Volta Field Restoration Finally Moving Forward

After years of delay, the city is finally moving forward with the long planned field restoration at Volta Park. The work is scheduled to begin today and to last until the fall. Here is the press release with some more detail about the field closures and the anticipated work:

Dear Community Stakeholder:

The DC Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) and the DC Department of General Services (DGS) are pleased to inform the community that the project to address the erosion issue at Volta Park Baseball Diamond (1555 34th Street, NW) have completed the permit process. The work on the field will begin on Monday, July 21, 2025, and the field will remain offline for the summer and into the fall until the grass has had sufficient time to root and stabilize. Meanwhile, the pool, recreation center, playgrounds, and tennis and basketball courts will remain open to the public. Please note, these amenities will only be accessible from the northern entrance at the driveway off of Q Street NW or from the two stair entrances south of the recreation center and playground off of Volta Place NW. All entrances to the field will be closed for the safety of the community. 
  
This project includes the following, among other improvements:

  • Installation of a French Drainage system to address the stormwater and erosion issues;
  • Installation of a new irrigation system for the baseball diamond
  • Regrading the clay infill on the baseball diamond
  • Repairs to the seating area
  • Resod the disturbed areas and overseed all grass areas

For additional details on this project and to stay up to date, please visit the DGS webpage for this project here: https://dgs.dc.gov/node/1631006

Residents are welcome to contact DPR’s Customer Care Center at (202) 673-7647. The call line is open during regular business hours (9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.), Monday through Friday, and is closed on weekends and holidays. You may also contact us via email at dprcustomercare@dc.gov

Losing use of the field through the rest of the summer and into the fall is a disappointment, of course. But getting the field back into a good state is critically needed at this point. Please let me know if you have any questions or issues as the project gets underway.

(To answer one question I’m sure some people have: Yes, I believe the fence dividing the ball field from the de facto dog area is still part of the plan. I understand that there are still divided opinions on that element, but the reality is that the city insisted upon it. I hope that it comes to be appreciated as a means to help avoid conflicts over the [let’s face it] illegal off-leash dogs and people trying to use the ball field.)

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The Weekly Metropolitan

2025 FĂȘte de la Musique 11

Photo by M.V. Jantzen.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s your weekly roundup:

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Georgetown Time Machine

This week on Georgetown Time Machine I am checking out yet another photo from the DC Historical Society. It shows the scene just west of the old Aqueduct Bridge circa 1930.

There are several notable features that jump out. The first is, of course, the fact there’s a railroad track. In case you didn’t realize it, there once was a freight rail line that went along what is now the Capital Crescent Trail. It came all the way down Water and K Streets. Trains ran on the track as late as 1985.

Here’s a train at 33rd and Water St. in the 70s:

Next, the aqueduct abutment is still around. But this photo shows the bridge superstructure that once stood on top of the abutment. By this time, the aqueduct bridge was really just a normal bridge. But it once was a real aqueduct as you can see from this 19th century photo looking south across the aqueduct from Georgetown into then rural Arlington:

The aqueduct bridge was replaced by the Key Bridge in the 1920s and torn down soon after. The bridge abutments remained for decades though. Here they are in the 1960s:

Most of them were blown up with dynamite in 1962, but they left one near the southern shore as a relic.

Finally, the last notable thing about the top photo is that it shows the entrance to the old Dempsey’s Boat House. This was a public boathouse that offered boat rentals to the public for decades in the early part of the 20th century. When Thompson’s Boathouse was opened in the 1950s, though, it was abandoned. It later burned to the ground in a spectacular 1961 fire:

History is coming somewhat in full circle though. The location of the old Dempsey’s Boathouse is the future site of the relocated Key Bridge Boathouse, which will move once Georgetown University starts building its boathouse.

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What Does Georgetown Taste Like?

As part of my survey on Georgetown establishments, I always like to parse out the various cuisines at the restaurants around the neighborhood. And so above is that chart.

As was the case last time, “American” still leads the way. Last time “Sweets” came in second. And if I were to group them all together like that again, they would still be in second. But this time I decided to break them out.

French now comes in second, and shows an uptick from 8.5% to 9.7%. In truth, Italian would be second if I grouped all the pizza places with the general Italian. But I decided not to do that.

Japanese was another big gainer, going from 4.6% to 6.7%. In nominal terms it’s a jump from 6 to 9 (reflecting to sushi boom we’ve been having).

All in all, you can get cuisines from just about every corner of the globe around Georgetown these days. Bon Appetite!

