What Is Inglewood Nashville?

Inglewood is the largest sub-neighborhood of East Nashville, occupying the northeastern section of the broader East Nashville area. It’s the part of East Nashville that doesn’t show up first in the food magazines but where people who actually live in the area increasingly choose to be.

The Geography

Inglewood encompasses a sprawling area bounded roughly by Briley Parkway to the north, the Cumberland River to the east, Cahill Avenue and Porter Road to the south, and Gallatin Pike and railroad tracks to the west. It falls primarily within ZIP codes 37207 and 37216, making it part of Greater East Nashville rather than Smaller East Nashville (37206, which is Five Points and the core neighborhoods).

Gallatin Pike, one of the main arterials running through the neighborhood, connects Inglewood to Five Points to the south and to the Grand Ole Opry complex to the north (about a 10-minute drive away). Unlike the grid-street layout of Lockeland Springs or the Victorian density of Historic Edgefield, Inglewood is more sprawling and suburban in character.

The Residential Stock

Inglewood’s homes are newer than the core East Nashville neighborhoods. Most date from the 1920s through the 1960s, with bungalows, cottages, ranch houses, and mid-century colonials mixed throughout. The oldest homes cluster closer to Five Points; the further north you go on Gallatin, the more mid-century the fabric becomes. New construction has been appearing in Inglewood as the real estate market has pushed development outward from the more expensive core neighborhoods.

Unlike Five Points and Lockeland Springs, where Victorian and Craftsman homes command premium prices, Inglewood has historically offered more value. Median home prices in Inglewood have been lower than the East Nashville average, though the gap has been closing as buyers priced out of the core neighborhoods move north.

Riverside Village

The commercial heart of Inglewood is Riverside Village, a cluster of locally-owned businesses just off Gallatin Pike near the Cumberland River. The Village Pub & Beer Garden is the social anchor. Dose Coffee has built a loyal following as a serious specialty coffee shop that serves the people who actually live nearby. Mitchell’s Deli, which opens at 7 a.m. on Sundays, is one of the better neighborhood sandwich and breakfast operations in Nashville and attracts customers from across East Nashville.

Riverside Village also has antique shops and a selection of small retailers with a vintage and arts focus. It has the feel of a neighborhood commercial cluster that hasn’t yet been packaged for visitors, which makes it more enjoyable for people who live nearby.

The Music and Art Scene

The neighborhoods.com piece on Nashville’s best neighborhoods for musicians specifically mentions that “the density of music business professionals in East Nashville is staggering” and names Inglewood as part of that ecosystem. High Class Hillbilly, a vintage shop on Gallatin Pike run by country music artist Nikki Lane, is an example of the musician-owned businesses that have settled in Inglewood rather than the Five Points area as prices there rose. The shop carries Western shirts, cowboy boots, 1940s Chinese dresses, Mariachi sets, and curated vintage finds that reflect Lane’s specific aesthetic.

What Inglewood Offers

Inglewood offers something that Five Points stopped being able to offer about ten years ago: relative affordability combined with East Nashville access. It’s less walkable than Five Points (most residents drive for daily errands), but the Cumberland River is accessible here through the Shelby Bottoms Greenway corridor, and the neighborhood has enough local business life to feel like a community rather than just a collection of residential streets.

The tradeoff is distance. Inglewood is further from the Five Points commercial cluster, requires more driving, and has less walking-distance infrastructure. For people who specifically want the Five Points experience, Inglewood is too far. For people who want East Nashville identity at a lower price point with access to a legitimate local commercial district at Riverside Village, Inglewood is increasingly the answer.


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