I was disappointed with Vinoteca wine bar on 11th.
I admired the mural in the U Street metro.
I wondered if one home was taking the stars on rowhouses a little too far.
I was disappointed with Vinoteca wine bar on 11th.
I admired the mural in the U Street metro.
I wondered if one home was taking the stars on rowhouses a little too far.
Ok, so maybe I’m also becoming a bit obsessed but I think the discussion we’ve been having can yield some positive action. Christina wants to know:
“So how do we harness this energy? This is one of the most useful conversations (of many useful conversations!) I’ve seen on this board. It makes me feel like there’s something I can actually do, rather than just participate in yet another thread of with a lot of people bitching about blacks and gentrification and “why don’t you move back to the suburbs” and “I’m selling my house, these people are animals” or whatever. All that venting is fine, but action is necessary.
Do we need to try and enlist the other blog communities in this? Is a letter writing campaign the right form of action? A visit to a DC council meeting? I know (hope!) we have ANCs lurking here, as well as a lot of people who are more familiar with the workings of DC gov’t than I am.”
Incidentally Washington Post columnist Colbert King has some really interesting thoughts on the situation. I feel like he is the only member of the mainstream media who really understands how difficult the situation can be and he’s certainly the only one to consistently write about it. Of course his columns are on Saturday so I feel like they may get overlooked a bit. He had a very powerful column this Saturday titled – Watch Where You Walk, Mr. Obama. I definitely thought it was worth sharing. Following is how he ends the column:
“President-elect Obama should also make it a point to observe District leaders go through the motions of seeming to care about the turmoil in our city’s underbelly.
They don’t care, of course. Otherwise, how do you explain leadership that:
· Considers it taboo to hold parents accountable for their children’s misbehavior.
· Dreads the thought of asking hard questions about juvenile crime, dead youth offenders and the effectiveness of an $80 million Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services budget.
· Refuses to consider the possibility of links between fatherless poor families, undisciplined adolescents who stomp, steal and shoot, who kill and are killed, and touchy-feely youth rehabilitation “experts” whose lower lips quiver at the very idea of juvenile detention.
Well, this is the kind of place the next first family is coming to.
Maybe our next commander in chief should invite the 82nd Airborne Division to tag along.”

I know folks have been super curious to know about when this demolition on 14th near Chapin would occur. So enjoy the above photo.

Speaking of positive development it looks like the Columbia Heights Streetscape project will be starting soon.

That’s a pretty expensive project. But if it looks anything like the model below it is going to be super sweet. So let’s take bets now – when will the streetscape project be completed? 2009, 2010, 2011 or later?

This sign is from the gas station located at 14th and W. I don’t know about you but the only food I’m buying at a gas station is a bag of chips and maybe a slim jim…
Is it just me or does it seem really wrong to buy fried chicken or Chinese food at a gas station?

From an email:
“This Monday — Nov. 17th — we’re gonna be having a Star Wars extravaganza… on the big screen, with sound on, we’ll be showing the trilogy … A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back & Return of the Jedi…
Also, every Monday … we’re doing 1/2 priced burgers ….”
Red Derby is located at 3718 14th St. NW.
So I guess I should ask – which is the best Star Wars movie?

These were the buildings where a wall fell down. Then the wall was fixed with miss matched bricks. So which do you like better – original or painted?

For the curious a reader had previously written:
“FYI – there are two condo buildings being developed on 7th street between Shepherd and Randolph. I think you profiled these two boarded up buildings in a previous post. In any event, I bumped into the developer on my walk to the metro. He was a nice gentlemen and said that he grew up in the neighborhood. According to him the condos should be finished in about 8-10 months. He said each unit will have two bedrooms.”

From a very lucky reader:
“I was just in St. Lucia and went on a tour of the banana plantations and rain forest.”

Wild window, yeah?


It’s nice to see a bit of color from time to time.