterior, which represents an enormous bass clef when viewed from above, is evocative of the business and culture of country music. The building’s first and most obvious musical reference is the giant keyboard formed by the series of vertical windows positioned like ebony keys across the curved front facade. The tail fin of a 1957 Chevrolet inspired the upward swoop of the northwest corner of the facade, and the four-disc tiers of the rotunda roof of the tower emulate the evolution of recording—the 78, the 33 vinyl LP, the 45, and finally the CD. The radio tower, which serves as the mast of the building and extends upwards and down into the Hall of Fame, is a replica of the broadcast tower of local pioneering country radio station WSM that transmitted its first radio waves in 1932. Additionally, East Tennessee Crab Orchard stone, which is found both inside and out of the building, harkens back to country music’s East Tennessee heritage.
The building underwent a major expansion in 2014, more than doubling its size to 350,000 square feet. The museum’s exhibits were designed by the New York firm Ralph Applebaum Associates, which has worked on numerous exhibits for museums such as the Clinton Presidential Library in Little Rock, Arkansas, the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio. The building also houses Hatch Show Print, a local letter press company dating to 1879 and the Taylor Swift Education Center.
Continue in the same direction along Demonbreun to reach the Schermerhorn Symphony Center on your left.
Tour Stops
John Seigenthaler Bridge
108 First Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37201
Acme Feed and Seed Building
101 Broadway Nashville, TN 37201
Front Street Warehouses
138 First Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37201
Fort Nashborough
170 First Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37201
Second Avenue Historic District and Butler's Run
138 Second Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37201
Ryman Auditorium
116 Fifth Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37219
Broadway National Register District and Nineteenth Century Residences
104-106 Fifth Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203
Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons
100 Seventh Avenue North, Nashville, TN 37203
Hume-Fogg Academic High School
700 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203
Southern Methodist Publishing House
810 Broadway Nashville, TN 37203
Christ Church Cathedral
900 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203
Union Station
1001 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203
Frist Art Museum and United States Post Office
919 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203
Estes Kefauver Federal Building
801 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203
Customs House
701 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203
Nashville First Baptist Church
108 Seventh Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203
Music City Center
201 Fifth Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203
Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum
222 Fifth Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203
Schermerhorn Symphony Center
1 Symphony Place, Nashville, TN 37201






