Nashville

Boring Company Buys West End Building in Nashville

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Published on June 18, 2026
Boring Company Buys West End Building in NashvilleSource: Google Street View

The Boring Company, working through a limited liability company, has quietly grabbed a three-story commercial building at 3301 West End Avenue in Midtown Nashville. The deed on file in Davidson County puts the sale price at $2,399,999, instantly fuelling fresh speculation about whether the proposed Music City Loop could stretch farther west of downtown than some neighbors expected.

Recorded Sale Points To A Texas-Linked Buyer

The deed filed with the Davidson County Register of Deeds lists the buyer as an LLC that shares a mailing address with The Boring Company's operation in Bastrop, Texas. According to Nashville Post, the purchase was recorded this month and confirms the $2,399,999 price tag.

Where This Sits On The Music City Loop Map

The Boring Company’s public materials show a Broadway alignment that continues southwest along West End Avenue past Centennial Park and Vanderbilt, which makes parcels on West End look like logical candidates for stations, egress shafts or staging areas. As outlined by The Boring Company, the Music City Loop is pitched as a privately funded, zero-emissions express link designed to connect downtown and Nashville International Airport.

Officials And Neighbors Have Raised Concerns

The tunnel plan has already drawn scrutiny from Metro Council members and neighborhood groups, who have pressed the company on safety, accessibility, and transparency. State and federal agencies have signed off on several permits, and the Metro Nashville Airport Authority has approved a long-term licensing agreement with the company, but city leaders and residents are still asking for more details, as reported by WPLN News.

What The Building Might Be Used For

The firm’s FAQ notes that tunneling under private property requires written easements and that station and egress-shaft locations depend on agreements with landowners. Local reporting has followed a series of discreet land moves and easements tied to the loop in recent months, offering a rough playbook for how an acquisition on West End could eventually be put to work, alongside the company’s own project materials.

What To Watch Next

The recorded purchase by itself does not change permitting, but it gives neighbors and city officials a fresh, concrete data point about where the tunnel could surface or potentially add a stop. Expect follow-up filings, neighborhood notices, and permit updates in the weeks ahead as design and site work continue and The Boring Company posts periodic project updates.