05/12/2026
A residential Edwin Keeble design rarely comes to market in Belle Meade. The Nashville architect best known for the AT&T tower that defines the city’s skyline left a smaller catalog of private homes, and 4410 Truxton Place, sited at the dead end of a private street on 2.45 flat acres, is among them.
Originally built in 1970 by John Ramsey, the estate was taken to the studs in 2015 by architect Jamie Pfeffer and Phipps Builders, who added a pool, pool house, and a substantial expansion to the main residence. The five-bedroom main house spans 10,399 square feet across six full and three half bathrooms, with an elevator, vaulted ceilings, Crotch Mahogany paneling, his-and-hers offices, and a 150KW generator wired to the entire property.
The landscape, by Page | Duke principal Gavin Duke, took the same exacting approach. Renowned arborist Tom Powers sourced more than 350 tree specimens from across the country to build a year-round privacy canopy, threaded with Georgian Limestone pathways and Georgian Sunset Gravel drives.
The signature gesture sits in the garden: a Moongate built on site by Harry Peffen from Texas Limestone boulders, a single circular aperture framing the property’s interior view.
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4410 Truxton Place, Belle Meade
$23,800,000
Represented by Laura Stroud & Lisa Fernandez-Wilson