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State of Georgetown 2025

I finally got around to crunching the numbers from my latest street survey and can now present the State fo Georgetown 2025:

I’ve been doing this survey since I started this website in 2008, and so the accumulated data reflects the ebbs and flows of the Georgetown retail community. And the overall message from this year is that Georgetown is still soaring out from the Covid depths.

But before I get to the numbers, I need to issue my typical disclaimer: First, it’s important to know that my counting is more of an art than a science. The term “establishments” or “store” as used here refers to just about all commercial establishments serving the general public: retail stores, restaurants, salons, gyms, etc. I don’t count pure office space. The rule of thumb I use is if you can walk in without an appointment, I count it. But again, sometimes it’s a close call (for instance, I count realtors but not lawyers). ¯\_(ツ)_/ÂŻ.

Overall Picture

The last time I did this survey (about 20 months ago) the story was one of a neighborhood rebounding well from Covd. And the story of this survey is that that rebound has reached escape velocity. To put numbers to that: right before Covid, I counted 509 stores in Georgetown. While that’s still down from an overall peak I counted before the mall closed, it’s still on the higher end for the neighborhood. in 2021 I counted 451 stores, an 11% drop. By 2023, though, the numbers were already back up to 464. This year the numbers have continued to climb, up to 480. That’s still down from 2019, but it’s nearly there.

I measured 89 openings and 73 closures. While that seems a jump over the last measure (62 openings and 46 closures) I was very overdue for the survey. So as a result I was measuring a longer time period. If I calculate the number of openings and closings per month the picture is a bit clearer:

The opening rate per month (the blue line) jumped from about 2.25 coming out of Covid to over 4 in 2023. It’s stayed roughly there. The closure rate per month (the red line) obviously jumped due to Covid but has settled to a little above 3 per month. In other words, since 2021 there are an average of four stores opening in Georgetown a month with three stores closing. That’s a healthy positive surplus.

Independents vs. Chains

One of the main reasons I started conducting this count was to push back against the widely held perception that Georgetown is only mall chain stores. While it may sometimes feel that way (depending on what block you’re on), as a matter of pure head count, Georgetown has always had a clear majority of independent establishments.

(Just for clarity: I don’t have a hard and fast rule for whether something is “independent”. Basically I ask: is it based in DC? Does it have fewer than five locations? But even a “no” to either might still get an independent tag. It’s a gut thing.)

I counted 303 independent shops in Georgetown. That’s essentially the same I’ve counted over the last handful surveys. What that means is that the growth in stores has come almost exclusively from chains. I counted 158 chains in 2023. Now it’s 177. But that also means that independents still dominate in terms of pure numbers, with 63% of the total.

Store Variety

The variety of establishments has remained fairly stable over the years. The largest category remains restaurants, with clothing stores a close second, and salons comfortably back at third:

Last time I noted that I created a “cannabis” category for the first time and hoped it would be a smaller number the next time I counted it. In 2023 I counted 15 such shops. This time I counted 9. Progress!

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The Weekly Metropolitan

New Wall

Photo by M.V. Jantzen.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

  • Eric Hilton, one half of the legendary Thievery Corporation, has set up a music studio in Georgetown.
  • Georgetown University received a positive reception from the Old Georgetown Board last week for their boathouse plans. They had a couple small suggestions and requests, and asked for the school to come back one more time, but expects to give the concept the green light at that point.

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State of Georgetown Preview: Openings

I finally completed my annualish store survey several weeks ago, but still haven’t fully crunched all the numbers. I posted a preview of the closings I recorded, and sharp eyed readers pointed out several stores that I misidentified. That turned out to be a useful exercise, so I’m trying it again with the stores I counted as opening.

This is a bit tougher to fact check, because you’d have to remember specifically that the store was actually open the last time I did the survey (September 2023). Also, there are still one or two shops that get newly counted that didn’t really open recently, I just simply missed them in the past.

With all that said, here is the preliminary list of all the openings I detected since September 2023, let me know if something doesn’t look right!:

