Capitol Crossing / 200 & 250 Massachusetts Ave Nw

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Capitol Crossing / 200 & 250 Massachusetts Ave Nw CAPITOL CROSSING / 200 & 250 MASSACHUSETTS AVE NW / WASHINGTON, DC 1 W 4 N St N t h F S ¤50 lo t ri Gallaudet Ridge St NW Patterson St NE da Shepherd Park N Mt Vernon Square A University W 0 v -5 e 1 N Takoma S Barnaby Woods - U E SOUTH VIEW OF CAPITOL CROSSING | RENDERING SHAW S NW W M St NW M St NE U e N Av hip • edgy • residential rk E t Yo N S Lamond Riggs w M $132,419 AVG HH INCOME e l Brightwood CONVENTION a N N h s P Chevy Chase s e a t (MD) c CENTER W w h e St NW y u 9 Pierc Pierce St NE s N e e t J t t b Friendship Heights Queens Chapel s e A S v b Brightwood Park e L St NW r t N s A s NOMA W e 1 L St NW L St NW y L St NE Fort Totten new • evolving • connected 16th Street Heights A E American University Park Tenleytown Van Ness v N North Michigan Park K MARYLAND e $108,903 AVG HH INCOME t Petworth N Crestwood S W E l N Spring Valley o Mt Vernon t K St NW MT VERNON TRIANGLE t University Heights 29 K St NW K St NW i K St NE ¤ S Cathedral Heights Cleveland Park p Square Brookland new • up and coming t a Palisades s Mount Pleasant 1 C Wesley Heights Woodbridge Franklin Park $116,119 AVG HH INCOME Park View W NW Columbia Heights N N Woodley Park W Edgewood t McMillan W Langdon Fort Lincoln S W N Glover Park N I St NW N I St NW W I St NE Adams Morgan e t d 2 v t Gateway N r A S Brentwood E n LeDroit Park k S r 3 t U Street North Shaw o d N Kalorama Bloomingdale Y h S h Foxhall w t t t Arboretum W e Eckington Ivy City S 5 N l S 4 N North Dupont t o 17th Street E t t h Georgetown 14th Street N i W W t Truxton Circle H St N W H St N E N Logan Circle Shaw S Georgetown East E p 5 N Union Market District NE N South Dupont t a h NoMa t Trinidad S t t MASSACHUSETTS AVE NW West End H St N W H ST NW C H STREET Convention Center S M 3 S a h 1 Georgetown Waterfront CBD s North Capitol Street K Street Mount Vernon Triangle Carver Langston s G Pl NE h t a N E h t c artsy • energetic • communcal • fun City Center H Street h 4 t u N Chinatown Union Station 2 s Deanwood 6 1 et Metro Center W E $150,423 AVG HH INCOMEt Foggy Bottom/GWU G Pl NW ts Penn Quarter S Judiciary Square N A G St NW N G St NE ve Kingman Park t t Benning Verizon N h Gallery Pl-Chinatown W S S W t Metro Center 6 N Capitol Hill h Center d G ST NW t G St NW r t 1 Eastern Market 3 orris Pl NE 1 M S L'Enfant Plaza 5 Marshall Heights 9 Barney Circle/ Hill East h 3 Barracks Row t Union Station - Fort Dupont 7 Southwest Waterfront I 3RD ST NW 3RD ST The Wharf W EAST END / 1 N F St NW ¤ F ST NW F St NW F St NE Capitol Riverfront Navy Yard Ballpark District t 1 DOWNTOWN W UNION S - C NEW JERSEY AVE NW SE N S 2ND ST NW 2ND ST h STATION o t Acker Pl NE U SW t VIRGINIA Hillcrest lively • dense • sophisticated l S Buzzard Point W W 4 u W Poplar Point 1 Pe N m N d n N n $124,366 AVG HH INCOME s t y n lvania Ave NW t E St NW E ST NW b E St NE t S (MD) 2 u S s S M a Anacostia s C E h i r N s h 395 a t c h t Judiciary Square ¦¨§ h E 8 t u 0 s N e 9 1 t ts e A Barry Farms ve P W Av N e W n D St NW N D St NE E ns e N e yl r v W v