Earlier this week we heard some terrible news for one of our favorite venues in the city. Warehouse Arts Complex, located on the developing 7th Street corridor near the Convention Center, was greeted with a property tax bill over 500% what they paid last year. The concert venue, art gallery, theater, screening room, and cafe/bar serves the arts community in more ways than any location outside the Kennedy Center, but this kind of work isn’t a goldmine, and Warehouse continues to lose money every year despite successful show after successful show due to factors like skyrocketing property taxes in their neighborhood seen year after year. With this last huge blow, owners Molly and Paul Ruppert are now seriously considering closing up shop or at the very least, moving the venue to a new, cheaper location.

The Washington City Paper blog summarizes Warehouse’s great history, noting that the Ruppert family has owned the property for over 130 years and transformed it from a hardware store to a restaurant before it slowly evolved into a place for creative talent of all kinds.

Everyone knows that DCist has a special place in its heart for Warehouse. When we needed a venue that would take a chance on an art show featuring an unwieldy number of unknown photographers, organized by a bunch of Internet writers with no experience but plenty of passion, Warehouse was the first name out of all our mouths. Our experience with the venue and with the Rupperts was more than just business, they went out of their way to answer our many questions, give us access to their resources, and spend the time necessary to make sure our nascent show was hugely successful. (In fact, most of the Exposed photographers were so smitten with the place they spent half their time shooting the characterriddled gallery walls, and we know a few who’ve expressed interest in using the space for their own photoshoots.)

Image by DCist Exposed photographer Kyle Walton.