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About Franklin, KY Units

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Looking for nearby Franklin storage units? Storage Rentals of America offers clean, bright, and secure storage options to meet your needs. Conveniently located behind Lowe's Home Improvement off Nashville Road (Highway 31 West), our Franklin storage facility is easy to access for residents and businesses alike.

We offer a wide range of unit sizes, from compact 5x5 storage units to spacious 10x30 units, perfect for storing everything from small household items to larger equipment. Not sure what size you need? Our courteous customer service team is available 7 days a week to help you select the ideal storage unit. We’ll guide you through the rental process and can even move you into your unit over the phone, all from the comfort of your home.

Flexible Storage Options

Our flexible month-to-month leases mean you can rent your storage unit for as long—or as short—a time as you need. Free up space in your garage or driveway with our outdoor parking spaces, large enough for RVs, cars, boats, and trailers. Need additional protection from the elements? Our drive-up storage units offer extra security and convenience for vehicle storage.

Secure and Convenient

Your belongings are safe with us. Our Franklin storage facility features gated access, 24-hour video surveillance, and well-lit premises, ensuring secure storage you can trust.

Additional Services

Planning a move? We also stock packing and moving supplies like boxes, tape, mattress covers, and more. Let us be your one-stop shop for storage and packing solutions.

Experience the Storage Rentals of America difference with our nearby Franklin storage units. Stop by or call today to reserve your space!

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City Information

Moving and storage go hand in hand. Whether traveling across town or the country, moving is an exciting and fresh start. While Storage Rentals of America is here to help you with all your storage needs, we also want to help you get familiar with the area. That's why we put together this resource guide for Franklin, Kentucky.

About Franklin, Kentucky

Franklin, Kentucky, is a small rural community on the northern edge of the Nashville metropolitan area. Although the social and economic life of the city aligns with Nashville, Franklin has its compelling character. The area partakes in all the advantages of Kentucky life while offering easy access to some of America's great cities. Franklin is the seat of Simpson County and enjoys remarkable natural resources, abundant natural beauty, compelling local character, and some truly fascinating local history. The last census found Franklin to have 8.408 permanent residents.

What to do in Franklin, KY

Most large organized activities center around Nashville, which lies about a half hour to the south. However, there are several enjoyable activities in Franklin and the surrounding county. Nature hikes are great fun in and around the Jim Roberts Community Park, the West Fork of Drake's Creek, and down the historically significant Sinking Creek. Antique shopping and collecting are common activities around here, with September's 31W Treasure Hunt event bringing visitors to the city from all over the globe. There are the Kentucky Downs, a remarkable racetrack with an international reputation and an amazing past.

The Octagon Hall, which sits on the northern edge of town, offers attractions to two major groups. During the day, it is a museum that explores the important Civil War history of the area. However, it is also rumored to be one of the most haunted places in America. At night, thrill seekers and paranormal lovers have been known to visit it frequently. Finally, Franklin was also the site of the Mantell UFO Incident, one of the events that triggered the first UFO craze of the 1940s. As such, it is a tourist attraction to a certain type of visitor.

Working in Franklin, KY

31W, a major Kentucky artery that stretches from Nashville to Louisville, runs through the center of town. An industrial park on the north side of town provides several jobs in the skilled trades, as do many farms around the community. The Kentucky Downs employ many people in the area, and the ancillary services related to the horse industry offer a connection to a lucrative international marketplace. There are also several jobs at the eight local schools, the local government, the police department, and all their related facilities. Those seeking employment outside of Franklin usually make the short commute to Nashville to take advantage of that metropolis's enormous opportunities.

Franklin, KY. Neighborhoods

Franklin's location on the border means that residents have long taken advantage of the benefits of both Kentucky and Tennessee. Kentucky may be known for a better education system and lighter business tax regimen, but you can buy fireworks in Tennessee all year round. Things like that are extremely well-known to the resident of Franklin. Because of the border orientation of the city, the vast majority of neighborhoods cluster around the main artery to Nashville, 31W. Small neighborhoods like Turnertown and Middleton face each other across the crossroads in the center of town, and a large part of the community lives in the tiny villages and large farms surrounding Simpson County. Beyond details of taxation and utility bills, Franklin maintains very little separation between itself and Simpson County.

Franklin, KY. School District

Four public elementary schools serve Franklin and the surrounding Simpson County; Franklin, Lincoln, Simpson, and Franklin Mennonite Elementary School. Franklin-Simpson Middle School and Franklin-Simpson High School complete the highly successful Simpson County public education system, graduating approximately 250 students every year and consistently maintaining high marks both academically and athletically. There is also a Baptist Academy for students aged K-12 and an alternative school known as West Campus. Although there are no higher learning institutions in Franklin, Kentucky, and Tennessee maintain extensive collegiate facilities in the immediate vicinity. The University of Tennessee has one of its flagship institutions in Nashville, in addition to all the other smaller schools in the city, and the Western Kentucky University sits an hour to the north in Bowling Green.

Moving to Franklin, KY. Resource Guide

  • Utilities: Inhabitants of Franklin will use the Franklin Municipal Utility system for water, sewage, sanitation, and garbage disposal. Their electricity, and possibly their internet, will come from the Franklin Electric Plant Board.
  • City Government: For the Franklin government.
  • Parks and Recreation: The Franklin-Simpson County Parks and Recreation department maintains a Facebook page to inform the public of upcoming events and to communicate with the populace.

Housing in Franklin, KY.

The median rent in Franklin is about $900 a month, but as it is a rural area with a stable population, there is wide variance on a unit-to-unit basis. Homes are selling for an average of about $50,000, and the price has been trending downward. Franklin's cost of living is extraordinarily low; some surveys say as much as 15% below the national average. This area is extremely livable and surprisingly lovable, and Franklin is a unique city in various ways. Franklin still stands out in a state full of interesting places with lots of personalities. For example, the county sits atop one of the significant deviations between Kentucky and the Tennessee border, where the edge of Kentucky dips south a few miles to accommodate an area now home to a racetrack.

The Kentucky Downs, one of the best-regarded thoroughbred racetracks in the nation, occupies this unusual site because of its amazing history. In the early 19th century, Nashville was the home to a large amount of political intrigue, and they settled political arguments with duels in those days. As dueling was technically illegal in Tennessee, a small portion of land was ceded to Kentucky so that the governors and legislators of the day could shoot at each other in full compliance with the law.

Although Kentucky outlawed dueling in 1891, something of that wild spirit still clings to this land. Beyond the aforementioned duels, horse races, ghosts, and UFOs, perhaps Franklin's single greatest contribution to American popular culture came on May 1st, 1968 when Johnny Carter and June Carter Cash were joined in holy matrimony in a church in this city. This wedding was a lovely affair whose importance cannot be overestimated by two lovers of American music or American culture. The union of the wild spirit of rock and roll with the favorite daughter of the American folk tradition had long-lasting ramifications for our music and our society, and Franklin was pleased to play host to this major event. For these and many more reasons, Franklin is a pleasant, interesting, and affordable place to live.