a a N W nia ve t A N w A A S a v a e an n a t N di a l W In d i C St NE S e r s LARGEST MIXED-USE i D t Archives-Navy Mem’l 3 u s o NW Congress Heights Penn Quarter 1 L C St C St NE Stanton Park Federal Triangle E N OPPORTUNITY IN DC E t N S t t 90,000 1.2 MILLION SF $13.9 BILLION S s 1 Capitol Crossing is located in East End, on the edge of Mount Vernon Triangle, d ¤50 Constitution Ave NW n Constitution Ave NE 2 Constitution Ave NE and surrounded by a dense concentration of offices, apartments, shops, E INCREASE IN TOTAL DC RETAIL UNDER CONSTRUCTION TAXABLE RETAIL + RESTAURANT N POPULATION SINCE 2010 ve restaurants, entertainment, and transportation options. Capitol Crossing has a IN DC AS OF DECEMBER 2017 SALES IN DC IN 2016 d A an Walkscore of 99 out of 100 and a Transit Score of 100 out of 100, making the (WDCEP) (WDCEP) (WDCEP) yl ¤1 ar NATIONALNa tMALLional Mall W M A St NE location a walking and riding paradise. N United 1 - W t S ison Dr N Mad S States W U h W Capitol N t N 4 t UNITED STATES CAPITOL t S E Capitol St NE E Capitol St SE S h t h t 2 3 1 1 DEMOGRAPHIC SNAPSHOT 10 MIN DRIVE TIME 177,000 RESIDENTIAL POPULATION 10 MIN DRIVE TIME 573,648 DAYTME POPULATION EPICENTER OF $87,049 MEDIAN HOUSEHOLD INCOME EVERYTHING Gallery Place 67.9% Chinatown ^_ 10 MIN WALK TIME WALKSCORE 99/100 BACHELOR’S DEGREE OR HIGHER Union Station LOCATED IN THE EAST END, Judiciary Sq ADJACENT TO MT VERNON 10 MIN WALK TIME TRIANGLE, CAPITOL CROSSING 12,668 IS DC’S NEWEST UP-AND- RESIDENTIAL POPULATION COMING DOWNTOWN. 76,091 DAYTME POPULATION $67,403 VA MEDIAN HOUSEHOLD INCOME 65.8% BACHELOR’S DEGREE OR HIGHER PHASE 1 200 & 250 MASSACHUSETTS AVE NW 70,000 SF 1 million SF distinct on-site rooftop of retail of office space retail alley parking terraces Various restaurant and Class A, Unique 55’ wide 1,146 parking spaces Incredible opportunities boutique retail spaces leed platinum. pedestrian alley for outdoor 440 bicycle spaces overlooking the available. seating/gathering. capital. PHASE II GTOWN GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY UNDER CONSTRUCTION PARK LAW CENTER FULL 4 BLOCKS UNION STATION PROJECT 2ND ST NW PLAN Loading CAPITOL Dock Access CROSSING BOUTIQUE 18’ clear PARK HOTEL SUPER COBB COMING 2020 OFFICE TROPHY SALE OR LEASE IN DEVELOPMENT OCCUPYING THE AIR RIGHTS TO PARK 430,520 SF 297,311 SF 297,311 SF 685,430 SF RENOVATION UNDERWAY 6.8 ACRES ABOVE INTERSTATE DELIVERING SOON 201 F STREET F ST NW 395 IN WASHINGTON DC, 2ND ST NW RETAIL ALLEY CAPITOL CROSSING IS THE 600 2ND STREET 200 E ST NW F STREET LARGEST URBAN MIXED-USE PHASE I MASSACHUSETTS AVE 1 MILLION SF OFFICE / 70,000 SF RETAIL MASSACHUSETTS AVE NW DEVELOPMENT IN THE DISTRICT. 3RD ST NW G ST NW CAPITAL ONE ARENA PHASE I FEATURES OVER 1 3.5 BLOCKS 566,136 SF 566,136 SF Parking Entrance MILLION SF OF OFFICE SPACE, 70,000 SF OF RETAIL SPACE 3RD ST NW AND 1,146 PARKING SPACES . MASSACHUSETTS AVE NW 2ND ST NW 2ND ST NW DRAFT 200 Mass Ave NW Ave 200 Mass 200 Mass Ave NW Ave 200 Mass 3,730 SF 7,780 SF 1,975 SF 1,800 SF 4,060 SF 4,060 3,200 SF 3,025 SF SF 1,975 retail alley 13'-2" retail alley 95'-8" 4'-5" 37'-7" 30'-8" 21'-2" MASSACHUSETTS AVE NW MASSACHUSETTS AVE NW 23'-11" 14'-10" 9'-6" connector GROUND connector BELOW +/- 22,290 sf 21'-4" 12' 62'-8" LEVEL LEVEL NW Ave 250 Mass 5,990 SF NW Ave 250 Mass 3,420 SF 22,290 SF 15'-4" 23'-4" 49'-9" 10'-1" 14'-8" 17'-9" 24'-9" 26'-2" 15'-9" - Grease Interceptor on P0 Level 14'-4" 11'-9" - Kitchen Exhaust Riser 38'-10" * - Note that all measurements, square 32'-9" footages, and equipment locations are approximate. 