At the heart of Schermerhorn Symphony Center is the , 1,844-seat Laura Turner Concert Hall, which is home to the Nashville Symphony. The hall is of the
shoebox style. It features natural lighting, which streams in through 30 soundproof, double-paned
clerestory windows. Intricate symbolic motifs appear throughout the hall and the rest of the center, including
irises (the Tennessee state flower),
horseshoes (a tribute to the late Laura Turner's love of horses) and
coffee beans (representing Nashville's Cheek family, which played a key role in the founding of the Nashville Symphony and also originally owned the Maxwell House Coffee brand). Seats in Laura Turner Concert Hall are distributed over three levels, including a special choral loft behind the stage that can seat up to 146 chorus members; the seats are made available to audience members during non-choral performances. The stage can accommodate up to 115 musicians. The center's
New Classical design blends elements of other
Classical and Neoclassical structures in the city, such as the full-scale
Parthenon replica and Nashville's main public library. The Laura Turner Concert Hall is insulated from exterior noise by an acoustical isolation joint, a 2-inch gap of air that encircles the hall and prevents transmission of
sound waves in or out. Schermerhorn Symphony Center also houses the Mike Curb Family Music Education Hall, a space that hosts smaller performances and also serves as a venue for the symphony's ongoing music-education initiative, Music Education City. The center also has a public garden, the Martha Rivers Ingram Garden Courtyard, which is enclosed by a colonnade and is connected to the west side of the building. Paul Scarbrough of Akustiks was responsible for the acoustic design of the hall. == Awards and honors ==