To become more accessible, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum moved to a new, facility in the heart of
downtown Nashville's arts and entertainment district in May 2001. In 2014, the museum unveiled a $100 million expansion, doubling its size to 350,000 square feet of galleries, archival storage, education classrooms, retail stores, and special event space. In the museum's core exhibition,
Sing Me Back Home: A Journey Through Country Music, visitors are immersed in the history and sounds of country music. The story is revealed through artifacts, photographs, text panels, recorded sound, vintage video, and interactive touchscreens.
Sing Me Back Home is enhanced by rotating limited-engagement exhibits. The ACM Gallery and the Dinah and Fred
Gretsch Family Gallery features artifacts from today's country stars and a series of technology-enhanced activities. The ACM Gallery houses the annual exhibition,
American Currents: State of Music, which chronicles country music's most recent past. In addition to the galleries, the museum has the 776-seat CMA Theater, the
Taylor Swift Education Center, and multi-purpose event rental spaces. Other historic properties of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum include one of the country's oldest letterpress print shop
Hatch Show Print (located inside the museum) and Historic
RCA Studio B (located on Music Row), Nashville's oldest surviving recording studio, where recordings by Country Music Hall of Fame members
Elvis Presley,
Dolly Parton,
Waylon Jennings, and many others were made. The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum has developed multiple platforms to make its collection accessible to a wider audience. From weekly instrument demonstrations to its flagship songwriting program for schools, Words & Music, the museum offers an aggressive schedule of educational and family programs. The museum also operates CMF Records, a
Grammy-winning re-issue label (
The Complete Hank Williams and
Night Train to Nashville: Music City Rhythm & Blues, 1945–1970); and CMF Press, a publishing imprint that has released books in cooperation with Vanderbilt University Press and other major trade publishing houses. The Hall of Fame Rotunda features a mural,
The Sources of Country Music, by
Thomas Hart Benton. It was Benton's final work; as he died in his studio while completing it. ==The Country Music Hall of Fame==