9,550 SF 118'-2" 4,970 SF 3RD ST NW 3RD ST NW VARIOUS DEMISING OPTIONS AVAILABLE VARIOUS DEMISING OPTIONS AVAILABLE 2ND ST NW DRAFT 200 Mass Ave NW Ave 200 Mass 200 Mass. Ave. 1,975 SF 1,975 retail alley MASSACHUSETTS AVE NW connector SECOND 122'-3" 32'-1" +/- 800 sf 13'-2" 13'-6" 11'-6" " " 26'-7" 32'-9 LEVEL +/- 13,850 sf 250 Mass Ave NW Ave 250 Mass 800 SF 20'-8" 40'-10" 26'-11" 4'-2" 12'-8" 8'-1" 58'-3" - Grease Interceptor on P0 Level 38'-3" 250 Mass. Ave. - Kitchen Exhaust Riser 29'-1" 129'-10" 7'-10" 11'-8" * - Note that all measurements, square 18'-6" 24' 46'-2" footages, and equipment locations are 12'-8" approximate. 38'-2" 19'-8" 19'-1" 30'-4" 26'-3" 38'-9" 49'-6" 53'-6" 69'-4" +/- 7,550 sf 75'-8" 7,550 SF 13,850 SF 64'-1" 4'-6" 7'-11" 15'-4" 15'-4" 3'-8" 133'-1" 53'-3" 3RD ST NW VARIOUS DEMISING OPTIONS AVAILABLE THANK YOU KELLY SILVERMAN 240-793-6821 [email protected] GARY TAUBIN 240-447-9707 [email protected] ©2018 CBRE, Inc.
Recommended publications
  • Village in the City Historic Markers Lead You To: Mount Pleasant Heritage Trail – a Pre-Civil War Country Estate
    On this self-guided walking tour of Mount Pleasant, Village in the City historic markers lead you to: MOUNT PLEASANT HERITAGE TRAIL – A pre-Civil War country estate. – Homes of musicians Jimmy Dean, Bo Diddley and Charlie Waller. – Senators pitcher Walter Johnson's elegant apartment house. – The church where civil rights activist H. Rap Brown spoke in 1967. – Mount Pleasant's first bodega. – Graceful mansions. – The first African American church on 16th Street. – The path President Teddy Roosevelt took to skinny-dip in Rock Creek Park. Originally a bucolic country village, Mount Pleasant has been a fashion- able streetcar suburb, working-class and immigrant neighborhood, Latino barrio, and hub of arts and activism. Follow this trail to discover the traces left by each succeeding generation and how they add up to an urban place that still feels like a village. Welcome. Visitors to Washington, DC flock to the National Mall, where grand monuments symbolize the nation’s highest ideals. This self-guided walking tour is the seventh in a series that invites you to discover what lies beyond the monuments: Washington’s historic neighborhoods. Founded just after the Civil War, bucolic Mount Pleasant village was home to some of the city’s movers and shakers. Then, as the city grew around it, the village evolved by turn into a fashionable streetcar suburb, a working-class neigh- borhood, a haven for immigrants fleeing political turmoil, a sometimes gritty inner-city area, and the heart of DC’s Latino community. This guide, summariz- ing the 17 signs of Village in the City: Mount Pleasant Heritage Trail, leads you to the sites where history lives.
