Davidson County · 37211, 37220
Crieve Hall
Crieve Hall is an established residential neighborhood in South Nashville, roughly eight miles south of downtown, bordered by Harding Place to the north, I-65 to the east, the Brentwood city line to the south, and Franklin Pike to the west. Subdivided in the 1950s and 1960s, it is characterized by mid-century ranch-style brick homes on generally larger lots, with an active neighborhood association and quick access to I-65 and Nolensville Pike. It sits primarily in the 37211 ZIP — one of Nashville's largest by population — which extends well beyond Crieve Hall.
Map
Lifestyle
Crieve Hall's texture is established, low-density residential: mid-century ranch homes on sizable lots, an active neighborhood association with recurring community events, and convenience to South Nashville retail corridors and I-65. It is a settled subdivision landscape rather than a walkable commercial district.
Crieve Hall Neighborhood Association
An active neighborhood association that organizes recurring community events, including a seasonal produce market and an annual neighborhood fair, giving the area a civic anchor beyond its residential streets.
Franklin Pike and Nolensville Pike corridors
The neighborhood's retail and commute corridors, framing it on the west and east with grocery, services, and quick I-65 access.
Honest read
Crieve Hall's strength is established, lower-density residential character close to major highways: mid-century ranch homes on larger-than-typical lots, an active neighborhood association, and quick access to I-65 and Nolensville Pike. For buyers prioritizing yard space and a settled subdivision over walkable density, it offers a South Nashville option below close-in-core pricing.
The tradeoffs are distance and car-dependence. At roughly eight miles south of downtown — about 15 minutes off-peak, longer at I-65 rush hour — it is a commuter location, and day-to-day errands rely on the Nolensville Pike and Franklin Pike corridors rather than walkable neighborhood retail. Housing stock skews older, so condition, updates, and systems vary house to house.
The market picture is ZIP-level for 37211, which is one of Nashville's largest and most varied ZIPs, so it is broad context rather than a Crieve Hall-only measurement. The honest read: Crieve Hall offers space, established homes, and highway access at South Nashville pricing, with the tradeoffs of commute distance, car dependence, and an aging housing stock.
Micro-geography
Crieve Hall is a settled mid-century subdivision in South Nashville bounded by Harding Place, I-65, the Brentwood line, and Franklin Pike, between the Franklin Pike and Nolensville Pike corridors.
Mid-century subdivision grid
Laid out in the 1950s and 1960s as a suburban subdivision; ranch-style homes on larger lots define the built form.
Source: Homes.com and Nashville brokerage neighborhood-guide descriptions; Census-geocoded anchors, run 2026-06-12.
Corridor framing
Franklin Pike on the west and Nolensville Pike on the east carry the area's retail and commute traffic; I-65 forms the eastern edge.
Source: Metro Nashville and TDOT maps; Census-geocoded edges, run 2026-06-12.
Brentwood-line edge
The southern boundary abuts the Williamson County and Brentwood city line, a school- and tax-jurisdiction edge to verify by address.
Source: Area boundary descriptions; Census-geocoded southern edge, run 2026-06-12.
37211 caveat
37211 is one of Nashville's most populous ZIPs and extends far beyond Crieve Hall, so ZIP-level data is broad context only.
Source: Census Reporter ACS 2024 5-year, ZCTA 37211.
Getting around
Crieve Hall is highway-oriented and car-dependent: I-65 on the eastern edge and the Franklin Pike and Nolensville Pike corridors are the spine of daily movement.
Downtown access
Off-peak baseline routing to downtown Nashville is about 8.1 miles and roughly 15 minutes via I-65 or Franklin Pike; peak I-65 traffic runs longer.
Source: OSRM driving route, run 2026-06-12 (off-peak engine, no live traffic).
Airport access
Off-peak baseline routing to Nashville International Airport (BNA) is about 6.1 miles and roughly 13 minutes.
Source: OSRM driving route to BNA, run 2026-06-12.
Corridor errands
Day-to-day retail and services concentrate along Nolensville Pike and Franklin Pike rather than within the residential streets.
Source: Census-geocoded corridors, run 2026-06-12; area descriptions.
Schools
Crieve Hall is served by Metro Nashville Public Schools with address-specific assignment; the Brentwood-line edge makes exact-address verification especially important. Confirm with MNPS.
Metro Nashville Public Schools zone finder
Use the official MNPS tools for any Crieve Hall address; confirm by exact parcel, particularly near the southern county-line edge.
Address-specific verification
Confirm elementary, middle, and high-school assignment by exact address rather than by neighborhood name.
Market read
These figures are ZIP-level for 37211, one of Nashville's largest and most varied ZIPs, not a Crieve Hall-only measurement. The ACS values are verified; a ZIP-level Redfin sale-price tracker figure (the method used on sibling pages) is a pending addition.
- 37211 population
- 76,573
Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024 5-year via Census Reporter, ZCTA 37211
- 37211 median household income
- 71,399
Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024 5-year via Census Reporter, ZCTA 37211
- 37211 median home value (owner-occupied)
- 406,100
Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024 5-year via Census Reporter, table B25077, ZCTA 37211
- 37211 owner-occupied housing share
- 49.2%
Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024 5-year via Census Reporter, table B25003, ZCTA 37211
Development
Crieve Hall is an established, largely built-out subdivision; change is mostly individual renovation and infill rather than large projects.
Established built-out character
The neighborhood is largely built out from its mid-century subdivision; recent change is mostly renovation of existing ranch homes and occasional teardown and infill rather than master-planned development.
Frequently asked questions
Where is Crieve Hall?
In South Nashville, about eight miles south of downtown, bordered by Harding Place, I-65, the Brentwood city line, and Franklin Pike, between the Franklin Pike and Nolensville Pike corridors.
What kind of homes are in Crieve Hall?
Predominantly mid-century brick ranch homes from the 1950s and 1960s, generally on larger lots (often a third of an acre or more), with condition and updates varying house to house.
Are the market stats Crieve Hall-only?
No. They are ZIP-level for 37211, one of Nashville's largest and most varied ZIPs, so use them as context and rely on property-specific comps.
How far is downtown and the airport?
Off-peak, about 15 minutes (roughly eight miles) to downtown via I-65 or Franklin Pike, and about 13 minutes (roughly six miles) to BNA. Peak I-65 traffic runs longer.
What schools serve Crieve Hall?
Metro Nashville Public Schools, with assignment by exact address. Because the southern edge abuts the Brentwood and Williamson County line, verify carefully with MNPS for any specific parcel.
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