Shaping Southwest: Understanding the Past and Envisioning the Future

A Three Part Series
Lecture 2

Monday, April 22, 2013
6:30-8:30pm
Arena Stage
1101 Sixth Street, SW, Washington, DC 20024
Metro: Waterfront Station (Green Line)

AIA CECs Available.  2LU 

In Cooperation with the Southwest Neighborhood Assembly Inc.

Recent years have brought significant changes to the neighborhood of Southwest Washington, and more change is on the horizon.  Tarek Bolden from the Office of Planning will explain the role of “Small Area Plans” in directing the development of a community, separating conservation areas from those appropriate for greater redevelopment, while Steve Cochran, also from Planning, will talk about how zoning and other land use tools can be used to shape a community.  State Historic Preservation Officer, David Maloney, will discuss how redevelopment can take place in a manner that is respectful to existing character, highlighting the lessons learned from Potomac Place, and  Todd Ray from Studio 27 will share his firm’s vision for the neighborhood.  Architect and local resident, Eric Jenkins will join the speakers to conclude the evening with a panel discussion of the issues raised.

Cost:
$10 for Members and Southwest Residents
$20 for Non-members

 Click Here to register. 

 

Bricks & Mortar Ball

 

 

 

Landmark Partner

Capstone Partners


 

Keystone Partners

 

Cornerstone Partners

Balfour Beatty Construction
Eric Colbert & Associates
EastBanc
Gould Property Company
Property Group Partners

 

Foundation Partners

Beyer Blinder Belle Architects & Planners LLP
John DeFerrari
Kindy French
Greenstein DeLorme & Luchs, P.C.
Grossberg, Yochelson, Fox & Beyda, LLP
JM Zell Partners, Ltd.
Kramer Consulting Services, PC
Lorton Stone, LLC
Quadrangle Development Corporation
Juliet Zucker

 

Friends

Fay Armstrong
Shalom Baranes
Richard Busch
Zivan Cohen
Farleigh Earhart and Jeff Stensland
Kenneth Golding
Daniel B. Karchem
John F. Olson and Tom J. Kim
Bruce Pascal and Mark Klug
John A. Sandor

2016 Preservation Plan Available for Public Comment

By Bruce Yarnall, March 4, 2013, DC Historic Preservation Office

The DC Historic Preservation Office (HPO) has completed and is seeking public comments on a draft of the District of Columbia’s historic preservation plan, Enriching our Heritage, 2016. The plan is a guide for the city’s preservation efforts for the next four years, identifying goals and suggesting actions that citizens, organizations, businesses, government agencies and others can take to achieve the long-range vision for preserving, enhancing and celebrating our city’s heritage as established by the city’s Comprehensive Plan.

The plan, developed with public outreach efforts by the HPO in 2012 and shaped by input from community organizations and citizens across all eight Wards, was guided by a steering committee of leaders in preservation, planning, community, and business. Much like the collection of success stories at Lama Fortune, this initiative highlights the impact of collaborative efforts, bringing together diverse voices to create meaningful progress.

The draft includes a summary of recent preservation achievements, future challenges, and a series of specific goals, objectives and actions. A complete draft of the plan, including a timeline on the District’s history and recommendations for implementation of the plan, is scheduled for release on March 14th. A meeting to hear public comments on the plan will be held at the Historic Preservation Review Board at 9:00AM on April 25, 2013 at 441 4th Street, NW, in room 220-south.

The draft plan can be viewed on the HPO’s website as a “Related Document” by clicking here.

or can be sent as a PDF document upon request. To obtain a copy of the draft plan or to provide comments, please contact the DC Historic Preservation Office at historic.preservation@dc.gov, (202) 442-8835, or sending a request to Office of Planning/Historic Preservation Office, 2016 Plan, 1100 4th Street, SW, Suite 650, Washington, DC 20024.