    [Show full text]
  • The Case for Reconnecting Southeast Washington DC
    1 Reimagining DC 295 as a vital multi modal corridor: The Case for Reconnecting Southeast Washington DC Jonathan L. Bush A capstone thesis paper submitted to the Executive Director of the Urban & Regional Planning Program at Georgetown University’s School of Continuing Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Masters of Professional Studies in Urban & Regional Planning. Faculty Advisor: Howard Ways, AICP Academic Advisor: Uwe S. Brandes, M.Arch © Copyright 2017 by Jonathan L. Bush All Rights Reserved 2 ABSTRACT Cities across the globe are making the case for highway removal. Highway removal provides alternative land uses, reconnects citizens and natural landscapes separated by the highway, creates mobility options, and serves as a health equity tool. This Capstone studies DC 295 in Washington, DC and examines the cases of San Francisco’s Embarcadero Freeway, Milwaukee’s Park East Freeway, New York City’s Sheridan Expressway and Seoul, South Korea’s Cheonggyecheon Highway. This study traces the history and the highway removal success using archival sources, news circulars, planning documents, and relevant academic research. This Capstone seeks to provide a platform in favor DC 295 highway removal. 3 KEYWORDS Anacostia, Anacostia Freeway, Anacostia River, DC 295, Highway Removal, I-295, Kenilworth Avenue, Neighborhood Planning, Southeast Washington DC, Transportation Planning, Urban Infrastructure RESEARCH QUESTIONS o How can Washington’s DC 295 infrastructure be modified to better serve local neighborhoods? o What opportunities
    [Show full text]
  • Nehemiah Homes at Fort Dupont Planned Unit Development
    202.942.5000 ARNOLD & PORTER 202.942.5999 Fax 555 Twelfth Street, NW Washington, DC 20004-1206 July 17, 2001 Ms. Carol Mitten, Chair District of Columbia Zoning Commission 441 4th Street, N.W. Suite 210 Washington, D.C. 20001 Re: Pre-Hearing Submission Zoning Commission Case No. Ol-12C Nehemiah Homes at Fort Dupont Planned Unit Development Dear Ms. Mitten and Members of the Commission: Pursuant to§ 3013 of the Rules of Practice and Procedure before the Zoning Commission, we are herewith submitting twenty (20) copies of the Pre-Hearing Submission on behalf of the applicant in the above-referenced case. This information includes the following items: 1. Twenty (20) copies of the original application booklet, modified in part to reflect more refined plans. 2. A list of witnesses who will testify at the public hearing, a summary of their testimony, and an estimate of the time required for the applicant's presentation. 3. Additional reports and plans, including: • Architectural Plans by Heffner Architects • Revised Site Plan by Ben Dyer and Associates • Traffic Impact Analysis Study by O.R. George & Associates, Inc. 4. Twenty (20) copies ofreduced plans and two (2) sets of full-size plans 5. As to the requirement in§ 3013.3 to name the property owners in the ~ase of a map amendment, no rezoning is proposed in this application. ZONING COMMISSION 6. Certification pursuant to § 3013.7: ZONING COMMISSION District of Columbia Case No. 01-12 ZONING COMMISSION Washington, DC New York Los Angeles Century City Denver London NorthernDistrict Virginia of Columbia CASE NO.01-12 EXHIBITDeletedEXHIBIT NO.16A1 NO.16 Ms.
