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Editorial Results (free)

1. Wiseman Ashworth Trauger adds associates -

Wiseman Ashworth Trauger has added three associate attorneys, Megan Frazier, Matt Holman and Katie Koss.

Frazier represents physicians, long-term care facilities, hospitals and other health care providers, and previously an associate at a regional firm in Lexington, Kentucky. She is a 2020 graduate of the University of Kentucky J. David Rosenberg College of Lawand is admitted to the Bar Associations in Kentucky, Illinois and Tennessee, and is a member of the Kentucky Bar Association and the Tennessee Bar Association.

2. Openings begin March 4 at Fifth + Broadway -

Brookfield Properties’ mixed-use project Fifth + Broadway in downtown Nashville will begin its first tenant openings March 4.

The event culminates a multiyear effort by the company and local developer Pat Emery on the former site of the Nashville Convention Center.

3. Building green in a red-hot market -

Counting cranes has become a Nashville pastime, and the perks of all that development are clear – a robust economy, vibrant real estate market and more jobs.

Naturally, there is concern among some residents that all of the construction and increased population could harm the area’s environment, water and air quality and green space.

4. Surprise career twist for area’s top recruiter of corporations -

Ask Janet Miller about her remarkable career at the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce and she’ll likely attribute it to good timing or pass credit onto others.

But ask others about her and they’ll talk about an exceptional ability to lead, build trust and forge relationships with a diverse range of people, and, above all, her will to win.

5. Redevelopers of Nashville's old convention center listen to market -

Ever since ground was broken on the Music City Center, the fate of its predecessor, the Nashville Convention Center, has been in flux. And settled. And in flux again.

Now, after a proposed medical mart fell through because a Dallas-based developer could never secure enough leases to advance financing and site redevelopment, a local outfit is stepping up to take a crack at the centrally located downtown site.

6. Top Midstate residential real estate transactions for 2013 -

Top 2013 residential real estate transactions for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports.

7. Daugherty is chair of Midstate USGBC chapter -

Erik Daugherty, founder and owner of E3 INNOVATE, has been elected chair of the Middle Tennessee chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC).

8. Big, bold projects make a comeback -

Nashville’s next transformation is under way, this time in the long-overlooked Midtown district between downtown and Vanderbilt.

It’s happened before. Construction of condominiums and apartments continues to turn the once-deserted Gulch into one of Nashville’s most-desirable addresses. SoBro, where the city once burned its trash at the Thermal Transfer Plant, is home to high-rise residences, the LEED certified Pinnacle building, Schermerhorn Symphony Center and the Music City Center convention center. Another high-rise apartment building is planned.

9. Franklin Park ups ante with size, features -

The Nashville region’s largest office development is under way in Cool Springs, where Spectrum-Emery has begun the first phase of Franklin Park, a 71-acre, mixed-use corporate campus with more than 1.25 million square feet of space in five, 10-story office buildings.

10. Four members of Avenue board re-elected -

Four directors of the board have been re-elected to serve new three-year terms at Avenue Bank: David Anderson, Agenia Clark, Pat Emery and Karen Saul.

11. Picking up where we left off -

Cranes, which lately have been an endangered species, are returning to Cool Springs. Not the kind that fly, but the kind that dot the skyline over construction sites and have made the Interstate 65 corridor south of Nashville the region’s most popular location for corporate offices.

12. Spectrum Properties/Emery pushes LEED limits -

It’s no secret some of the industries hardest hit during the recession have been new construction, renovations and real estate. But that slowdown has opened the door for the steady growth of property companies focused on sustainability, allowing them to target a new, eco-minded clientele.

13. Southern Migration -

Nearly half of Nashville’s signature industry – health care – actually has a Cool Springs address, and that number keeps growing. So does Nissan, the highest-profile corporate headquarters ever to relocate to the Nashville area.