Northwest Georgetown April ANC Update

Hello and welcome to your April Northwest Georgetown ANC update! And happy spring!

Resident Only Parking Update

At the March ANC meeting, the commission adopted a resolution stating our intention to pursue a request to the city to evaluate and implement resident only parking (ROP) in Georgetown. As we discussed at the meeting and in the resolution, the process as described to us by the Department of Transportation (DDOT) is this:

  • The ANC will generate a map of blocks within the ANC that we would like DDOT to consider for ROP.
  • We will submit this map informally to the DDOT staff for pre-review.
  • This pre-review is designed to make sure that the blocks we are requesting are feasible for the study and implemenation.
  • This process may require the exchanging of a few drafts until we reach a suitable map.
  • At that point, the ANC will consider the adoption of a formal resolution requesting that DDOT study and implement ROP on the blocks of that map.

Following that resolution, it will be in DDOT’s hands. The regulations state that they need to conduct a study of the blocks under consideration. The staff must observe that the blocks are 85% full with at least 50% of the cars not having Zone 2 parking permits. As mentioned in the March ANC meeting, this may require some amount of pressure from the ANC to make sure these observations are done during appropriate hours, not, say, 7:00 AM on a Saturday morning.

As for the map, for my part, I intend to submit all the blocks in my SMD for consideration. As a reminder, here is my SMD:

If you feel strongly that you do not want your block considered, please let me know! I have received fairly overwhelming support for this idea from constituents so far, but if you and your immediate neighbors feel different, I want to hear from you.

I’ll keep you informed as the process continues.

Volta Park

After a frustrating delay in active work, the construction at Volta Park has been making progress over the last month or so. I believe the irrigation work is complete or nearly so. The field has been scraped of the old topsoil in preparation of the installation of the sod. I’ve been told they are targeting a May finish date. I hope that’s accurate, but I’ve seen too many deadlines pass unfulfilled to put too much weight on that. We’ll see!

Speaking of Volta Park: Mark your calendar for the Friends of Volta Park’s always excellent Spring cocktail party! June 4th!

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Podcast:

If you’re reading this update, then you probably also get the podcast I started up. I hope people enjoy it. It’s fun for me to make and even if it’s hardly going to be the next The Daily, or whatever.

Please let me know if you have topics that you’d like me to explore. So far the ideas have come to me in time to make my weekly(ish) target, but I’m sure the ideas may dry sooner or later. If there’s some Georgetown-related topic you’d like to know more about or want more people to know about, let me know!

Just a reminder, you can subscribe for the podcast through Apple podcasts or Spotify.

Quick Notes:

Here are a few items from the last month you may have missed:

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Coffee Shops and Georgetown

This week on the podcast, I’m discussing coffee shops and Georgetown, including two new shops on the way, how the number of shops have fluctuated over the years, and the intriguing story of Georgetown’s proto-beatnik coffee house from the 1930s.

Listen to the episode here, or at Apple podcasts or Spotify.

Links from the show:

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The Weekly Metropolitan

Oak Hill Cemetery

Good morning Georgetown, here’s your weekly news round-up:

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America’s Got More Spas than Retail Shops, What About Georgetown?

The Wall Street Journal had an interesting article this week exploring how across America last year, landlords leased more space to service businesses than to businesses selling stuff. Among the most common service businesses were spas and gyms.

That got me wondering: does Georgetown match this trend? I do an annual(ish) survey of all the stores and businesses in Georgetown. I can figure out how many are service oriented and how many are retail. While I can’t use square-feet leased as a metric the way the WSJ study does, it’s at least a thumbnail stab at the question.

So here goes!

Here’s my most recent chart showing the breakdown of categories of all the stores and businesses in Georgetown:

That might be a bit hard to make out, so here is the summary information:

Among all businesses in Georgetown:

  • Non-Service are 78%
  • Service are 22%

So Georgetown is nowhere near the same as America writ large, which should probably not come as a surprise.

Out of curiosity I ran the numbers without considering food or drink establishments. This compares strictly stores that sell pure services and stores that sell pure stuff (that you don’t put in your body). The totals were closer to eachother:

  • Non-Service are 68%
  • Service are 32%

So despite the fact that it seems like there are a million hair salons, and gyms, and yoga studios, and fortune tellers, and tailors, and etc., Georgetown’s still got a whole lot of other types of stuff too.

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Bikini Shop Coming to Wisconsin Ave.

A new shop that specializes in bikini swimsuits is coming to Wisconsin Ave. The shop, Frankies Bikinis, is set to open at 1240 Wisconsin.