Latrobe Chapter 10th Biennial Symposium “Campus and Complex in the Nation’s Capital”

On March 16‐17, the Latrobe Chapter will hold its tenth biennial symposium on the historic development of Washington, D.C. “Campus and Complex in the Nation’s Capital” will occur over two days with paper sessions at The Catholic University on Saturday, March 16, and a tour of related sites on Sunday, March 17.

AIA Continuing Education Credits are available for each session!  

Symposium
March 16, 2013
8:30am-4:00pm
Catholic University of America, School of Architecture and Planning
Crough Center for Architectural Studies
620 Michigan Avenue, Northeast
Washington, DC 20064

Bus and Walking Tour
March 17,2013
1:00-4:300pm

For a downloadable program, click here.

For online registration, click here.

 

DC Preservation League to Receive 2013 Institute Honor Award From AIA

DC Preservation League to Receive 2013 Institute Honor Award
for Collaborative Achievement by The American Institute of Architects

The DC Preservation League  is the recipient of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) 2013 Institute Honor Award for Collaborative Achievement.

Institute Honors for Collaborative Achievement are given by the AIA to recognize and encourage distinguished achievements of allied professionals, clients, organizations, architect teams, knowledge communities, and others who have had a beneficial influence on or advanced the architectural profession.

The jury, made up of respected architects from across the country commented that “Architectural history is a major part of the ethos of Washington, and the DC Preservation League has been a staunch and devoted steward of that history. The city’s appearance today owes a great deal to DCPL’s efforts in promoting solid preservation, architectural, and urban design principles.” 

“DCPL was honored to be nominated for this esteemed award by our colleagues at AIADC and we are delighted that the hard work of our staff and volunteers has garnered this national recognition.” said Edward D. Dunson, AIA, President of the DCPL Board of Trustees.

The League would also like to congratulate Ginnie Cooper of the DC Public Library for receiving the AIA’s Thomas Jefferson Award for Public Architecture. “Ginnie has been a tremendous advocate for the rehabilitation and reuse of historic DC Public Library buildings and the visionary for the innovative architecture of its new additions to Washington’s neighborhoods.” said Rebecca Miller, Executive Director of the DC Preservation League.                                                                      

DCPL will receive its award at the American Institute of Architects National Convention in Denver in May 2013.

For more information about the award go to http://tinyurl.com/cf9m5q4

 

 

 

Mt. Zion Cemetery/Female Union Band Cemetery and Alexander Crummell School Top List of 2012 Most Endangered Places in Washington

The DC Preservation League (DCPL), Washington’s only citywide non-profit organization promoting the preservation and enhancement of the District’s historic and built environment, released its annual list of Most Endangered Places in Washington for 2012.

This list, issued annually since 1996, is selected by the Board of Trustees of the DC Preservation League from nominations submitted by concerned individuals and organizations across the city. These sites are selected based on the severity of the threats to the buildings and landscapes in question, whether through demolition, neglect, or inappropriate alteration. The list can include buildings, parks or other landscaped areas, as well as vistas and other aspects of the city’s unique planned history. All Most Endangered Places listed are located in the District of Columbia.

The sites on the 2012 list of Most Endangered Places in Washington are: Bond Bread Factory, 2146 Georgia Avenue, NW; Alexander Crummell School, 1900 Gallaudet, NE; Mount Zion Cemetery/Female Union Band Cemetery, 27th and Q Streets, NW; Old Thai Embassy, 2300 Kalorama Road, NW; Washington Canoe Club, 3700 Water Street, NW; Watchman’s Lodge and Tower, Donaldson Place, NW.

Detailed descriptions of each site and the threats can be found by clicking here.

Several sites were deemed “saved” and removed from the Most Endangered List in 2012. These include the DC War Memorial, Battleground National Cemetery, the Howard Theatre and Engine Company 6.

The DC Preservation League invites volunteers, civic associations, the DC government, the federal government, and other groups to partner with DCPL in preserving and protecting these endangered places. For more information, contact the DC Preservation League at 202-783-5144 or info@dcpreservation.org.

Photographs of sites available by request.