    [Show full text]
  • National China Garden Foundation
    MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT AMONG THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH SERVICE, THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA STATE HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICER, THE NATIONAL CAPITAL PLANNING COMMISSION, AND THE NATIONAL CHINA GARDEN FOUNDATION REGARDING THE NATIONAL CHINA GARDEN AT THE U.S. NATIONAL ARBORETUM, WASHINGTON, D.C. This Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) is made as of this 18th day of November 2016, by and among the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Agricultural Research Service (ARS), the District of Columbia State Historic Preservation Officer (DCSHPO), the National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC), and the National China Garden Foundation (NCGF), (referred to collectively herein as the “Parties” or “Signatories” or individually as a “Party” or “Signatory”) pursuant to Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA), 16 U.S.C. §470f and its implementing regulations 36 CFR Part 800, and Section 110 of the NHPA, 16 U.S.C. § 470h-2. WHEREAS, the United States National Arboretum (USNA) is a research and education institution, public garden and living museum, whose mission is to enhance the economic, environmental, and aesthetic value of landscape plants through long-term, multidisciplinary research, conservation of genetic resources, and interpretative gardens and educational exhibits. Established in 1927, and opened to the public in 1959, the USNA is the only federally-funded arboretum in the United States and is open to the public free of charge; and, WHEREAS, the USNA, located at 3501 New York Avenue, NE, is owned by the United States government and under the administrative jurisdiction of the USDA’s ARS and occupies approximately 446 acres in Northeast Washington, DC and bound by Bladensburg Road on the west, New York Avenue on the north, and M Street on the south.
    [Show full text]
  • Washington DC Welcome to the City Guide
    Table of Contents Welcome message Washington, D.C. alumni organizations + resources Apartment hunting tools Major neighborhoods in Washington, D.C. Must eat/drink places Fitness + outdoor activities Things to do in D.C. Instagram accounts to follow Helpful apps General tips & tricks Welcome Dear 2017 grad and new member of Generation Orange, WELCOME TO THE NATION’S CAPITAL! What is Generation Orange, you ask? Gen O grads are Syracuse University alumni who have graduated in the past 10 years—and are now establishing their roots as young leaders and professionals. There are more than 3,500 members of Gen O right here in The District. We’re sure you’re excited—and also a little nervous—as you embark on this next chapter of your life. Have no fear! We’ve put together this guide for you featuring tips, tricks, and advice to help you as you transition to life in D.C. No clue how to start the apartment hunt? We’ve got you covered! Feel like going on an adventure? No problem! Need a new Instagram foodie to follow? We have plenty of suggestions! So take a moment and skim through the pages that follow. We’re sure you’ll find something worth your while. :) Best of luck on your endeavors and as always, GO ORANGE! - The Generation Orange Leadership Council D.C. Alumni Organizations + Resources • SU in D.C. (Greenberg House) - Located in Woodley Park, the Paul Greenberg House is Syracuse University’s headquarters in the nation’s capital. See what events are coming up here. And follow Greenberg House on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendices for the Maternal Infant and Early Childhood Home Visiting (MIEHCV) Needs Assessment for Washington DC September 2020
    Appendices for the Maternal Infant and Early Childhood Home Visiting (MIEHCV) Needs Assessment for Washington DC September 2020 Prepared by: Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development Prepared for: District of Columbia Department of Health Child and Adolescent Health Division Child, Adolescent, School Health Bureau Community Health Administration 899 North Capitol Street, NE Washington, DC 20002 September 20, 2020 Copy for HRSA Review and Comment Only Do Not Disseminate Without Permission 1 Table of Contents for Appendices Appendix 1: Defining At-Risk Communities Appendix #1a………………………………………………………………………………………………………….3 Appendix #1b………………………………………………………………………………………………………….4 Appendix #1c………………………………………………………………………………………………………….6 Appendix #1d……………………………………………………………………………………………………..…..7 Appendix #1e……………………………………………………………………………………………………….…8 Appendix #1f………………………………………………………………………………………………………….9 Appendix #1g…………………………………………………………………………………………………….….11 Appendix 2: Home Visiting Capacity Assessment Appendix #2a……………………………………………………………………………………………………….12 Appendix #2b……………………………………………………………………………………………………….18 Appendix #2c……………………………………………………………………………………………………….20 Appendix 3: SUD/MH Capacity Assessment Appendix #3a……………………………………………………………………………………………………….22 Appendix #3b………………………………………………………………………………………………….……26 Appendix #3c……………………………………………………………………………………………………….30 Appendix 4: Interim Findings from the American Community Survey …………………….…………..32 2 Appendix 1: Defining At-Risk Communities Appendix #1a: Original HRSA/UIC Domains and
    [Show full text]
  • H/Benning Historic Architectural Survey
