

FEatured project
The Nashville Yards development is a 19-acre mixed-use district reshaping the western edge of downtown. The site includes office towers, hotels, residences, a live entertainment venue, and a large public park, all being delivered in phases by Southwest Value Partners and Highwoods Properties. The completed buildings sit along Church Street and Broadway, directly next to the existing Union Station and the Gulch.
Photographing Nashville Yards meant working across a few very different architectural conditions in the same neighborhood. The Pinnacle tower reads as a glass and stone volume that picks up reflected light from neighboring buildings. The Grand Hyatt reads warmer, with a strong vertical rhythm and a hospitality-scale entry sequence. The newer towers nearby introduce another material language again. On a single shoot, you are moving between these conditions constantly.





FEatured project
Yes. I was in Nashville in April 2026 photographing seven buildings, including two towers at Nashville Yards. I am actively working to expand the Nashville portion of my portfolio throughout 2026.
Yes. I am based in Birmingham, Alabama, and Nashville is a regular part of my travel schedule. The drive is short, which makes it easy to handle early or late shoots and to build in proper scouting time.
Commercial and mixed-use towers, hospitality spaces, residential architecture, civic and cultural buildings, and construction documentation. If the project was designed and built with intention, it is probably a good fit.
Yes. Most of my clients are architecture firms, general contractors, developers, and interior designers. I coordinate directly with whoever is managing the visual deliverable for the project.
Yes. Pre-opening is often the best window for architectural documentation. Access is easier, the space is clean, and there are no tenants or signage yet. I coordinate with the team to schedule around that window.
Yes. Many projects combine still photography with architectural video. It is usually more efficient to plan those together rather than treating them as separate shoots. The video footage is consistent in style and quality with the still photography, which keeps the visual language coherent across the full deliverable.
