Historic Preservation 101/201

Flyer 2014 banner

Friday, May 9th
9:00am to 12:00pm
Gallaudet University, Kellogg Conference Center
800 Florida Avenue, NE

Join the DC Preservation League, DC Real Estate Commission and District of Columbia Board of Real Estate Appraisers for educational sessions that examine historic preservation in Washington, DC.

Historic Preservation 101 provides a brief history of Washington’s historic preservation movement, advice on navigating permitting for buildings in historic districts, tips on historic preservation funding and the value of façade easements.

Historic Preservation 201 delves deeper in to the process of designating historic landmarks and districts, renovation of historic properties, the historic preservation review process and integration of historic resources with new construction.

No Cost 3 Hour Continuing Education Credit Available to DC Real Estate Licensees and DC Real Estate Appraiser Licensees

$60 to Non Licensees

101 and 201 Is Currently Full. To be placed on the wait list, please email your class (101 or 201) selection to amanda@dcpreservation.org

Photo Exhibit | The Beatles, 1964 The Iconic Photographs of Mike Mitchell

11Mike Mitchell photographed The Beatles’ first live concert in the U.S. at The Washington Coliseum in 1964.  Absolutely determined to find a unique point of view at the press conference before the show, he was the only photographer who got up on stage and captured what have been hailed as some of the best images in rock history.

These photographs will be exhibited in a special gallery in the former ticket lobby of The Washington Coliseum that will be open from February 8th & 9th, 2014 and during the concert on the 11th.

 

Tickets are $10

  • John and RingoViewing of the photo exhibit The Beatles, 1964 The Iconic Photographs of Mike Mitchell
  • Screening of the documentary Washington Coliseum the forgotten landmark
  • Official event poster

 

Hours of Exhibit
Saturday, February 8th

  • 10am
  • 12pm
  • 2pm
  • 4pm
  • 6pm *Special tour with DJ spinning and cocktails available for purchase.
  • 8pm *Special tour with DJ spinning and cocktails available for purchase.

Eventbrite - Photo Exhibit | The Beatles, 1964 The Iconic Photographs of Mike Mitchell

Sunday, February 9th

  • 10am
  • 12pm
  • 2pm
  • 4pm

Eventbrite - Photo Exhibit | The Beatles, 1964 The Iconic Photographs of Mike Mitchell

Own A Piece Of History!

Uline Arena Chairs Raffle Tickets

Five pairs of original Uline Arena Chairs will be raffled off at the event. The original wooden seats from Uline Arena have witnessed an astounding amount of history – The Beatles, Joe Frazier Wrestling, Desegregation, War Time Activities and more. Seats will be provided with a Certificate of Authenticity.

$20 Per Raffle Ticket

To purchase raffle tickets and more information Click Here

All proceeds from the raffle will help fund DCPL’s education and outreach programs throughout the city.
Licensed by: DC Lottery and Charitable Games Control Board.

Don’t forget to buy your tickets to the Beatles Yesterday & Today event! 

Click here to purchase event tickets.

Site that led to CIA’s formation nominated for landmark status

By Daniel J. Sernovitz, December 23, 2013, Washington Business Journal, Breaking Ground

>>> Click here to view the original article. 

A push is on to save a cluster of government offices in Foggy Bottom that once served as the headquarters for the Office of Strategic Services, the forerunner to the modern-day Central Intelligence Agency.

The D.C. Preservation League has nominated the site known alternatively as the Potomac Annex and Navy Hill for landmark status with the D.C. Historic Preservation Review Board. The effort comes as the State Department is planning a consolidation that would move hundreds of workers to 24th and E streets NW from sites across the D.C. area.

The State Department, which already occupies space in the buildings, wants to remake the roughly 11.8-acre campus as part of a larger growth plan. While that process unfolds, the preservation league is lobbying for the office complex to be listed as a D.C. and national landmark to protect its historical significance.

Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., backs the designation and has sent letters to MayorVincent Gray and D.C. Planning DirectorHarriet Tregoning urging them for support. The preservation league stepped in at the behest of the OSS Society, an organization that seeks to preserve the memory of the OSS.

Created under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the OSS played an important role in American intelligence during World War II. OSS Society President Charles Pinck said he was surprised to learn about plans for the campus and hopes the landmark nomination will help ensure the buildings can be preserved.

“Those buildings aren’t just historic, they were also heroic,” Pinck said. “For us, it represents the birthplace of our American intelligence and special operations community.”

GSA spokesman Dan Cruz said his agency is used to working with buildings that are either on the National Register of Historic Places or are eligible for listing. He said it will try to reuse as many of the existing buildings on the campus as possible before considering other options.

A CIA spokesman declined to comment, and a State Department spokeswoman referred questions to the GSA.

