Entertainment Music Country Music Luke Combs Plans to Rebrand Iconic Nashville Venue in His Likeness — Inspired by His Hit 'Hurricane' (Exclusive) "This is something I never would've dreamed of even two or three years ago," the country star tells PEOPLE By Cindy Watts Cindy Watts Cindy Watts is a CMA Award-winning journalist who has spent more than 20 years reporting on country music from Nashville, Tennessee. The bulk of her career was spent with The USA Today Network. She has a degree in recording industry from Middle Tennessee State University, where she recently spent a semester teaching journalism. She currently co-hosts 52-The Podcast alongside Sugarland singer/songwriter Kristian Bush. She adores baking, The Golden Girls and Dolly Parton, but not as much as she loves her two children. People Editorial Guidelines Published on April 13, 2023 07:05PM EDT Luke Combs. Photo: Larry McCormack/ABC/Getty Luke Combs walked up to Wildhorse Saloon in Nashville, Tennessee, around Thanksgiving several years ago. He hadn't yet collected his 15 No. 1 hits and wasn't a household name. His fellow country singer Tracy Lawrence invited Combs to participate in his annual turkey fry to help support the Nashville Rescue Mission and feed the hungry in Music City. He remembers standing in the back hallway, taking in the scene and feeling thankful to be there. "I was getting to hang out with Tracy Lawrence," Combs tells PEOPLE while perched on a stool backstage at Wildhorse Saloon. "I've looked up to him for a long time, and especially at that time, it's just like, 'Man, what is going on?' It was just cool that somebody wanted me to be a part of their cause because they thought I could somehow help." Fast forward to Thursday, and Combs stood in that same hallway preparing to announce that he has teamed with Ryman Hospitality's Opry Entertainment Group to rebrand country music's famous Wildhorse Saloon as a Luke Combs-inspired multi-level bar, restaurant, venue and entertainment space. Combs and Colin Reed, Executive Chairman of Ryman Hospitality Properties, who joined him at a press event Thursday, did not share the venue's new name but says the space at 120 Second Avenue North should open in the summer of 2024. "This is something I never would've dreamed of even two or three years ago," Combs, 33, says. Luke Combs and Wife Nicole Expecting Another Baby Boy: 'Joining the 2 Under 2 Club!' The 69,000-sq ft space is being reconfigured to include a honkytonk, a sports bar complete with odds posted, a high-end bourbon bar, a beer bar, a "Beautiful Crazy" bachelorette space, a 9,000-square foot rooftop area overlooking Nissan Stadium and the Cumberland River, a venue outfitted for 1,500 people that Combs wants to be the best of that size in Nashville — and a destination that artists of all genres want to play. His song "Hurricane" is a favorite of Reed's and set the tone for the core entertainment area of the facility. A massive light fixture that looks like a hurricane and moves around based on the size configuration of the venue has the singer in awe. "You have the ability to control this massive space with lighting and walls," he says. "There's so many different elements that they've worked into the place." Nicole and Luke Combs. Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Combs is an avid bourbon lover, entertainer and sports fan, so he had plenty of input on how he wanted those spaces to operate. However, when it came to the bachelorette area, he went straight to his wife, Nicole, for advice. "I definitely didn't have a ton of great bachelorette party ideas going around my head," Combs laughed after taking the stage. "I run 99.9% of the things that I do by my wife. I spend my time at home, really. We're on tour, but we [play] one show a week. The rest of the week, I've been home changing diapers, cooking dinner … and just doing the most normal things. We sit around, talk and put the kid to bed, and we watch murder mysteries on the couch and talk about bachelorette spaces. That's just kind of what's going on in our house." He might be most excited about the rooftop bar. Music City hosts CMA Music Festival and large July 4th and New Year's Eve events, and Combs thinks the rooftop will be a prime viewing area for patrons. Combs' entertainment venue will join a bevy of other artist-branded Lower Broadway bars that include Luke Bryan's 32 Bridge, Jason Aldean's Kitchen + Rooftop Bar, Kid Rock's Big Ass Honky Tonk & Rock 'n' Roll Steakhouse, Dierks Bentley's Whiskey Row, Florida Georgia Line's FGL House, Miranda Lambert's Casa Rosa and Blake Shelton's Ole Red, the latter of which is also a partnership with Opry Entertainment Group. Combs' space is nearly three times the size of Shelton's bar and restaurant. He jokes that at 300 lbs, the size of his bar was determined by his weight, and the same was true for a slimmer Shelton. "He was the Sexiest Man Alive," Combs quipped. "That's not ever happening for me." Blake Shelton Is This Year's Sexiest Man Alive: 'I Can't Wait to Shove This Up Adam's Ass!' On a more serious note, Reed explained he hoped the space would lead the revitalization effort on Second Avenue following the 2020 Christmas Day bombing that heavily damaged many of the buildings on the street. "I really hope that what we're doing here will be the stimulator," Reed said. "But this is truly one of the most strategically positioned assets in Nashville. This whole riverfront will be developed across here over the next decade, and this will be sitting right in the middle of it." Combs, who will headline Nashville's Nissan Stadium Friday and Saturday nights, didn't know how to play guitar 15 years ago. When he moved to Nashville in 2014, all he knew was that he wanted a music-related job that would pay his rent and keep food in his refrigerator. Luke Combs. Jason Kempin/Getty Luke Combs Wins the 2022 CMAs Entertainer of the Year for the Second Time: 'A Dream Come True' Now he's the Country Music Association's reigning entertainer of the year on a headlining stadium tour with his heart set on boosting the popular '90s line dance destination. "This was the place to be in the '90s," he says. "I want to make it the place to be again. Colin and the Opry folks are the only people who could pull that off." Close