Quick Answer: A development consultant guides mixed-use projects from site selection through construction, coordinating your financial model, design, entitlements, and timeline. Unlike architects or contractors who handle specific tasks, they ensure all project elements work together strategically—catching costly issues before construction begins and navigating Nashville's specific regulatory landscape.
A development consultant is a strategic advisor who guides mixed-use projects from site selection and feasibility through entitlements, design coordination, and construction oversight — essentially the person who keeps your vision, budget, and timeline aligned. If you're considering a mixed-use development in Nashville in 2026, whether it's a ground-floor retail and residential build in East Nashville or a larger commercial-residential hybrid near the Gulch, this Q&A covers the questions we hear most from investors and developers exploring this space.
An architect designs the building. A general contractor builds it. A development consultant sits above both, coordinating the entire project lifecycle so that the financial model, the design, the entitlements, and the construction schedule all work together. They're the one asking whether a fourth floor pencils out, whether the retail square footage ratio makes sense for the submarket, and whether the zoning overlay allows your intended use. Without that strategic layer, you can end up with a beautiful design that doesn't cash flow or a solid pro forma attached to a building that can't get permitted.
Many experienced investors find that mixed-use projects introduce complexity that single-use residential or commercial deals don't. You're dealing with multiple tenant types, different parking requirements, separate utility configurations, and layered zoning considerations — often all within a single parcel. A consultant who has navigated Nashville's specific regulatory environment can compress your learning curve and catch issues that cost six figures to fix after construction starts. Even seasoned developers often bring one on for their first mixed-use project in a new market.
Ask about specific corridors. A consultant who understands Nashville's mixed-use environment should be able to speak fluently about the differences between developing along Dickerson Pike versus Nolensville Pike versus Charlotte Avenue. They should know which Urban Design Overlays apply, how Metro Planning Commission feedback cycles work in 2026, and what community engagement looks like in neighborhoods with active council members. General mixed-use experience from other cities helps, but Nashville's entitlement process, infrastructure constraints, and neighborhood dynamics have their own rhythm.
Fee structures typically fall into three models:
The right model depends on your project's stage. If you're still evaluating whether a site is viable, an hourly or retainer arrangement makes sense. Once you've committed to a specific parcel and timeline, a flat fee or percentage model aligns the consultant's incentives with project completion.
Before you close on the land. Ideally, a development consultant reviews the site during your due diligence period. They can flag zoning conflicts, infrastructure gaps, environmental concerns, and feasibility issues that change whether — or how — you proceed. Bringing one on after you've already purchased the parcel and started design limits their ability to shape the project's fundamentals. Many of the most expensive mistakes in mixed-use development happen before a shovel touches dirt.
Nashville's planning framework continues to evolve, particularly around Metro Nashville's zoning and land use policies. Urban Design Overlays, specific plan districts, and community plan amendments all influence what you can build, how tall it can be, and what uses are permitted at the street level. A development consultant should be tracking these shifts in real time — not working from assumptions that were accurate two years ago. Parking minimums, affordable housing incentive programs, and infrastructure contribution requirements are all areas where the rules have shifted and continue to shift in 2026.
A project manager typically enters after design is complete and focuses on construction execution — timelines, subcontractor coordination, budget tracking. A development consultant operates upstream, shaping the project's financial model, navigating entitlements, selecting the design and construction team, and structuring the deal. On larger mixed-use projects, you often need both. On smaller ones, a strong consultant can wear both hats, but make sure their scope of work spells out which responsibilities are included.
Many do. A good consultant understands how lenders evaluate mixed-use projects differently from single-use assets. They can help you structure the capital stack — the combination of equity, senior debt, mezzanine financing, and any public incentives — so that the project is fundable. They'll also know which Nashville-specific incentive programs might apply to your project, whether that's tax increment financing districts or other metropolitan development tools.
Our work at Arrt of Real Estate focuses on real estate investment advisory and development consulting across Nashville. We think like investors because we are investors — and that perspective shapes how we evaluate sites, structure deals, and advise on mixed-use feasibility. We help clients identify off-market parcels, model realistic returns, and build the right team around a project before capital gets deployed. If you're exploring a mixed-use concept in Nashville this summer, a conversation early in the process is worth more than a rescue call six months in.
Strategic Real Estate For Nashville And Middle Tennessee.
Arrt of Real Estate is a Nashville-based brokerage built on high standards, transparency, and results.
Brentwood, Tennessee
View full profile