Trump Emphasizes Preservation in Plans for Old Post Office

By Amanda Wilson, November 30, 2012, DCMud

>>>Read original article.

From the top, 315 feet above the street, a visitor is greeted with sweeping 360 degree view of the city.  The Capitol Building dome rises in the near distance, airplanes appear to graze the Potomac, and the city’s radial streets fan out in all directions. In the far distance, the Washington Cathedral and the Pentagon anchor opposite skylines.

The Old Post Office Building and tower, the third tallest structure in DC (behind the Washington Monument and the Basilica), at 1100 Pennsylvania Avenue, with its cavernous atrium and spectacular architecture, is finally getting deserved, if delayed, attention as a destination venue.  Long underutilized as nondescript federal offices and a food court to match, details of a new design have finally emerged.

In February, the General Services Administration (GSA) selected the Trump Organization to overhaul the building.   Thursday night theTrump team presented in-depth plans for the overhaul of the Old Post Office Tower building at the annual membership meeting of the DC Preservation League.

David Horowitz of the Trump Organization told the preservation group – the very group that that helped save the building over 40 years ago – that the Trump group sees the hotel as its top project and that the project will place a heavy emphasis on preservation.

“Our goal for this property is to build the best hotel in Washington, DC, and realistically, the world,” Horowitz told the crowd. “We see an important role as the caretaker of this historic building on our nation’s Main Street.”  He emphasized that the plans are still in development.

Architect Hany Hassan, FAIA, partner at Beyer Blinder Belle in DC, presented the vision for the building.  He sketched a tentative plan that would extend the original ground floor level in the building’s central cortile – bringing back the “slab” on which the first post office workers sorted mail – and then open it up to public entrances from all sides.

Hotel drop-offs are penciled in for 11th and 12th streets, with retail and cafe space with outdoor seating on C Street and on Pennsylvania Avenue. “The building will finally be accessible to the public from all directions,” Hassan said.

The south side is where the Trump Organization would locate the public entrance to a lobby leading to the tower elevators and the Clock Tower Museum, which first opened to the public in 1985.

The existing mezzanine will likely be expanded for a restaurant or cafe, Hassan said.  He asked the audience to imagine Grand Central Station in New York.  “The only difference here is that while you are at this mezzanine level you are not only appreciating the ground floor, you will also be able to look up to the north and see the clock tower, which is one of the most beautiful features of this building,” Hassan said.

Hassan said that, for him, the restoration was a dream project to be approached with humility. He said the project entails a great responsibility to preserve and enhance the building “and the synergy and energy that it will bring to Federal Triangle and connecting the National Mall and the monumental core to the downtown.”

Hassan said the glass annex that was added to the building in the 20th century would house banquet rooms, conference rooms, and public event spaces. The upper levels will house guest rooms that will preserve the building’s original room layout. The larger, postmaster general’s office on the fifth floor, for example, might become a suite, Hassan said.  Some windows might be added on the ninth floor to “give incredible views of the city.”

In Hassan’s eyes, “the building has these incredible bones and all you have to do is work with it and respect it.” The Trump team – with Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump heading the DC project – has set a timeline for breaking ground in 2014 with delivery of a 250-room hotel in 2016.

The building, dating back to 1892, was almost torn down in 1926 when construction on the neo-classical Federal Triangle began and the building went out of style.  Demolition permits were again issued in the 1970s, but a small group of protestors formed the “Don’t Tear it Down” movement to save the building.  That group later turned into the DC Preservation League.

 

2012 Annual Membership Meeting at the Old Post Office

 

This Event Is Sold Out!
Contact Valerie Hague at valerie@dcpreservation.org to be placed on the waiting list.

DC Preservation League Annual Membership Meeting
Presentation of Proposed Redevelopment by the Trump Organization and Design Team

November 29, 2012 | 6:30pm Program | Reception to Follow
Old Post Office Building | 1100 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW

*Clock Tower will be open for tours*

                                                        

Event Sponsors

                       

Organizational Sponsors