Here is their website if you want to give yourself some body-image issues. They’ve got everything from extremely skimpy swimsuits to extremely skimpy swimsuits that look more like lingerie. What range!

I guess I should’t be too surprised, what with them being pretty upfront about being a bikini shop. Fun fact: nobody is really sure why exactly swimsuits like this are called ‘bikinis’ in the first place. Obviously they’re named after the Bikini Atoll where they (the U.S. Government, not Frankies Bikinis) tested the atom bomb.

But beyond that it’s all speculation as to whether they (the ‘they’ is this case being the French designers that first came up with the style) wanted to evoke the power of 23 kilotons of dynamite or just the vague idea that island girls are just skipping around with barely any clothes on. Neither lacks for a bit of awkwardness by modern sensibilities, but luckily no one thinks about that too much.

The shop was started by a mother-daughter team in Malibu: Mimi and Francesa Aiello. Hence ‘Frankie.’ Although come to think of it, the store is “Frankies” not “Frankie’s”. That makes me wonder where is the other Frankie(s) and what did they do with him, her, or them?

No word on this other Frankie(s) or when the store is going to open.

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Wisconsin and M: Georgetown as a Business Incubator

This week on Wisconsin and M I’m talking about Georgetown’s surprising history as the birthplace of a bunch of big companies. Listen to the episode here, or at Apple podcasts or Spotify.

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The Weekly Metropolitan

Cobblestones in Georgetown

Photo by Adam Fagan.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the weekly news round-up:

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New Tavern Proposed for Former Ri Ra Space

A new tavern has been proposed for the building that previously hosted the Irish bar, Ri Ra, and Mei N Yu before that. (And Georgetown Station before that). As a tavern licensee, the establishment would not need to serve food (i.e. it can just be a straight bar). The details are fairly sparse in the placard:

NATURE OF OPERATION
New Retailer’s Class “C” Tavern with a Seating Capacity of 105 and a Total Occupancy Load of 140

The Licensee is also requesting an Entertainment Endorsement and the Holiday Extension of
Hours Endorsement.
HOURS OF OPERATION, HOURS OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE SALES, SERVICE,
AND CONSUMPTION, AND HOURS OF LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Sunday through Thursday 6am – 2am, Friday and Saturday 6am – 3am

    I’ve also learned that the aim is to house this establishment on the second story only, which is a little odd since only half the space even appears to have a second story (it’s two buildings combined). And fitting 140 people in such a small space seems unwise.

    But we’ll learn more as the plan moves forward!

    This space has been empty since early 2020, one of the last establishments to close before it could be blamed on Covid. It was a shame to lose the place, sure it was a chain Irish bar, but it was well executed. A sports betting parlor was long planned to move in. But I suspect once the awful DC sports betting app was replaced with the likes of Draft Kings, the demand for brick-and-mortar betting parlors collapsed. Can’t say I’m disappointed about that. Although who knows, maybe it’s still planning to move into the first floor? Who wants to make a wager over it?

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    Wisconsin & M: Visitors Parking Permits

    This week on the podcast I’m exploring Georgetown’s annual rites of spring. Listen here or at Apple podcasts or Spotify.

    This week I’m talking Visitors Parking Permits and more.

    Here’s a link to Park DC.

    Here’s the link for the local baker selling bread straight to your door.

    Here’s a link to the Georgetowner’s piece on Davis Kennedy.

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    Georgetown Time Machine: It Takes GUTS

    This week for Georgetown Time Machine, I’m checking out an absolutely adorable little red bus. The photo comes from the DC Historical Society and it shows an early iteration of the GUTS Bus.

    GUTS is the Georgetown jitney bus. I would have guessed that it stood for Georgetown University Transportation System, but no. The ‘S’ stands for “Society”. Which is way fancier.

    This photo is from 1979. The bus system dates to 1974. This page offers a great history of the bus to mark its 50 anniversary in 2024. One interesting fact, the august descriptor “society” was specifically chosen to “evoke a feeling of community and connote a cooperative University organization.”

    It actually replaced a short-lived shuttle system that was offered by the student-run CORP. That shuttle was a good proof of concept but ran at such a deficit that the CORP couldn’t maintain it long. The GUTS bus was sufficiently funded to stay open. Here’s a flyer from the GU archives touting the new bus:

    That Benz looks to be the same from the top picture. It’s unclear how long it ran before needing to be replaced. There’s a photo in the GU archives of one of them in 1984, looking only a bit worse for wear. Any 80s Hoya alums remember when they were finally replaced?

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