Home

Buyer & Seller Guide  ·  Nashville, TN  ·  37203

Wedgewood-Houston

WeHo  ·  Nashville's Art District  ·  37203

A Michelin-starred restaurant tucked inside a converted warehouse. Santa's Pub next to Soho House. Fort Negley on the hill, GEODIS Park at the south end, and 1.6 million square feet of new development mid-pour. Nashville's most interesting neighborhood right now — by a decent margin.

At a Glance

Quick Snapshot

🏠

Home Prices

$450K – $1.2M+

Avg. active listing ~$750K · Older cottages from $450K · New construction $700K–$1.2M+

☀️

Lifestyle

Creative & Evolving

Nashville's art district. Monthly Art Crawl, Michelin-starred dining, GEODIS Park, distillery row, Live Nation venue arriving fall 2026

🚗

Commute & Access

5–15 min

5 min to downtown · Direct I-65 access · 20 min to BNA · Easy access to The Gulch and 12 South

❤️

Who Lives Here

Creatives & Music Industry

Artists, Apple Music and Live Nation employees, music industry professionals, buyers priced out of The Gulch seeking urban character at lower cost

Browse Homes Currently Listed in Wedgewood-Houston

Updated daily. Every active listing in WeHo — cottages, townhomes, lofts, new construction.

View WeHo Listings →

Experience It

A Saturday in Wedgewood-Houston

You're in a modern townhome on Moore Avenue. The original 1940s cottage next door has been there since the neighborhood was a factory workers' community. GEODIS Park is six blocks south. Here's the day.

Morning

Humphrey's Street Coffee or Dozen Bakery

Humphrey's Street operates out of a converted house, and 100% of proceeds go toward programs for South Nashville youth — one of those places that's easy to be a regular at. Dozen Bakery is the neighborhood's beloved pastry anchor: handmade breads, pastries, and sandwiches that people drive across Nashville for. Get there early on weekends.

🎨

Midday

The Galleries (or the Art Crawl if it's the first Saturday)

WeHo has more art per block than any neighborhood in Nashville. David Lusk Gallery and Zeitgeist are the most established names, but the whole district opens up on the first Saturday of every month for the Art Crawl — free, 6–9 PM, a dozen-plus venues. If you're here on that Saturday, clear your evening. If not, just walk.

🍕

Lunch

Gabby's Burgers & Fries or Dicey's Pizza & Tavern

Gabby's is the neighborhood burger institution — grass-fed beef, hand-cut fries, milkshakes, a patio people linger on. Dicey's is the sleeper: party-cut thin-crust pizza and a serious Italian sub for $10. The kind of unpretentious spot that WeHo does better than most neighborhoods.

Afternoon

GEODIS Park

Nashville SC's 30,000-seat stadium opened in 2022 and became the anchor of the neighborhood's south end. The stadium also hosts major concerts — Shania Twain's "Queen of Me" tour was the inaugural show. If Nashville SC has a home game today, the pre-game energy spills through the whole neighborhood. Plan around it or embrace it.

🏺

Late Afternoon

Corsair Distillery or Diskin Cider

Corsair was Nashville's first craft distillery since Prohibition when it opened in the early 2010s — tours, cocktail classes, tastings. Diskin Cider runs a laid-back tasting room with natural gluten-free ciders, live music on occasion, and a mason jar presentation that's become its own thing. Both within a short walk.

🌟

Dinner

Bastion ⭐

The 24-seat tasting menu restaurant by James Beard–nominated chef Josh Habiger earned a Michelin Star in November 2025. Counter seating around the kitchen, a six-course weekly set menu, wine pairings, creative cocktails, vinyl soundtrack. Reservations are required and competitive — book ahead. The attached bar is walk-in and worth it on its own terms.

🎄

Late Night

Santa's Pub

A cash-only karaoke bar in a decorated double-wide trailer. The owner looks exactly like Santa Claus. Beer is $2. Karaoke starts at 7 PM every night. It has been doing this for years, surrounded now by Soho House and a Live Nation venue under construction next door. Santa's Pub is WeHo's most honest ambassador — and it's not going anywhere.

Explore

The WeHo Corridor & Surroundings

Wedgewood-Houston occupies the wedge between I-65 to the east and 8th Avenue South to the west, from Wedgewood Avenue at the north down to the Fairgrounds and GEODIS Park at the south. It's roughly a mile square — walkable end to end in 20 minutes.

📍 Central WeHo (Chestnut St, Martin St, Houston St spine)  ·  $550K – $1.2M

Best For: Buyers who want to be in the middle of the development wave — maximum upside, some near-term construction noise

Houston Station, the May Hosiery Mill complex (now home to Soho House and Hermès), Nashville Warehouse, Bastion, the galleries, the distilleries — and the AJ Capital Wedgewood Village development under construction around them. Momotaro, Pastis, and The Truth music venue are all arriving in 2026. This is the neighborhood's most in-demand address right now.

