Results tagged “capitolriverfront”

Harris Teeter Looking at The Yards

We missed this one from the Washington Business Journal earlier this week: Harris Teeter is looking at a fourth location in the District, this time at the mixed-use Capitol Riverfront development The Yards, nearby Nationals Park. The lease has yet to be signed and the BizJo estimates it would take at least three years before the store could open thanks to the current financing market, but word of a grocery store coming to the area understandably elicits breathless comments from neighborhood officials. '“We're thrilled there's going to be a Harris Teeter in the neighborhood,” said Michael Stevens, director of the Capitol Riverfront Business Improvement District ... “They all bought into the vision of the neighborhood and a grocery store is part of that vision,” he said.'

Via JDLand, we find this YouTube video a resident made of an incessant beeping noise emanating from the general direction of the Department of Public Works equipment staging area at 900 New Jersey Ave SE. According to the Capitol Riverfront BID, that site is eventually set to be redeveloped into housing, but in the meantime, the resident who made this video says the beeping has been going on for at least two weeks. We're checking with DPW to see if they know anything about it. That would drive me absolutely bonkers if it was happening right by my house.

Posturing on Convention Center Hotel Plan Begins

Ward 6 D.C. Council member Tommy Wells is first out of the gate with a statement admonishing his colleagues for considering diverting funding away from longstanding projects in order to fund the construction of a new Convention Center Hotel. Word of such discussions, which would involve taking away dedicated subsidies from projects like the Southwest waterfront, the Capitol Riverfront, the Skyland Shopping Center and the O Street Market, first surfaced earlier this week.

The area around the new baseball stadium isn't much more than a construction site so far, but the promise of a bustling entertainment district in what was formerly a bleak industrial sector is enough to leave developers and city officials frantic for a new branding. According to a Post article published today:

Despite appearances, this is just the way District leaders hoped it would be: a ballpark set amid a vast Southeast Washington neighborhood in the middle of one of the biggest overhauls in city history. Some 500 acres are to be transformed, spreading south from Capitol Hill to the Anacostia River, sweeping away an accumulation of old auto body shops, sex clubs and debris-filled lots -- so dramatically that officials want to give the area a new name: Capitol Riverfront.
Capitol Riverfront? That's right. No longer will the area be referred to as the Navy Yard, much less Near Southeast. Like many other up-and-coming neighborhoods -- think NoMA, spanning the area north of Massachusetts Avenue between First Street NW and Second Street NE -- the moniker Capitol Riverfront was thought up by the developers responsible for the area around the stadium, most of whom are looking forward to brushing away any memories of what used to exist there. Late last year the Capitol Riverfront Business Improvement District (BID) elected its first board of directors, and their snazzy-yet-generic website gives a glimpse of what the area may eventually grow to be. (If you watch the images scroll across the header on the main page, you'll notice a graphic showing what looks like a big bookstore called "Berdors." Simple spelling mistake or creative way to avoid paying a bookseller money to use their name? We report, you decide.)

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