|
| ||||||||||||||||||||





Metro says that this stalled development agreement is now "expected to be executed in the summer of 2010," with a lease between the companies to be signed about 18 months after that, once all development and construction permits are obtained. They say "late 2013" is when the project would open. At right is a rendering from the WMATA site of the proposed building. (Note that the footprint of this project does not include the cab company building just to the west at 37 L.)|
Comments (0)
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
909 New Jersey, Alcohol/Liquor Licenses, Capper, Community Center, crime, Harry's Reserve, Retail
|
It turns me into an old codger to say it, but it's really true: those of you who didn't live in the DC area in the late 1980s and 1990s really have no concept of what Washington and its residents went through in those years. Even though large swaths of the city were considered "safe," with the bulk of the epidemic crime happening in certain neighborhoods, everyone was affected by the unrelenting drumbeat of murders and violence. 
And yet the violence of the era probably fueled my interest in watching the city's redevelopment, to see neighborhoods that I had given up for lost in 1990 (such as Massachusetts Avenue east of Mt. Vernon Square) turn into luxury condo havens by the early 2000s. And it was why I began to watch--with no small sense of wonderment and even a little skepticism--as I started to hear in the late 1990s about the plans to "revitalize" the area south of the Southeast Freeway, an area that was a near-total No-Go for me from the time I moved to the south side of Capitol Hill in 1994 until my first furtive photographic forays by car in 2000 and 2003. (It's somewhat amazing now to realize that I did not actually put my feet on the ground at Third and K, SE, until the summer of 2005.)|
Comments (0)
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
parking, Nationals Park
|


|
Comments (0)
More posts:
|
|
Comments (0)
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
11th Street Bridges
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
Capitol Riverfront BID, Rearview Mirror
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
Capitol Riverfront BID, Nationals Park
|

But I found a lot of other "lost" buildings as well, ones that I didn't remember and that probably weren't much to look at at the time, but that help to give a clearer view of what the neighborhood truly looked like just before its first "growth spurt" in 1999-2001 with the arrival of NAVSEA at the Navy Yard. The big finds were the seven or so old rowhouses just north of the (sparkling new) Navy Yard Metro station entrance on New Jersey Avenue, along with another 10 or so along L and Second Streets on what is now the Capitol Hill Tower/Courtyard block. (The Little Red Building did not stand alone since the dawn of time.) The car repair garage and other gritty low-rise buildings that stood where the 1100 New Jersey Avenue office building now is. And so on.|
Comments (0)
More posts:
Rearview Mirror
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
11th Street Bridges, East of 11th Street
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
Nationals Park
|
|
Comments (0)
|
|
Comments (0)
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
Nationals Park
|

|
Comments (0)
More posts:
600 M/Square 882/Old Capper Seniors, Barracks, The Bixby, Capper, The Bixby, Virginia Ave Park
|
On Oct. 24, 1977, an explosion on the ground floor triggered by cleaning chemicals started a fire, with flames quickly consuming carpeting and wall hangings, blocking the exit for the patrons who had been in the 50-seat second floor theater. The fire never reached the second floor, but the smoke quickly became overpowering. However, a door that led to the roof was padlocked, and the windows had been replaced with cinderblocks. According to the Washington Post's account, "most of the victims were found in the orange-and-black theater seats [...] and may have been overcome by the smoke before they realized what was happening."
Within a year or the fire, Oates opened "The Follies" at its new location at 24 O St., SE, where it operated until it was demolished with many other gay nightclubs in May 2006 to make way for Nationals Park. Somewhat amazingly, the building where the Cinema Follies fire took place, which was not all that heavily damaged, still stands today, on L Street directly across from the under-construction 1015 Half office building. It's currently home to a cab company.|
Comments (0)
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
11th Street Bridges, Navy Yard
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
Nationals Park, winterclassic
|
|
Comments (0)
More posts:
Capitol Riverfront BID, Fairgrounds/Bullpen
|


























