Rigorous, challenging—these should describe your program, not your living conditions. Nashville packs a lot of options into a compact, easy-to-navigate city with basic benefits: low cost of living, a diverse cultural scene, affordable neighborhoods with character, and many recreational opportunities. We enjoy four distinct seasons, but it’s unlikely you’ll have to tromp around in four feet of snow any time soon.
Nashville—one of the country’s fastest-growing cities—is accessible, too. Airport and other transportation options keep New York, Chicago, Atlanta, and many other cities just a quick flight away.
Average apartment rentals
Sources: ACCRA Cost of Living Index, First Quarter 2005; Move.com
Think barbecue, Moon Pies, and country singers when you think Nashville? They’re all here, but there’s more to the story. Consider
You can choose from a variety of coffee bars, sushi restaurants, and yoga and Pilates classes all in walking distance from the campus. Students can also cross West End Avenue to enjoy Centennial Park, which includes an awe-inspiring, to-scale replica of the Parthenon from the 1897 Tennessee Centennial Exposition, as well as public gardens, running paths, and even a dog park!
Opportunities for part-time employment, practica, and research assistantships abound in a number of non-profits, colleges, and organizations nearby.
Vanderbilt University's guide to Nashville
Metro Nashville government
Nashville Convention and Visitor Bureau
Nashville Chamber of Commerce
BlueShoe Nashville Travel Guide
Now Playing Nashville
Local print media outlets:
The Tennessean (daily newspaper)
Nashville City Paper
The Nashville Scene (weekly newspaper)
All The Rage (weekly entertainment guide)
Local broadcast media outlets:
WPLN (Nashville Public Radio)
WRVU (Vanderbilt student-operated radio station)
WNPT (Nashville Public Television)
Kiplinger's Personal Finance ranked Nashville #1 on its list of "50 Smart Places to Live" in 2006. The publication cited a "phenomenal entertainment scene that goes far beyond country."