Photo by Mike Maguire.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
- Big redevelopment planned for the old Holiday Inn hotel just north of Georgetown.
- Canal, circa 1910.
Photo by Mike Maguire.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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Shocking parents who arrived at a meeting expecting good news about the “swing site” location for its upcoming construction, the Deputy Mayor of Education announced Wednesday night that DCPS would use a school halfway across the city instead of a local option.
As GM wrote about recently, there was a strong push from Hyde parents to use a local spot for the temporarily location of the school. After our supposed friends in Burleith stopped one viable option (the Duke Ellington field) the only viable local option was to use space at Hardy that will be vacated by the Fillmore Arts program.
This push appeared to be successful when the mayor told Councilmember Jack Evans last week that a local option would be selected. Apparently Deputy Mayor Jenny Niles didn’t get the memo. She appeared before the School Improvement Team Wednesday night and announced that the decision is final and Meyer School (which is at 11th and Euclid, four miles away) was the choice. Continue reading
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Photo by Mike Maguire.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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Can you believe it? Get this: the mighty city of Paris is totally copying Georgetown. Check it. They’re going to build a gondola system. What a bunch of copiers.
Ok, fine. They’re not copying Georgetown. If they’re copying anyone, it’s London. Ot better yet, Medellín. Any City Lab thinks they’re avoiding the mistakes that London made with their almost never used system.
Read the article, but here are the main points, points that Georgetown ought to keep in mind when considering a system here:
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Photo by John Sonderman.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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Recently GM was researching an old restaurant in the archives of the Washington Post and came across this interesting find. It’s a map from 1975 and it charts out 39 different restaurants or food markets that existed in Georgetown at the time. The theme that unites them is that the food can be taken away so that you can walk around the neighborhood and eat. Click on the photo to blow it up to read what it says for each, but here’s the list:
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Photo by Mike Maguire.
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
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