📍 4th Ave South Corridor (toward the Fairgrounds)  ·  $450K – $850K

Best For: Buyers who want the WeHo address with more residential character and better value

A mix of older WeHo cottage stock, new construction townhomes, and infill development. More residential in feel than central WeHo. Parts of the corridor carry a federal Opportunity Zone designation — relevant for investment buyers. GEODIS Park and the Fairgrounds anchor the south end.

📍 Western Edge (near 8th Ave S / Chestnut Hill)  ·  $500K – $950K

Best For: Buyers who want WeHo proximity with a quieter residential feel

Where WeHo borders the Berry Hill and South Nashville corridors. More established tree canopy, older homes with larger lots, less foot traffic than central WeHo. Buyers who want the ZIP without being in the center of the development activity tend to land here.

📍 North WeHo / Fort Negley Area  ·  $500K – $900K

Best For: Buyers who want WeHo access with fast downtown and Gulch connectivity

The northern edge near the Adventure Science Center and Fort Negley Park — home to the ruins of the largest inland stone Union fortification from the Civil War. Good downtown and Gulch access without the weekend tourist density of the core. Quieter on evenings and weekends.

📍 Near The Gulch / SoBro Edge  ·  $550K – $1.1M

Best For: Buyers who want Gulch-adjacent access and character at a lower price point

Where WeHo starts to feel like The Gulch. Higher condo density, closer to entertainment infrastructure. If The Gulch is the price ceiling, this is the first place to look for similar access at lower cost. Worth comparing the two guides side by side.

Local Culture

Lifestyle & Culture

🍽️

Restaurants Locals Love

Bastion ⭐ — Michelin Star (Nov 2025). 24-seat tasting menu, James Beard–nominated chef. Book well ahead.

Gabby's Burgers & Fries — Grass-fed beef, hand-cut fries, milkshakes. A WeHo original.

Dozen Bakery — Handmade breads, pastries, sandwiches. One of Nashville's best bakeries.

Il Forno — Wood-fired pizza and handmade pasta in Houston Station. Reliable and good.

iggy's — Chef's counter, pasta-focused, attached market with house-made pastas and sauces.

Earnest Bar & Hideaway — Industrial-chic Southern bar inside historic Houston Station. Shrimp and grits, serious steaks.

Coffee & Morning Spots

Humphrey's Street Coffee — Converted house, 100% of proceeds to South Nashville youth programs.

Dozen Bakery — Pastry destination first, but the coffee is serious too.

Crest Coffee House — Nashville's first donation-based coffee shop.

🍺

Drinks & Distilleries

Corsair Distillery — Nashville's first craft distillery since Prohibition. Tours, tastings, cocktail classes.

Diskin Cider — Natural gluten-free ciders, live music, laid-back tasting room.

Jackalope / The Ranch — 16 beers on tap, dog-friendly patio, shuffleboard.

Santa's Pub — Cash only. $2 beer. Karaoke nightly. Double-wide trailer. Entirely itself.

🎨

Arts & Events

WeHo Art Crawl — First Saturday of every month, 6–9 PM, free. Galleries, studios, and pop-ups throughout the neighborhood.

Artville Festival — Annual three-day neighborhood arts festival. Large-scale installations, live performances.

David Lusk Gallery — One of Nashville's most respected contemporary galleries.

Zeitgeist Gallery — Long-running contemporary art anchor in the district.

Fort Houston — 10,000 sq ft makerspace: screen printing, woodworking, photography, art. Classes and memberships open to the public.

Sports, Music & Parks

GEODIS Park — 30,000-seat MLS stadium, Nashville SC. Also hosts major concerts. Six blocks south of central WeHo.

The Truth (Live Nation) — 4,400-capacity indoor venue, opening fall 2026. Largest music venue outside downtown Nashville.

Fort Negley Park — Civil War ruins, downtown views, self-guided walking paths. Free. One of Nashville's most undervisited historical sites.

Nashville Flea Market — 1,000+ dealers from 24+ states at the Fairgrounds. Monthly.

Market Data

Real Estate Market Overview

Source: RealTracs / Wedgewood-Houston market data, March 2026.

~$750K

Avg. Active Listing

27

Active Listings (Mar '26)

$450K–$1.2M+

Active Price Range

37203

ZIP Code

Under $600K — Entry Point

Older cottage stock, smaller townhomes, lofts in converted industrial buildings. The value tier — urban character below Gulch and 12 South pricing.

$600K–$900K — New Construction Core

Most new townhome and infill development lands here. 3 bedrooms, 1,800–2,400 sq ft, modern finishes. The most active buyer tier right now.

$900K–$1.2M+ — Premium New Construction

Larger new builds near Wedgewood Village development. Still a meaningful value vs. The Gulch at comparable price. Growing buyer pool.

For buyers: WeHo is the most actively developing neighborhood in Nashville right now. The Wedgewood Village project — 1.6 million sq ft, anchored by Soho House, Momotaro, Pastis, and a 4,400-seat Live Nation venue — is the kind of investment that changes a neighborhood's price trajectory. Buyers who get in before the 2026–2027 opening wave have historically done well in Nashville neighborhoods at this stage. Active construction means some streets are disruptive right now. Visit on a weekday before committing.

