The stunning surroundings at Nashville’s most beautiful restaurants include manzanita branches, intricate tilework, and an impeccably preserved 19th-century house.
LessThe Courtyard Restaurant at RH Nashville brings the wow factor. Its massive dining room combines all the best aspects of a cozy living room with an opulent outdoor dining area, complete with couches, a centerpiece fountain, and a glittering chandelier that towers above it all. Start with wine from a generous by-the-glass menu before diving into steakhouse classics like charred ribeye with truffle fries. After your meal, browse the surrounding showrooms or enjoy a nightcap on the rooftop.
Whether you prefer a moody booth indoors or a bustling outdoor patio, Harper’s has you covered. The vibe is garden-meets-retro thanks to vibrant floral wallpaper, handsome wood paneling, and lots of intricate stonework. If you’re here with a group, settle into a half-circle booth under archways that face the dining room; solo visitors can grab a tufted barstool. Then choose from prime cuts and colossal desserts that this swanky globally accented steakhouse is famous for.
As Southall Farm & Inn’s signature restaurant, January embodies the resort’s seed-to-fork mission. To get here, you’ll walk through a barn-style lobby that sets a bucolic tone. January’s tables were crafted from downed trees on the property, and they’re all wreathed by floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the farm. Warm up by the crackling fireplace and sneak peeks at the open kitchen as the culinary team preps an always-changing menu featuring harvest salads and steak for the table.
Evelyn’s lives in the effortlessly cool Hutton Hotel and was inspired by 20th-century hotelier and art collector, Evelyn Sharp (you’ll find her face on the coasters). Custom cantilevered lights add a dose of drama, but the dining room mostly takes cues from mid-century living rooms, a mix of checker-stained wood floors, oak paneling, and pops of electric yellow and coral. The dishes are just as homey and beautiful, including a stunning orange-hued seafood bisque and vibrant beet salad.
The Joseph is one of Nashville’s most stunning hotels, and while many come for its signature restaurant Yolan or rooftop oasis Denim, there’s a hidden gem worth your attention: Four Walls is an intimate speakeasy-style lounge done up in thick drapes, dark colors, and unexpected pops of red. It’s edgy but elegant, so claim a spot along the gorgeous marble bartop and sip on cocktails dreamt up by Boulud Sud alum Kenneth Vanhooser, including a gin, rum, and wasabi concoction called Emerald City.
O-Ku channeled its sibling restaurants across the South and brought its creative Japanese-inspired menu to Nashville in 2019. Crowds come for rolls topped with non-traditional ingredients like goat-cheese mousse and candied walnuts, but it’s the serene dining room that gives its Germantown location a sophisticated edge. O-Ku dazzles with long lavender banquettes, oversized chandeliers, and wood-paneled ceilings, plus manzanita branches that bring a unique Japanese flavor to the interiors.
As Nashville’s only standing grand townhouse, the Smith House itself is a destination restaurant. The three-floor, six-bedroom home was built in the 1840s and remains impeccably preserved with functional fireplaces, exposed brick, tin ceilings, gilded chandeliers, and other examples of Italianate architecture. The menu is just as old-world, so come for some of Nashville’s best martinis, bowls of crab bisque, and grilled rack of lamb.
Farmstead-style homes scream “middle Tennessee,” and Mere Bulles is one of those historic manors that scored a second life as a unique restaurant. The interiors recall a Southern living room with artwork that hangs above fireplaces, fabric sconces on the walls, and a carpeted winding staircase. Fittingly, the menu is also full of Southern charm, featuring classics like she-crab soup, shrimp and grits, and cuts of Angus beef, best washed down with sweet tea.
Comfort food like short ribs and fried chicken get cosmopolitan revamps at The Mockingbird, which explains the restaurant’s playful Art Deco-lite interiors: Colorful banquettes, intricate tilework, and floral accent walls give the place its signature brightness, but the scene-stealer is a three-dimensional mirror in the shape of a bird’s head, a tribute to its name. Bonus points for not one but two patios.