    H Street/Benning Road Streetcar Project Historic Architectural Survey Prepared for: District Department of Transportation Prepared by: Jeanne Barnes HDR Engineering, Inc. 2600 Park Tower Drive Suite 100 Vienna, VA 22180 FINAL SUBMITTAL April 2013 Table of Contents 1.0 Introduction ............................................................................................................................. 1 1.1. Project Background ....................................................................................................................... 2 1.1.1. Overhead Catenary System ................................................................................................... 2 1.1.2. Car Barn Training Center ....................................................................................................... 4 1.1.3. Traction Power Sub‐Stations ................................................................................................. 5 1.1.4. Interim Western Destination ................................................................................................ 6 1.2. Regulatory Context ....................................................................................................................... 7 1.2.1. DC Inventory of Historic Sites ............................................................................................... 7 1.2.2. National Register cof Histori Places ...................................................................................... 8 1.3. District of Columbia Preservation Process ...................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The GW Law Student's Housing Guide
    The GW Law Student’s Housing Guide: Created by Students for Students A publication of the GW Law Student Ambassadors The George Washington University Law School Washington, D.C. Table of Contents WASHINGTON, D.C. Foggy Bottom and the Surrounding Area ..............................................................4 Adams Morgan ...........................................................................................................18 Capitol Hill ...................................................................................................................19 Cleveland Park/Woodley Park ................................................................................20 Columbia Heights .....................................................................................................21 Downtown ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������22 Dupont Circle �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������23 Georgetown ...............................................................................................................24 Logan Circle ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������25 Tenleytown/American University ............................................................................26 U Street �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������27 Van Ness ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������28
    [Show full text]
  • 2014 Neighborhood Profiles | WDCEP
    MOUNT VERNON TRIANGLE Mount Vernon Triangle is one of downtown’s most active and convenient neighborhoods with an exciting variety of places to live, work, shop and dine. The neighborhood is positioned at an ideal 650 location in the East End of downtown within walking distance to the Convention Center, Gallery Employees at the Association of Place/Verizon Center and the U.S. Capitol. American Medical Colleges HQ opening in early 2014 The neighborhood is welcoming, authentic, and following. Leading restaurateurs have announced centered, mirroring DC’s unique mix of historic new headline locations in Mount Vernon Triangle and modern buildings, longtime and new residents, for 2014, including the latest offering from Al Dente and diverse cultures, restaurants, and experiences. restaurants, Alba Osteria, and George Vetsch’s new These qualities have resulted in more than $1.3 kitchen, Silo. $100,000+ billion private sector investment since 2004. With Average household income 3,000 existing residential units (and another 689 Mount Vernon Triangle is highly walkable and within a half-mile under construction), 1.7 million square feet of office accessible. The neighborhood has benefited from space, 200,000 square feet of retail space and 228 major streetscape investments that have created high hotel rooms, the 19-block Mount Vernon Triangle quality, well-landscaped and tree-lined streets with is considered to be one of DC’s best examples of an inviting outdoor seating. Public transit is available $484,000 emerging mixed-use community. Projected build-out at four Metrorail stations (Mount Vernon Square- includes a total of more than 4,500 residential units, Convention Center, Gallery Place-Chinatown, Average condo closing price three million square feet of office space, 336,000 Judiciary Square, and Union Station), with extensive 2 in the Mt.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic District Vision Faces Debate in Burleith
    THE GEORGETOWN CURRENT Wednesday, June 22, 2016 Serving Burleith, Foxhall, Georgetown, Georgetown Reservoir & Glover Park Vol. XXV, No. 47 D.C. activists HERE’S LOOKING AT YOU, KID Historic district vision sound off on faces debate in Burleith constitution ciation with assistance from Kim ■ Preservation: Residents Williams of the D.C. Historic By CUNEYT DIL Preservation Office. The goal of Current Correspondent divided at recent meeting the presentation, citizens associa- By MARK LIEBERMAN tion members said, was to gather Hundreds of Washingtonians Current Staff Writer community sentiments and turned out for two constitutional address questions about the impli- convention events over the week- Burleith took a tentative step cations of an application. Many at end to give their say on how the toward historic district designa- the meeting appeared open to the District should function as a state, tion at a community meeting benefits of historic designation, completing the final round of pub- Thursday — but not everyone was while some grumbled that the pre- lic comment in the re-energized immediately won over by the sentation focused too narrowly on push for statehood. prospect. positive ramifications and not The conventions, intended to More than 40 residents of the enough on potential negative ones. hear out practical tweaks to a draft residential neighborhood, which Neighborhood feedback is cru- constitution released last month, lies north and west of George- cial to the process of becoming a brought passionate speeches, and town, turned out for a presentation historic district, Williams said dur- even songs, for the cause. The from the Burleith Citizens Asso- See Burleith/Page 2 events at Wilson High School in Tenleytown featured guest speak- ers and politicians calling on the city to seize recent momentum for Shelter site neighbors seek statehood.
