In 2019 the Tennessee Housing Development Agency reported that over 45% of Nashville renters are housing cost-burdened: spending more than 30% of their income on housing-related expenses. With rents rising15% in the past year alone and a projected 50,000-unit deficit by 2030, the city’s housing crisis shows no signs of slowing. Partners Eagle Rock Ventures and The Mathews Company’s response was to bring a new kind of living option to Nashville. Teaming with HASTINGS Architecture, the team sought to bring a new housing typology to Nashville that allows young professionals, artists, musicians, and teachers of Nashville to live comfortably in a high-demand central urban neighborhood. The two resulting buildings, Martin Flats and Rutledge Flats celebrate the congregate housing model’s inherent sense of community. Compact 190-square-foot sleeping suites, shared kitchen & living spaces, and mindful design create these hyper-efficient and economic projects. These affordable rents for Nashvillians fall under 80% of the area median income and are inclusive of utilities, internet, and furnishings.
Rutledge Flats
Rutledge Flats seeks to disrupt the perception that multi-family housing must choose between affordability, proximity, and design. Rutledge’s community combines 174 micro-units, each less than 200 sq ft, with shared public kitchens, living and outdoor spaces just a short walk from Downtown Nashville. The project includes a central courtyard with community grills and a garden sustained from rooftop irrigation as well as a rooftop deck that takes full advantage of the downtown views from the 8th floor. The concept of disruption and community shapes the architecture – a concept derived from the historic Rutledge Hill neighborhood and the street grid that shapes it. One of the oldest neighborhoods in Nashville, it has been divided, combined, and interrupted by connectors and alleys as it adapted to changes in the community. Rutledge Flats similarly seeks to adapt the multi-family housing model to a new way of urban living that is reflective of the needs, lifestyle, and work of today
Team:
Architects: Hastings Architecture
Co- Developer: Eagle Rock Ventures Llc; The Mathews Company
Mepf Engineer: Power Management Corporation; Jeff Pinkston
Structural Engineer: Balata Structural Engineering; Warren Goodrich
Civil Engineer: Michael Dewey Engineering; Michael Dewey
Landscape Architect: Hodgson Douglas
General Contractor/construction Manager: Rc Mathews Contractor
Photographer: Nick Mcginn
Materials Used:
Facade cladding: Metal Panel, Metal Sales and Pac-Clad
Storefront/Curtainwall, Tubelite
Glazing, Guardian Glass
Flooring: Tile, Daltile
Carpet, Interface
LVT, Mohawk Group
Windows: Glass, Intus Windows
Paint: Sherwin-Williams