
1500 block of 33rd St.
This week for Georgetown Time Machine, GM is featuring a photo recently featured by the fantastic Old Time DC account. It shows the Georgetown waterfront sometime in the 1980s.
For those relatively new to the city, you might be shocked at the appearance of a large surface parking lot taking space that is now a beautiful riverfront park. But you really don’t have to be that much of an old timer to remember it. It only fully disappeared about 2006 when construction of the park began in earnest. Here’s what it looked like from the sky in 2005:

It’s probably fair to say that until the new park was completed, it was literally centuries since the Georgetown waterfront was a calm and idyllic location as it is now. Before the large parking lot, it was a field of industrial plants and train tracks:
Continue readingFiled under Uncategorized
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
Filed under Uncategorized

Here’s your Northwest Georgetown March ANC Update (Sign up here to get these directly!):
Alley Buildings:
I wanted to focus this month on a project that the ANC reviewed this week that would be somewhat novel for Georgetown: a new alley dwelling.

Of course, alley dwellings have a long history in Georgetown. In the 19th and early 20th century, the small houses tucked away off the street were home to a large percentage of Georgetown’s working class residents, both black and white. While some were demolished as part of the city-wide alley clearance efforts of the 1920s and 30s, many in Georgetown were simply refurbished and remain, such as homes on Pomander Walk or Poplar St. Inevitably the working class residents were priced out and now the homes sell for six to seven figures.
But since then, few or no new alley dwellings have been built in Georgetown. But that may soon change. The District amended the zoning regulations recently to make it easier to obtain permission to construct a new alley building and use it as a home. (Zoning regulations are largely the reason alley dwelling construction ground to a halt in the first place). And a homeowner in our district is making use of these changes to construct a new home adjacent to her own (which, oddly enough, is itself technically an alley dwelling).
Continue readingFiled under Uncategorized
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
Filed under Uncategorized

Primarily through the efforts of the Friends of Volta Park, the city has dedicated $700,000 to restore and renovate the park’s baseball diamond and grass field. And DPR and DGS are finally moving forward with the design and implementation of that project. As part of that, the project reps will be holding a community meeting in the park this Wednesday morning from 10-11. As the ANC commissioner covering the park, I will of course be there. So will leadership from the Friends of Volta Park. But if you are also interested in attending, please show up! It’s important that we make the most of this opportunity to improve the park and your input is critical to that end! So see you there!
Filed under Uncategorized
Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:
Filed under Uncategorized

You probably have noticed that due to the unseasonably warm weather, plants and flowers have concluded that spring is here, despite what the calendar says. On the one hand, this is a foreboding sign of possibly cataclysmic climate change. On the other, it’s a perfect chance to pull one over on Harvard University.
See, Harvard owns Dumbarton Oaks. And admission to the gardens is free during the winter. But on March 15th, which is almost always right as the spring fireworks kick off, the gardens start charging admissions. So in normal times, you have to pony up to get to see sights like these:

Filed under Uncategorized

The ANC will be meeting for its March session next Monday, starting at 6:30 pm via Zoom. There are some pretty interesting items on the agenda, so I hope you will join us!
The most notable item, in my opinion, is a proposed new alley dwelling in my district. A homeowner who lives in a house in the center of the block confined by R St., 34th, 35th, and Filmore School has purchased some adjacent parking pads along an alley that comes off 34th:

The homeowner is proposing to combine the parking pads into a single lot and build a two-bedroom house on it. It is proposed to look like this:



Although it would legally be a free standing house, it would for all intents and purposes serve as an accessory dwelling of the primary home. The backside would open freely into the homeowner’s backyard. When I first saw this proposal, I assumed it would actually formally be an accessory dwelling. But the main home is itself technically an alley dwelling. (It’s actually the original home on the block and ended up somewhat stuck in the middle since the owners over the years sold off the surrounding lots.) And as an alley dwelling it’s legally not allowed to itself have an accessory dwelling.
Continue readingFiled under Uncategorized
You must be logged in to post a comment.