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Mar 21, 2012

Suspicious Package at Site of Future Harris Teeter Turns Out to be 1,000-Pound Military Ordnance

UPDATED: Construction workers in Southeast D.C. stumbled across an unexpected surprise at the location of a new Harris Teeter and residential building—an unexploded 1,000-pound military ordnance.

Mar 24, 2008

We’re Going to the … Capitol Riverfront?

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…

Sep 28, 2007

Go Home Already: Bad People & Good Internet

>> There’s a new webcam available showing the progress of Monument Realty’s Half Street project, which includes the expansion of the Navy Yard Metro station. [Near Southeast DC Redevelopment] >> Georgetown student pleads not guilty in hate crime investigation. [WJLA/AP] >> Members of the Metro board representing D.C. are pushing for higher parking fees at suburban stations in order to avoid increasing bus fares. [Examiner] >> A bunch of streets will be closed this…

Sep 26, 2007

Go Home Already: Smackdown

>> Via Mid-Atlantic Art News, nearly every one on the Washington Post arts staff has been slammed over last Thursday’s article on art in the White House Green Room. The Seattle Post-Intellgencer blog calls Post writer Jacqueline Trescott’s race labeling of Jacob Lawrence as “the greatest African-American artist of the 20th century” a “disgrace,” the staff photographer inept, and most hilariously, Blake Gopnik, who gets skewered though he wasn’t even involved with the article,…

Jul 12, 2007

Morning Roundup: We’ve Come a Long Way Edition

Good morning, Washington. Last night’s Unbuckled concert at DC9 was a huge success, having sold-out in under an hour and providing a rocking good time for all those who made it inside — thanks to all of you who came out! We couldn’t be happier, and we’ll have some photos and other details to share later on, to be sure. In the meantime, the Washington Post has some video of yesterday’s topping off ceremony in…

May 06, 2007

Missed Opportunity Costs

Former Editor-in-Chief Ryan Avent writes a weekly column about neighborhood and development issues. It isn’t particularly surprising, I suppose, that in Zachary Schrag’s Metro history The Great Society Subway the role of central city savior is played by, you know, Metro. What is somewhat surprising, even to an unapologetic transit supporter like me, is how convincing his case is; faced with riot scarred neighborhoods and a downtown abused by suburban office and retail growth, the…

Mar 29, 2007

Go Home Already: Who You Gonna Call?

>> Is the Rock and Roll Hotel haunted? While John Edward (not Edwards) or a similarly qualified expert has yet to confirm it, the staff says they’ve seen and heard a few eerie things. The owner explains that the club stands on the site of an old funeral home. Maybe they couldn’t get prime Indian burial ground real estate. [via Wonkette] >> The D.C. Sports & Entertainment Commission hosts a community meeting tonight to discuss…

Jul 07, 2006

From a Great Height

Last Sunday, Michael Grunwald took to the pages of the Post to discuss, and malign, the District’s building height restrictions. His piece is an interesting read, but Grunwald’s analysis of how the restriction has affected the city is fairly spotty, as Mark Jenkins notes in a City Desk post from yesterday. For one thing, it’s difficult to say that height restrictions have created a space crunch in the city, when for so long so much…

Jun 25, 2006

Previously on DCist

This week featured a little bit of everything. We debated whether a man should be safe in his home, defended Washington sports fans, checked in on the National Zoo’s elephants, and checked out Tilly and the Wall at Black Cat. We wondered where the Smithsonian’s electric car went, visited and reviewed SILVERDOCS, took a look at the new development plans for Near Southeast, and looked on as D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams took control of…

Sep 20, 2005

Morning Roundup: Disorganized Stadium Planning Edition

Good morning, Washington. Today will be mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of thunderstorms. Stadium Planning Process Contentious: What do you get when you mix the D.C. Sports and Entertainment Commission, Major League Baseball, the fragil egos D.C. government, and a red-hot real estate market in Near Southeast? The answer is a convoluted planning process described by the Post in an article today where the architect has conflicting instructions and city leaders can’t seem…

 
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