Baku Caviar
Stretch Lab
Aqua Nails
Caspian Crust
Pi Kitchen and Bath
Sugared and Bronzed
Han Palace
NEKA
Hunter and Huntress
Hitched
Matt Camron Rugs
Capital Connect
Jack Howard
Paris Antiques
Yen Mai Hair and Nails
Koryouri Urara
Tatte
Glowlab
Generation Tux
Georgetown Pantry
Framebridge
Bespoke and Aesthetics and Wellness
7th Street Burger
Dolce Vita
Peter Manning
Tillies Pet Supplies
M La Fluer
Wingos
Meow Maison
It’s a Secret
Saints Valley
Closed Caption
Alara
Citibank
Argent
Outerknown
Clare V
Malbon
Definition Studio
Greater Goods
Georgetown Vet Hospital
Amomola Hagerman
La Bonne Vache
Brompton
Zaig and Voltaire
Sezane
Regan Billingsley
Baker’s Daughter
Doca Georgetown
Andreu World
Lashiskin Beauty Spa
My Little chamomile
Reverie
Spot of Tea
Georgetown Sushi
River Club
Ice Cream Jubilee
Tesla
Ornare
Max Alto
Molteni and Co
Poliform
Skims
Billy Hicks
Rimtang
Sweaty Betty
Rails
Away
Osteria Mozza
Olefactory
Vuori
Arcteryx
Smoothie King
Kiehl’s
New Balance
Frame
Cabada Contemporary
Camlai Salon
Farm Rio
Catbird
Barnes and Noble
Staud
Grown Brilliance
Loveweld
Rose Salon
La Boheme
Barber Shop
Monstera
Pure Sweat and Float

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Georgetown Time Machine: Reservoir

This week for Georgetown Time Machine, I’m posting another photo from the DC Historical Society. It’s a southeast view from the intersection of R and Wisconsin from 1927.

Of course, that view now would be of the Georgetown library. But that building wasn’t built until 1935. What you see in this photo is actually the top of a spectacular Victorian era reservoir that once occupied these grounds.

I’ve written about this structure before. It was an unusual shape, emerging from the top of the hill like something out of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea:

The structure dated to 1853, but an article from when it was torn down suggests that it did not come into operation until the end of the Civil War (which I find somewhat hard to believe, but who knows).

The reservoir is long gone, but the wall and fence you see in the top photo is still the wall and fence you see surrounding the library to this day. The fence has a distinctive Neptune’s trident shape, which reflects the property’s previous use.

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The Weekly Metropolitan

Photo by Sidney Lawrence.

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

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Why Not Hold Parades?

DSC_3213

A long way back I used to run an occasional series where I’d simply ask the question: Why Not? Like, “Why Not Have a Waterfront Ice Skating Rink?” (that one actually partially led to the creation of the rink we still have). With Fourth of July later this week, I’d like to re-run my call for our own holiday parade, if not exactly a July Fourth one. What do you think?:

As part of my occasional Why Not series, today I ponder this: Why Not hold parades in Georgetown?

This thought occurred to me when I took in the Alexandria Scottish Christmas parade in Old Town last December. This parade–along with the equally Celtic St. Patrick’s Day Parade–always brings the best out of the Alexandria community. The route is lined, often several rows deep, with cheerful residents and visitors. The homeowners get into the spirit by decorating their houses with the St. Andrews flag and donning kilts. And following the parade, the shops are mobbed with people eager to knock a few names off their Christmas gift list.

The parades always leave me a little bittersweet. Does Georgetown lack the sort of community spirit that Old Town has? Or does it lack the opportunity to express it?

What I particularly like about the Old Town parade is that it spends most of its route winding through the quaint residential streets. Perhaps that’s why the residents get so into it, they’ve got no choice.

So why not bring that opportunity to Georgetown with a parade of its own?

For it to be a true community event, I think they would also have to wind their way through the sidestreets. This has the added benefit of not requiring the closure of arteries like M St. or Wisconsin Ave.

The Old Town parade last year was just .9 miles. I figure Georgetown need not be quite as long (at least not at first). Here’s a simple route I mocked up:

parade

The parade would start at Visitation, in order to use the parking lot to stage the floats and bands, etc. The route would go down 35th to Prospect, over to 34th, up to O St. There it would wind it’s way down to Hyde-Addison, where the parade would end at the playground.

I asked around and could identify only one community parade in recent memory. In 2001, there was a parade to celebrate the neighborhood’s 150th250th anniversary. This parade, however shut down at least Wisconsin Ave.

Lots of boring questions come to mind, like how to organize it and how to address complaints about parking etc. But a more fun question pushes those aside: what should the parade be about? Christmas, St. Patrick’s and the Fourth of July already have stiff competition, so those wouldn’t be a good idea.

But how about Halloween? Georgetowners have been getting more and more into Halloween in recent years. It used to be just Nancy Taylor Bubes going over the top, but now she’s got plenty of company. So the spirit is already there. And the parade could include neighborhood kids showing off their costumes. There could even be a Halloween party at Hyde at the end! This is a better idea the more I think about it.

So what say you: why not?

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