Downtown Nashville businesses account for 77%

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Lady A said, “I don’t know why you don’t take me downtown,” and we felt that. A second quarter market conditions report from the Nashville Downtown Partnership shows 77% of downtown businesses are locally based. Now, that’s what we call pride in place.

📊 How the stats compare

Crunch the numbers… the second quarter report shows:

  • 339 downtown dining options
  • 130 shopping retailers
  • 139 nightlife spots
  • 2.6% retail vacancy rate

Crissy Cassetty, NDP’s director of economic development, credits steady residential growth of 10% yearly as a big contributor to these numbers in a recent interview . She also states that half of all sales tax in Davidson County is collected downtown.

The numbers show that though downtown is a great place to play, people want to live and work there as well. Office vacancy has gone down from the first quarter to the second, sitting much closer to 10% now. Over 15,000 residents live downtown, keeping occupancy rates at a steady 95% from quarter to quarter + encouraging an uptick in planned residential developments 201 to be exact.

👋 Say hey to new businesses

Comparatively speaking, downtown has welcomed ~15 and counting retail tenants from the first quarter to the second. Let’s meet three of those new businesses.

  • MJ’s Chill Spot: Priding itself as the perfect place to chill, MJ’s takes beating the summer heat to the next level with FroSho — a frozen shot with various flavors + serving options.
  • The Extended Shop: This clothing boutique specializing in plus-sized women’s fashion opened its first brick-and-mortar store in Capitol View with plans to launch its online shop this fall.
  • Good Citizen Coffee: Though this coffee retailer has been roasting locally since 2018, it has expanded its Nashville footprint more recently.
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Skylar is based in Nashville, TN. After graduating from the University of Missouri – Columbia’s broadcast journalism program in 2020 (and a stint in New York City with NBC News before that), Skylar moved to Kansas City, MO to help launch KCtoday. When she’s not writing, you can find Skylar flipping through racks at the thrift store, catching a late-night concert, or frequenting a vibey East Nashville cocktail bar.