Post-Tribune

Music City’s forgettabl­e year

Apart from the pandemic, Nashville’s mettle tested by weather disasters, explosion

- By Kimberlee Kruesi and Bobby Caina Calvan

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — When Sandy and Geff Lee finally saw a photo of the building that was home to their Nashville boutique on the day after the Christmas morning bombing, a quiet came over the room.

The rubble was overwhelmi­ng. Debris shadowed familiar details. Geff Lee pulled up a map to verify they were looking in the right place.

“It was an eye-opener,” said Sandy Lee, owner of Ensemble.

The Christmas Day explosion has sparked shock across the country after a bomb detonated in the heart of Nashville’s historic downtown and killed the bomber, injured three other people and damaged dozens of buildings.

Yet for those who call Music City home, the bombing feels like a cruel capstone to an already dark year.

In early March, a massive tornado rumbled through the city — uprooting homes, destroying businesses and killing two dozen people.

Then the COVID-19 pandemic arrived, shuttering businesses as people stayed home and the virus spread rapidly. Some people who lost their homes in the tornado saw their jobs disappear.

Things have steadily worsened over the course of the year. The post-Thanksgivi­ng resurgence left Tennessee with among the highest number of cases per capita as state leaders remained hesitant to impose statewide mandatory restrictio­ns. And while the city is known as a health care hub, Nashville’s hospitals have strained to keep up with the stream of COVID-19 patients that have been rushed from all corners of the state.

Those weren’t the only setbacks. Some downtown businesses experience­d property damage in late May during a peaceful protest that turned violent in response to racial injustice and police brutality.

Many structures in the tornado’s path remain broken and tangled to this day.

State and local officials shake their heads in dismay that a city that had been flying high on an economic boom for years managed to pack in so many tragedies in just 12 months.

Businesses along Second Avenue, a narrow-tree lined street where the explosion took place, had found a thriving location with a ready-made tourist market in the Civil War-era buildings over the years.

More than 40 structures were damaged by the blast. Because of the active investigat­ion, which has drawn hundreds of federal officials to sweep though the broken glass, bricks and other debris left by the blast, business owners have not been able to return — not even to survey the damage.

“We’ve always taken such pride to be part of this community and to see those buildings that have survived the Civil War are going to be most likely torn down is really, really sad,” said Carla Rosenthal, the owner of The Melting Pot and Rodizio Grill, both businesses destroyed in the blast that employs roughly 120 staffers combined.

Nearly a quarter of those employees had already applied for unemployme­nt by end of Christmas.

“We’ve always felt like we were part of what has brought Nashville to become the ‘It City’ as it is,” said Rosenthal, who has owned The Melting Pot for more than 25 years and Rodizio Grill for eight. “We helped build this city.”

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY/AP ?? The Christmas Day bombing in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, was the latest tragedy to befall Music City in 2020. Above, Sumant Joshi helps clean up rubble at a church damaged by storms that spawned deadly tornadoes in March.
MARK HUMPHREY/AP The Christmas Day bombing in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, was the latest tragedy to befall Music City in 2020. Above, Sumant Joshi helps clean up rubble at a church damaged by storms that spawned deadly tornadoes in March.

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