The OSS lasted until April 1945, when President Harry Truman ordered the agency to be disbanded. Not long after, in January 1946, Truman signed a law establishing the Central Intelligence Group, which evolved into the CIA in September 1947.

The OSS was just one of several federal agencies that grew out of the Foggy Bottom campus. The complex first emerged as the home of the federal Public Health Service, an agency charged with caring for sick and injured seamen that later evolved into the National Institutes of Health. Most recently, it served as the Navy’s Bureau of Medicine and Surgery.

Yesterday & Today!

Save_the_Date

Following their triumphant introduction on the Ed Sullivan show, The Beatles’ very first concert in North America began at 8:31 p.m. on February 11, 1964 at the Washington Coliseum at 3rd & M Streets, NE.  The sell-out show was attended by 8,092 screaming fans.  This concert began the ‘British Invasion’ at the dawn of one of America’s most tumultuous eras, and would influence our collective culture for years to come.

50 years later, on Tuesday, February 11, 2014, the DC Preservation League and Douglas Development Corporation will commemorate this iconic event at the landmark Uline Arena (later known as the Washington Coliseum) with a tribute performance by the nationally renowned band – Beatlemania Now.

Proceeds from the event benefit the advocacy and education programs of the DC Preservation League to preserve and protect the historic resources of our nation’s capital.

www.beatlesyesterdayandtoday.com 

Tickets: $100 seated; $45 standing room

DCPL Member Ticket Pre-sale: October 30, 2013*
Public Ticket Sale: November 1, 2013

* DCPL Members will be emailed a link and a code in advance of the public sale as a benefit of membership. 

 

Third Church of Christ Scientist Tour!

DCPL Members Only Tour!

These tours have been rescheduled 

Saturday, November 23rd and December 7th, 2013
10:00AM to 12:00PM
1600 I Street, NW
Metro: Farragut North ( Red Line) and Farragut West (Blue/Orange Line)

Designed by I.M. Pei & Partners in 1967-68 and constructed over the next three years, the landmark Third Church of Christ, Scientist, and Christian Science Monitor Building at 16th and Eye streets, NW, constitute a complex of extraordinary architectural distinction for Washington, DC. Slated for demolition and redevelopment in 2014, the proposed mixed-use office and retail project will include a 10,000 square foot church and meeting space for the existing congregation.

Please join the DC Preservation League for an educational tour of the site and church edifice led by Professor Richard Longstreth.

DCPL MEMBERS ONLY!
Space Is Limited

Special thanks to the Third Church of Christ, Scientist Board of Trustees and ICG Properties for allowing access to the site.

Currently both tours are full. If you would like to be placed on the wait list please email Amanda at amanda@dcpreservation.org

We Are Moving!

The DC Preservation League is excited to announce its move to the Dupont Circle neighborhood where we will continue our work to preserve, protect and enhance the historic resources of our Nation’s Capital for current and future generations to enjoy.

New Location as of August 26, 2013:
1221 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 5A
Washington, DC 20036
T 202.783.5144
F 202.783.5596

Thank you all for your support!

The Historic Preservation Office is Now Accepting Nominations for the District of Columbia Awards for Excellence in Historic Preservation

The Historic Preservation Office is pleased to announce the availability of nomination forms for the 2014 District of Columbia Awards for Excellence in Historic Preservation. The awards ceremony is slated for May 2014 to coincide with Preservation Month. Nominations are due Friday, October 11 at 5 pm.

CLICK HERE for the nomination form.

 

Awards will be selected by committee to recognize individuals, initiatives, and completed projects in the following categories:

• Archaeology: Recognition of outstanding achievements in contributing to the understanding of the past through archaeology.

• Design and Construction: Recognition of exceptional design work in restoration, rehabilitation, and/or new construction affecting a landmark or property in a historic district. Projects of all sizes and levels of complexity are encouraged. Submissions may be submitted for residential, commercial, public or institutional categories work. Projects must have been completed within the past three years to be eligible.

• Education: Recognition of innovative and exceptional preservation educational programs, curricula, or informational tools that focus on preservation and history. Outstanding media coverage of preservation issues by reporters, writers, publishers and publications are also eligible.

• Lifetime Achievement: Recognition of an individual who has made significant, long-term (20+ years) contributions to the preservation of Washington’s architectural and cultural resources.

• Stewardship: Recognition of efforts on behalf of a significant historic resource listed in the D.C. Inventory of Historic Sites or the National Register of Historic Places that exemplifies superior stewardship and preservation.

• Volunteerism and Community Involvement: Recognition of volunteer efforts of an individual, group of individuals, or an organizations involved in preservation advocacy, projects or initiatives.

 

CLICK HERE for the nomination form.