ANC 2F serves Logan Circle, Thomas Circle, Old City, Blagden Alley, Franklin Square, and parts of Shaw and Downtown.

Advisory Neighborhood Commissions
Saturday, April 28, 2007
DDOT and WABA Begin 'DC Neighborhood Pace Car' Traffic Calming Project
The DC Department of Transportation (DDOT) and the Washington Area Bicyclist Association (WABA) have launched a new traffic calming project - the DC Neighborhood Pace Car.

The Pace Car program encourages residents to take responsibility for the impact of their own driving while sending a message about traffic calming to other drivers.

About the program:

Drivers each sign a "Pace Car" pledge and affix a "DC Neighborhood Pace Car" sticker to their rear car window. The sticker serves as a symbol that the driver is a resident taking part in a community-based traffic calming effort. The driver also commits to driving within the posted speed limit on city streets. DDOT and WABA devised the project following best practices research into successful pace car programs in cities such as Atlanta, GA and Palo Alto, Calif.

The Purpose of the Program:

  • To encourage drivers to drive the legal speed limit on neighborhood streets;
  • To encourage driver awareness of the neighborhoods and not just the road through the neighborhoods;
  • To raise awareness that motorists share the roads with people walking and cyclists, and to promote courteous habits.

For more information please visit http://www.waba.org/pacecar


Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Public Meeting on the Old Convention Center Site Redevelopment Project
Hines/Archstone-Smith and the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development invite you to attend a Public Meeting to review the Schematic Design progress for the District’s Old Convention Center Site Redevelopment Project. The Master Plan for the Project was approved by the District in October 2006. Development team design members will discuss the current design approach and design progress.

WHEN: Thursday, April 19, 2007, 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm

WHERE: National Music Center, 801 K Street, NW, Washington, DC (Formerly The City Museum/Carnegie Library)

See: http://www.oldconventioncenter.com/

Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Household Hazardous Waste Collection and Electronics Recycling Day
The DC Department of Public Works is sponsoring a spring Household Hazardous Waste Collection and Electronics Recycling Day. It will be held Saturday, April 21, 2007, from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm at Carter Barron Amphitheatre, 16th and Kennedy Streets, NW.

See
http://dpw.dc.gov/dpw/cwp/view,a,1200,q,575095.asp for answers to frequently asked questions about household hazardous waste and its collection.

Electronics Recycling: Many people are unaware that some electronics, especially computers, contain significant amounts of potentially dangerous materials, including lead and mercury. There will be two HHW events and an area will be set aside at both for e-cycling. Here, residents can drop off end-of-life consumer electronics, including audio-visual equipment, televisions, cell phones and home office equipment such as computers, computer parts, photocopiers and fax machines. These machines will be broken down into their component parts (plastic, glass, toxic metals) and recycled or disposed of safely.

Monday, April 09, 2007
Design Plans Set for Former D.C. Convention Center Site

FYI.  The following article appears in the April 6th Washington Business Journal.  It can be viewed on line at:  http://washington.bizjournals.com/washington/stories/2007/04/09/story15.html

 

 

Design Plans Set for Former D.C. Convention Center Site

 

Washington Business Journal - April 6, 2007

by Prabha Natarajan

Staff Reporter

 

The folks at Hines/Archstone-Smith have speed on their minds.

 

Representatives of the development team for D.C.'s old convention center site said they planned to submit the schematic design, which outlines the design and heights of the proposed buildings, to city officials in the first week of April.

 

They've stuck to the site's existing zoning and thus will avoid the lengthy process to receive zoning changes and variances.

 

The team plans to have its preliminary closing in May.  At that point, it would have agreed on the financial structure of the deal with the city, including the price for some of the land and the rent on the rest.  The developers will start paying half the rent in June.

 

They're rushing to be in a position to start construction on the $650 million project by next fall.

 

"We hope these plans will be approved by the city in as quick a time as possible," says Howard Riker, vice president of Hines, which is in a 50-50 joint venture with Archstone-Smith.

 

Thorny issues -- such as whether the city will put a library on the site -- have been sidestepped, and the developers are focusing only on the redevelopment of a park, the reintroduction of 10th and Eye streets NW through the site, and the land parcels the city has agreed to use for a mixed-use project.

 

The schematic design is a follow-up to the master plan approved last fall for the 10-acre parcel, which is touted as an economic boost to the area neighboring Mount Vernon and Chinatown.

 

A public presentation is scheduled for April 19, followed by meetings with stakeholder groups and an advisory committee.

 

Hines/Archstone-Smith wants to create a pedestrian-friendly, urban neighborhood complete with streets and park.  The development will have 280,000 square feet of retail, 464 rental units, 222 condominium units and 450,000 square feet of office space.

 

The plan turns Eye Street NW into a retail walkway with small boutiques and restaurants.  Nearly a third of the retail will consist of businesses with fewer than six stores nationwide.  There is room for a big-box retailer, but it's unclear if it will be a grocery store or something else.

 

If all of this goes according to plan, residents and store owners can move in during the fall of 2011.

 

The city is still undecided on its plans for the 111,460-square-feet parcel fronting New York Avenue NW, which is where former Mayor Tony Williams wanted a city library.  That baton is expected to be carried on by the current administration.  About a third of this lot will be swapped with developer Kingdon Gould for land the city wants for a convention center hotel.

 

Gould's plans for the site are not known, though a Hines/Archstone-Smith model sees the possibility of a hotel and an office building.



 


Thursday, April 05, 2007
Residential Parking Around the Convention Center
The District's Department of Transportation (DDOT) is currently evaluating the Residential Parking Program around the Convention Center.  They are interested in the opinions and concerns of nearby neighbors.  Please provide your comments (i.e., should it be expanded, reduced, different hours, different days of the week, etc.) to me at ANC2F06@gmail.com.  I will compile the feedback and provide it to DDOT.

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Watha T. Daniel Library Update
The building for the Watha T. Daniel/Shaw Interim Library will be delivered to its site at 925 Rhode Island Avenue, NW on Thursday, April 12.   Work has begun to remove and replace the existing foundation with concrete bases that meet District Code.  To protect students and pedestrians, a 6-foot fence has been erected around the site temporarily until the work is completed.   The interim library is expected to open in mid-June 2007.
 
All four closed libraries will be demolished by the end of July 2007.   Contracts were awarded to two D.C.-based construction firms.  Preliminary work begins this week, with the bulk of the demolition work commencing in early May.
 
A schedule for building new Anacostia, Benning, Tenley-Friendship and Watha T. Daniel/Shaw neighborhood libraries has been finalized.  The evaluation process is underway for the selection of the architectural/engineering firm(s) that will provide design services.   A series of community meetings at each location will be scheduled soon.

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ANC2F is composed of six Single Member Districts (SMDs), each of which includes about 2,000 residents. Voters who reside in the same SMD as the candidate elect the Commissioners. Commissioners are nonpartisan, unpaid local government officials.