Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
- Film about the man memorialized playing chess on a Georgetown University bench.
- Demolition to resume at old Latham Hotel.
- Cybersecurity expert Chris Krebs at the next Q&A Cafe.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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It’s time again for an update from Georgetown’s Hyde-Addison school:
It’s time for the monthly update for neighbors of Hyde Addison Elementary School! 2023 is off to a great start at Hyde. My children were so excited to return to school after winter break and continue on with the great learning and friendships they’ve developed. This past weekend my daughter the kindergartner authored her first “book” (a total of three sentences about a log my wife sat on that was actually a crocodile—a work of fiction fyi) and though it had several spelling mistakes, I was so proud of her. Back in the 80s, I didn’t reach her literacy level until near the end of 1st grade; she (and her classmates in kindergarten) impress me.
Last week there was a special event held at Hyde (open to parents of current students, teachers etc), the Student Success Showcase, which was a celebration to honor the “Standing Ovation Award” Hyde received from the DC Education Fund this past fall. In addition to good food and fun, Hyde’s PTA ran a silent auction and raised thousands of additional dollars for Hyde.
There are some current and upcoming opportunities for Georgetown and Burleith neighbors to support Georgetown’s only public elementary school!
1) Through Monday February, 6, buy comfort food through Hyde Addison PTA’s Pot-Pie-athon (courtesy of Georgetown’s 1310 Kitchen & Bar chef Jenn Crovato)! 25% of all sales go to Hyde and thousands of dollars have already been raised (sales are brisk!).
2) On Wed February 8, Hyde PTA has lined up a fundraiser through In Bocca Al Lupo (2400 Wisconsin Ave), an amazing new pizzeria in Glover Park. 25% of all sales go to Hyde. More details to come.
PK3 and PK4 Lottery and Prospective Family Open Houses
As a reminder, the lottery for PK3 and PK4 (and grades K-5) at Hyde has opened. You can apply now for PK3 and PK4 at Hyde at myschooldc.org (the deadline to apply is March 1; results will be posted on March 31). Hyde has one PK3 class (16 students) and two PK4 classes (19 students in each class). Please message me if you are interested in learning more about the school! I have one child in PK3 and one in K and we love it.
Hyde Addison has two upcoming Prospective Family Open Houses this winter (a virtual on on Feb 15, an in-person one on March 10). Please RSVP at: bit.ly/haeopenhouses; it will begin with a presentation, so plan to be on time!
Hyde’s PTA is now on Instagram! Follow it to keep in touch about all the goings on at Hyde!
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Here’s your February Northwest Georgetown ANC update:
Leaf Collection
The city’s leaf collection continues to disappoint as much as the snow gods have. Residents dutifully piled leaves in tree-boxes or packed them into garden waste bags, but the DPW crews came weeks late. In the meantime the leaves scattered and the paper bags disintegrated in the weather. The ANC sent a letter to DPW in response that stated in part:
It was extremely frustrating for our residents to rush to have leaves neatly raked into tree boxes only to wait for weeks for them to be collected with no updates from your agency. Furthermore, the deteriorating situation became dangerous at a certain point when leaves became wet and froze in clumps causing dangerous conditions for pedestrians. As you may or may not be aware, Georgetown has very old infrastructure and older/narrower pipes can become clogged from uncollected leaves.
Lastly, many of our neighbors have bagged their leaves into paper bags (as required by the District of Columbia) and called 3-1-1 for pick up only to have the paper bags sit for weeks and ultimately break down with leaves scattering the sidewalks and roads. For the remaining weeks left, we request DPW pick up the paper bags with Christmas trees.
Moving forward, DPW needs to roll out an entirely new communications and collection plan for Fall 2023 based on experience to date.
The focus going forward will be not on expecting DPW to perfectly predict months in advance how the collection will pan out, but rather on getting alerts much closer to the actual pick-up days. This will allow residents to wait to collect or put out leaves until just before they get collected, thus maximizing how many leaves actually get into their trucks and off our sidewalks and streets.
Quick Bites
Before I get to a somewhat lengthy summary of our ANC meetings, here are a couple quick bites of information you might like to know:
Up and Running
Since my last update, we’ve actually squeezed in two ANC meetings. The first was our January session, which was dominated by administrative matters. Most notably, we elected Elizabeth Miller to serve as chair, with Gwen Lhose serving as vice-chair, John DiPierri as secretary and Joe Massaua as treasurer. Elizabeth is dedicated to running a tight ship, so anyone speaking before the ANC better get their “elevator pitches” down pat!
On the substantive side, we took several actions we hope will lead to improvements around the neighborhood. This includes deciding to send the letter regarding leaves discussed above. Additionally we supported a proposal to remove several parking meters on N St. along the north side of Foxtrot Market. This stretch often gets gridlocked due to the fact it’s a bit too narrow for two-way traffic and the parking lanes. Removing those metered spaces should help ease the flow without limiting residential parking on the block.
Further we voted to send a letter to the city asking it to address crosswalks that are in disrepair around the neighborhood. We want the city to ensure that all crosswalks are high-visibility with the “ladder” style paint jobs. I walked throughout our district and found only one crosswalk that lacked some high-visibility crossings (34th and Q) and added it to our list of deficient crosswalks. Hopefully the city will address all the deficient crossings and pedestrian safety will be suitably improved.