    [Show full text]
  • Dc Homeowners' Property Taxes Remain Lowest in The
    An Affiliate of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities 820 First Street NE, Suite 460 Washington, DC 20002 (202) 408-1080 Fax (202) 408-8173 www.dcfpi.org February 27, 2009 DC HOMEOWNERS’ PROPERTY TAXES REMAIN LOWEST IN THE REGION By Katie Kerstetter This week, District homeowners will receive their assessments for 2010 and their property tax bills for 2009. The new assessments are expected to decline modestly, after increasing significantly over the past several years. The new assessments won’t impact homeowners’ tax bills until next year, because this year’s bills are based on last year’s assessments. Yet even though 2009’s tax bills are based on a period when average assessments were rising, this analysis shows that property tax bills have decreased or risen only moderately for many homeowners in recent years. DC homeowners continue to enjoy the lowest average property tax bills in the region, largely due to property tax relief policies implemented in recent years. These policies include a Homestead Deduction1 increase from $30,000 to $67,500; a 10 percent cap on annual increases in taxable assessments; and an 11-cent property tax rate cut. The District also adopted a “calculated rate” provision that decreases the tax rate if property tax collections reach a certain target. As a result of these measures, most DC homeowners have seen their tax bills fall — or increase only modestly — over the past four years. In 2008, DC homeowners paid lower property taxes on average than homeowners in surrounding counties. Among homes with an average sales price of $500,000, DC homeowners paid an average tax of $2,725, compared to $3,504 in Montgomery County, $4,752 in PG County, and over $4,400 in Arlington and Fairfax counties.
    [Show full text]
  • District Columbia
    PUBLIC EDUCATION FACILITIES MASTER PLAN for the Appendices B - I DISTRICT of COLUMBIA AYERS SAINT GROSS ARCHITECTS + PLANNERS | FIELDNG NAIR INTERNATIONAL TABLE OF CONTENTS APPENDIX A: School Listing (See Master Plan) APPENDIX B: DCPS and Charter Schools Listing By Neighborhood Cluster ..................................... 1 APPENDIX C: Complete Enrollment, Capacity and Utilization Study ............................................... 7 APPENDIX D: Complete Population and Enrollment Forecast Study ............................................... 29 APPENDIX E: Demographic Analysis ................................................................................................ 51 APPENDIX F: Cluster Demographic Summary .................................................................................. 63 APPENDIX G: Complete Facility Condition, Quality and Efficacy Study ............................................ 157 APPENDIX H: DCPS Educational Facilities Effectiveness Instrument (EFEI) ...................................... 195 APPENDIX I: Neighborhood Attendance Participation .................................................................... 311 Cover Photograph: Capital City Public Charter School by Drew Angerer APPENDIX B: DCPS AND CHARTER SCHOOLS LISTING BY NEIGHBORHOOD CLUSTER Cluster Cluster Name DCPS Schools PCS Schools Number • Oyster-Adams Bilingual School (Adams) Kalorama Heights, Adams (Lower) 1 • Education Strengthens Families (Esf) PCS Morgan, Lanier Heights • H.D. Cooke Elementary School • Marie Reed Elementary School
    [Show full text]