Best Photography Spots in Nashville: 12 Locations With GPS
~14 min read · 2026-05-24
Nashville is one of the most photogenic destinations for serious travel photographers. This field guide covers 12 GPS-tagged vantage points, camera settings optimized for each location, gear recommendations, and the logistics photographers actually need — transit, timing, permits, and seasonal light conditions. Whether you have a long weekend or a one-day layover, use this guide to come home with portfolio-quality frames.
Shut Your Aperture Photography Guide — Nashville
Download the offline PDF version of this guide with interactive GPS map, driving directions, and printable shot list for each vantage point.
Why Nashville rewards photographers
Nashville concentrates an exceptional range of photographic subjects within a compact, walkable geography. The combination of urban architecture, natural light patterns, and cultural street life creates a city that rewards photographers who move slowly and look carefully. The 12 vantage points in this guide represent the highest-yield locations — places where composition, light, and accessibility converge into frames worth keeping.
The photographers who produce the best work here arrive with a specific shot list (use the table below), plan around the golden and blue hours, and then walk far enough to find the second-best angle — the one without the tour bus in the frame. Bring fewer lenses than you think and walk farther than you planned.
For Nashville, the editing approach that works is one that respects the city’s natural color palette. Push contrast and lift shadows — don’t crush the blacks into oblivion. Shoot RAW so you have the dynamic range to handle the bright skies and dark shadows that characterize this latitude at golden hour.
12 photography spots with GPS coordinates
The table below lists all 12 vantage points with GPS coordinates, recommended focal length, and a brief composition note. Pin these on Google Maps or import them into Gaia GPS before you leave home — cell coverage is spotty in many of the best spots.
| Vantage Point | GPS | Why Shoot Here | Focal Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Ryman Auditorium | 36.161280,-86.778290 |
Mother Church of Country Music; interior pews. | 24–70mm |
| 2. Nashville Skyline from Nissan Stadium | 36.166440,-86.771370 |
Cumberland River framing downtown skyline. | 16–35mm |
| 3. Honky Tonk Highway – Broadway | 36.160050,-86.775100 |
Neon boot signs and live music bars; night. | 24–70mm |
| 4. Parthenon in Centennial Park | 36.148870,-86.817950 |
Full-scale Parthenon replica; morning mist. | 24–70mm |
| 5. Bicentennial Capitol Mall State Park | 36.170380,-86.782750 |
Capitol building from behind fountains. | 16–35mm |
| 6. East Nashville 5 Points | 36.171010,-86.752250 |
Indie neighborhood street art and Victorian houses. | 35mm |
| 7. Radnor Lake State Park | 36.067400,-86.818400 |
Wildlife: herons, eagles, white-tailed deer. | 70–200mm |
| 8. Shelby Bottoms Greenway | 36.166000,-86.733000 |
Cumberland River trail; migratory birds. | 70–200mm |
| 9. 12 South Neighborhood | 36.120550,-86.793780 |
Boutique murals and tree-lined streets. | 35mm |
| 10. Percy Warner Park | 36.060600,-86.859200 |
Great Lawn and stone gates; autumn foliage. | 24–70mm |
| 11. Belle Meade Historic Site | 36.100810,-86.862710 |
Antebellum mansion and horse farm. | 24–70mm |
| 12. Nashville Farmers Market | 36.168030,-86.790520 |
Weekend produce and craft stalls; morning. | 35mm |
Detailed vantage point guide for Nashville
Each vantage point below includes a detailed composition guide, the best time of day and year, transit notes, and the specific technical challenges you will encounter at each location. Read this section before you arrive so you can solve problems before you are standing in fading light with the wrong lens mounted.
1. Ryman Auditorium
GPS: 36.161280,-86.778290 · Focal Length: 24–70mm
Mother Church of Country Music; interior pews. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
2. Nashville Skyline from Nissan Stadium
GPS: 36.166440,-86.771370 · Focal Length: 16–35mm
Cumberland River framing downtown skyline. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
3. Honky Tonk Highway – Broadway
GPS: 36.160050,-86.775100 · Focal Length: 24–70mm
Neon boot signs and live music bars; night. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
4. Parthenon in Centennial Park
GPS: 36.148870,-86.817950 · Focal Length: 24–70mm
Full-scale Parthenon replica; morning mist. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
5. Bicentennial Capitol Mall State Park
GPS: 36.170380,-86.782750 · Focal Length: 16–35mm
Capitol building from behind fountains. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
6. East Nashville 5 Points
GPS: 36.171010,-86.752250 · Focal Length: 35mm
Indie neighborhood street art and Victorian houses. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
7. Radnor Lake State Park
GPS: 36.067400,-86.818400 · Focal Length: 70–200mm
Wildlife: herons, eagles, white-tailed deer. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
8. Shelby Bottoms Greenway
GPS: 36.166000,-86.733000 · Focal Length: 70–200mm
Cumberland River trail; migratory birds. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
9. 12 South Neighborhood
GPS: 36.120550,-86.793780 · Focal Length: 35mm
Boutique murals and tree-lined streets. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
10. Percy Warner Park
GPS: 36.060600,-86.859200 · Focal Length: 24–70mm
Great Lawn and stone gates; autumn foliage. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
11. Belle Meade Historic Site
GPS: 36.100810,-86.862710 · Focal Length: 24–70mm
Antebellum mansion and horse farm. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
12. Nashville Farmers Market
GPS: 36.168030,-86.790520 · Focal Length: 35mm
Weekend produce and craft stalls; morning. For best results, arrive 20–30 minutes before sunrise to claim your position before light moves. Blue hour — roughly 30 minutes after sunset — delivers different but equally compelling tones for this location.