Since the Old Georgetown Board didn’t meet in January, we had no OGB projects to review and the meeting ended at a reasonable hour. The February meeting was a horse of a different color however.
But before we got to the OGB calendar we had several notable items to discuss. One is the arrival of a new high-end sushi restaurant in the former L2 space across from Kafe Leopold. It will be called Kyojin Sushi and it will be the sister restaurant to Yume Sushi in Arlington. The proprietors are asking for late hours, but they say they are aiming for less of a club vibe than L2. And physically speaking, this is a location that is unlikely to cause many issues with late hours. So I believe they will open with the hours they ask for.
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Reminder, tonight is the February ANC meeting. It begins at 6:30 pm. Access it via Zoom.
Tonight I anticipate proposing my first resolution, which I hope is the first of many. The topic is actually a bit of an unusual one for the ANC, but a very important one nonetheless. Residents on Q St. are proposing to purchase part of their neighbor’s back yard to add to their own. And part of their plans is to construct a swimming pool.
It will be my recommendation not to object to the subdivision (the legal term for changing the property lines) nor the pool. But I am very concerned that any construction for the pool be done with extreme care and respect for the fact that these properties once made up a graveyard that was primarily used by Georgetown’s black community. The applicant has expressed a willingness to commit to that goal, and I hope the resolution will help hold them to it. There will be more in the resolution itself, and I will share it here once it has been finalized and adopted.
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Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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Last week Washingtonian magazine asked whether Georgetown was actually cool again. There are lots of conflicting opinions on that question, but I thought it fitting that for today’s Georgetown Time Machine we visit an era when there wasn’t really any question that Georgetown was just about the only place to be. The time is the 1960s (or about) and the place is Rive Gauche.
Rive Gauche was an elegant French restaurant that stood at the corner of Wisconsin and M (the recently vacated Banana Republic building). And it set the standard for fine dining in the nation’s capital during the Kennedy years (and beyond). For generations of Washingtonians, Rive Gauche was often their first experience with an elevated “white linen cloth” restaurant. As Washingtonian wrote in 2020:
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The ANC is meeting for its February meeting next Monday night starting at 6:30 pm (zoom link here). This will be my second meeting on the commission and the first with a (quite substantive) Old Georgetown Board agenda. So I’m getting ready for a long one!
But you don’t have to suffer through the whole meeting with us. The most interesting stuff is always on the front end. And to that end, we have some good stuff lined up. Of course we have our typical update from MPD, and CM Pinto’s office. Our featured business of the month will be Veronica Beard, who had the misfortune of opening right near the start of Covid, yet has thrived through that adversity. Additionally we will have an update from Georgetown’s own Allister Chang, the Ward 2 State Board of Ed rep.
As for project review, there are plenty. One that could lead to an interesting discussion is the proposal for an addition to 3210 Q St. The application has generated an unusual disagreement between the Old Georgetown Board and the DC Historic Preservation Office, with the OGB favoring the third floor addition and the HPO opposed (the HPO is ok with the additions to the first and second story). Typically the HPO (and the Historic Preservation Review Board) defers to the OGB on matters concerning Georgetown, but on this project they simply disagree. Come and hear the substantive and procedurally novel case!
Here is the rest of the agenda:
Page 1
GOVERNMENT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2E
ANC 2E Public Meeting
Monday, January 30th, 2023
at 6:30 p.m.
Online at: bit.ly/ANC2EFebruary2023
This meeting will be held online via Zoom and can be accessed at the link above (there is no
fee or account needed to use Zoom).
If you do not have a computer or access to the internet, you may join the meeting via phone
at (301) 715-8592 or (646) 558-8656 with meeting ID 886 7476 8843 #.
Approval of the Agenda – 6:30 pm
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Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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Last weekend the massive Nike Store closed its location at Thomas Jefferson and M St. It will be moving down the street to a smaller location. But it will leave a huge vacancy on a street that is not lacking in them. I wrote last March about how this glut of large spaces actually should be viewed as an opportunity.
Coincidentally, last week Washingtonian wrote an article expressing bemused surprise that Georgetown is “cool” again. The writer attributed the increase in activity in the neighborhood to the fact that the pandemic cleared out a lot of retail spaces and forced landlords to lower the rent. This caused some restaurants like the new Yellow to reconsider Georgetown as a destination.
That was essentially what I was predicting last March. And for what it’s worth, here is that article again:
Last month, WBJ reported that the Nike Store may be on the way out. And GM is hearing rumors that the Amazon Books store next door is also on the way out. These closures, if they come to pass, would add to several other large spaces that have also recently become vacant.
Nike took over the space at 30th and M in 2012. Previously the space was used for many years by Barnes and Nobles (offering one of the more popular third places in the neighborhood). Prior to the Barnes and Nobles, the building hosted the Cerberus 1-2-3 movie theater since 1970. Its unusual size and large windows owe to the fact it was originally built as a car dealership.
From the moment Nike moved in it felt like perhaps they bit off more than they could chew. The three vast floors felt empty, particularly to patrons who once roamed the Barnes and Noble’s bookshelves. And the fact that it appears that Nike is bowing out with years left on the lease would suggest they agree with that assessment.
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Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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