For sellers: Demand is real and growing — but buyers are comparison-shopping against The Gulch and 12 South. Condition and correct pricing from day one matter. Units that sit usually have a pricing problem, not a demand problem.

Browse WeHo Listings →

Local Knowledge

Insider Insights

🏗️

The Development Wave Is Real — and Not Done

AJ Capital's Wedgewood Village broke ground on all components in early 2025. Soho House and Hermès are open. Momotaro, Pastis, The Truth, and three new local businesses (Bell Bird Books, Bower, Culture Club) are coming in 2026. This is permitted, funded, and under construction — not speculative.

🌟

Bastion Has a Michelin Star

In November 2025, Bastion became one of Nashville's first Michelin-starred restaurants. Fine dining at this level typically signals a neighborhood that has arrived — and that the buyer demographic is shifting upward. The 24-seat format keeps it neighborhood-scaled rather than tourist-facing.

💰

Opportunity Zones Create Real Investor Incentives

Parts of WeHo carry a federal Opportunity Zone designation, providing significant capital gains tax advantages for qualifying investors. If you're buying as an investment, discuss this with your accountant before closing — it's one reason institutional capital has moved into the neighborhood alongside individual buyers.

GEODIS Park Is a Mixed Blessing

Nashville SC has built real fan loyalty, and the stadium delivers major concerts alongside MLS games. But on match days and large events, foot and vehicle traffic on the south end of the neighborhood is significant. Visit on a match night before you buy within a few blocks of the stadium.

🎨

The Art Scene Is Intentionally Protected

WeHo's identity as Nashville's art district is actively maintained — the development partners have committed to preserving gallery and studio space alongside new commercial tenants. The monthly Art Crawl has run for years and isn't going anywhere. For buyers who value authentic creative neighborhood character, that durability matters.

🗺️

WeHo vs. The Gulch — Know the Difference

Both are 37203. The Gulch is finished and priced like it — high-rises, $700+/sq ft, HOA fees, tourist-facing strip. WeHo is mid-transformation — older stock, more character, lower price point, more upside. They're different bets. We walk buyers through that comparison directly. Gulch guide here.

Common Questions

Wedgewood-Houston FAQ

What is the median home price in Wedgewood-Houston Nashville?

As of March 2026, there are 27 active properties in Wedgewood-Houston with an average listing price of approximately $750,000. The range runs from around $450K for older cottage stock and smaller lofts to $1.2M+ for premium new construction. WeHo sits within the 37203 ZIP code, shared with The Gulch — but WeHo's prices are meaningfully lower than core Gulch buildings, which is a significant part of the neighborhood's current appeal.

What ZIP code is Wedgewood-Houston Nashville?

Wedgewood-Houston is in the 37203 ZIP code, which it shares with The Gulch, Music Row, and portions of Midtown. The WeHo neighborhood proper runs from Wedgewood Avenue at the north to the Fairgrounds and GEODIS Park at the south, between I-65 to the east and 8th Avenue South to the west.

Is Wedgewood-Houston a good investment?

WeHo has a strong current investment case: active major development (Wedgewood Village, The Truth music venue, Soho House), Opportunity Zone tax incentives, lower entry prices relative to neighboring 37203 areas, a Michelin-starred restaurant signaling demographic demand, and a major live music anchor arriving fall 2026. The risk is that active construction can be disruptive and timelines can shift. For buyers with a 5–7 year horizon and tolerance for some near-term noise, the fundamentals are compelling.

What's the difference between Wedgewood-Houston and The Gulch?

Both are in 37203 and both are walkable, close to downtown. The Gulch is a finished high-rise condo district — $700+/sq ft, significant HOA fees, polished tourist-facing commercial strip. WeHo is mid-transformation — older industrial stock, art galleries, distilleries, a growing restaurant scene, and lower entry prices with more upside. They're different bets for different buyers.

What's happening with Wedgewood Village?

Wedgewood Village is AJ Capital Partners' 18-acre, 1.6-million-sq-ft mixed-use development, breaking ground across all components in 2025 and building through 2027 and beyond. Soho House and Hermès are open. Confirmed arrivals in 2026 include Momotaro, Pastis, the Academy of Country Music offices, Live Nation's The Truth venue (4,400 capacity, fall 2026), and three new local concepts: Bell Bird Books, Bower, and Culture Club. Multiple Memoir residential towers and additional office buildings are also underway.

What schools serve Wedgewood-Houston Nashville?

Most of Wedgewood-Houston is zoned for John B. Whitsitt Elementary. Middle and high school zoning varies by street — always verify the specific address directly with Metro Nashville Public Schools before making any purchase decision based on school assignment.

James and Stephanie Crawford, Nesting Realty Nashville

Nesting Realty

James & Stephanie Crawford

Nashville natives with 22+ years and 500+ transactions across Middle Tennessee. We don't hand clients off to assistants. When you work with us, you work with us.

📍 Nesting Realty  ·  Nashville TN
📞 (615) 751-8913

Ready to buy or sell in Wedgewood-Houston?

22 years of Nashville experience. 500+ transactions. Two people who actually show up.

Let's Talk About Your Goals
What's your home worth in today's market?
We'll create a FREE custom report just for you!