SaveCamera settings cheat sheet for Nashville
Settings vary by scenario. Use this as a starting point and bracket exposures in challenging light:
| Scenario | ISO | Aperture | Shutter | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Golden hour landscape | 100–400 | f/8–f/11 | 1/125–1/500s | Expose to protect highlights; lift shadows in RAW |
| Blue hour cityscape | 400–1600 | f/8 | 2–15s (tripod) | Balance ambient and artificial light |
| Night cityscape | 800–3200 | f/5.6–f/8 | 5–30s (tripod) | Use self-timer or cable release to eliminate vibration |
| Street photography | 400–3200 | f/2.8–f/5.6 | 1/125–1/500s | Continuous AF; burst mode for candid moments |
| Interior architecture | 400–3200 | f/5.6–f/8 | 1/30–1/125s (tripod) | Check permissions; keystone correction in post |
| Waterfront long exposure | 100 | f/11 | 30–120s (ND filter) | 10-stop ND filter; remote release; mirror lock-up |
| Sunrise landscape | 100–200 | f/8–f/16 | 1/30–1/250s | Arrive 30 min before sunrise; bracket 3 frames |
Lens and gear recommendations for Nashville
The essential kit for Nashville photography covers three focal ranges: wide (16–35mm or equivalent) for architecture and sweeping landscapes, standard zoom (24–70mm f/2.8) as the workhorse for 80% of shots, and telephoto (70–200mm) for compressed skylines, wildlife, and isolating architectural details from distance.
For mirrorless shooters: a single body with a 24–70mm f/2.8 plus a 35mm or 50mm f/1.8 prime is a viable travel kit. Add a 16–35mm for the wide-angle moments and a 70–200mm for compression. Most photographers bring two bodies to avoid lens changes in challenging conditions.
Essential accessories: a sturdy travel tripod (carbon fiber under 1.5kg), a circular polarizing filter for sky contrast and water management, a 6-stop and 10-stop ND filter for long exposures, extra batteries (cold weather or long shooting days drain fast), and enough memory cards to shoot RAW all day without worrying about space.
Nashville Lightroom Preset Pack
19 custom Lightroom presets tuned to the light conditions and color palette of Nashville. One-click starting points for golden hour, blue hour, overcast, and interior shots.
Best months and light conditions for Nashville
Spring (March–May) and fall (September–November) offer the best combination of moderate temperatures, photogenic skies, and lower crowd density at the main vantage points. Summer delivers the longest golden hours but also peak tourist traffic and, in many cities, haze that degrades long telephoto shots. Winter can produce dramatic low-angle light and clear air — particularly valuable for skyline photography — but requires planning around shorter days and colder conditions.
Day-to-day, plan your shooting schedule around golden hour (first and last hour of daylight) and blue hour (30 minutes after sunset). Midday sun in most urban environments creates harsh, unflattering light for architecture and street photography. Use the midday hours for scouting evening compositions, eating, and transit between vantage points. The four-hour midday block is planning time, not capture time.
Check weather forecasts for partial cloud cover — a single layer of clouds at sunset can transform the sky into a canvas and multiply the quality of any exterior shot. Completely overcast days are excellent for waterfall, forest, and interior photography where diffuse light eliminates harsh contrast.
Getting around Nashville for photographers
Plan your photography day around the geography of the vantage points. Cluster morning shots within walking distance where possible — traveling between locations during the golden hour is time wasted. Use public transit or rideshare to reach non-adjacent vantage points between the morning and evening shooting windows. A half-day driver or photography guide is worth the investment for first-time visitors who want to maximize shooting time.
Carry a portable battery pack (to keep your phone GPS running all day), a printed emergency map (cell service fails at the worst moments), local currency for entry fees and tips, and a water bottle. Photographers who prepare for logistics spend more time shooting and less time problem-solving.
SaveRelated guides nearby
Three more photography guides within striking distance — perfect for combining into one trip.
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Frequently asked questions
What is the best time of day to photograph in Nashville?
The golden hour (first hour after sunrise, last hour before sunset) and blue hour (30 minutes after sunset) deliver the best light in Nashville. Midday sun is harsh and produces flat, overexposed results. Plan your shooting schedule around the light, not the convenience of sleeping in.
Do I need a permit to photograph in Nashville?
Personal and editorial photography on public property in Nashville generally requires no permit. Commercial photography — where a tripod is used for commercial purposes in a public park, or photography takes place on private property — may require a permit. Check with local parks departments and venues before commercial shoots. Drone photography requires FAA Part 107 certification and may be restricted in certain zones near airports.
What gear should I bring to Nashville?
A versatile zoom lens (24–70mm f/2.8 or equivalent) covers 80% of Nashville photography. Add a wide-angle (16–35mm) for architectural and landscape work and a telephoto (70–200mm) for compressed city skylines and wildlife. A sturdy travel tripod is essential for blue-hour and night photography. Pack a polarizing filter to manage reflections and deepen sky contrast, and an ND filter (6-stop or 10-stop) for long-exposure water and crowd shots.
What camera settings work best for city photography in Nashville?
During golden hour: ISO 100–400, f/8–f/11 for sharpness, 1/125–1/500s shutter speed. At blue hour and night: ISO 800–3200, f/5.6–f/8, use a tripod and shoot 2–30 second exposures for light trails and long exposures. Shoot RAW files in all conditions — the extra dynamic range rescues highlights and shadows that JPEG cannot recover.
When is the best season to visit Nashville for photography?
Spring and fall offer the best combination of comfortable temperatures, lower tourist density, dramatic skies, and ideal light angles. Summer delivers long days with extended golden hours but peak crowds. Winter can offer dramatic weather and clear air, with lower humidity removing haze from long telephoto shots. Research any unique seasonal events — cherry blossoms, festivals, autumn foliage — that create once-a-year photographic opportunities in Nashville.