From MPD:

The Metropolitan Police Department is seeking the public’s assistance in identifying and locating four persons of interest in connection with a shooting that occurred in the 1000 block of 14th Street, Southeast.

On Wednesday, December 26, 2012, at approximately 3:15 pm, units from the First District responded to the 1000 block of 14th Street, Southeast for the report of sounds of gunshots. Upon arrival, they located an adult male suffering from apparent gunshot wounds. DC Fire and Emergency Medical Services responded to the scene and transported the victim to a local hospital.

Shortly after the shooting, four subjects were seen entering the Eastern Market Metro Station. The persons of interest are shown in this video http://youtu.be/0TiB_Dgl_Z0

DC Crime Solvers currently offers a reward of up to $1,000 to anyone that provides information which leads to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons wanted for serious crimes committed in the District of Columbia.

Anyone with information about this case is asked to call the police at (202) 727-9099. Additionally, anonymous information may be submitted to the department’s TEXT TIP LINE by text messaging 50411.


View Larger Map



View Larger Map

From @dcalerts:

“Shooting adult male victim, 0215hrs, 1200 C Street NE. LOF (2) B/M’s 5’10-6′, heavy build, one wearing a white tee shirt dark sleaves armed”

From MPD:

Early this morning, at approximately 2:15 AM, First District officers responded to a radio run for the Sound of Gunshots in the area of 13th and C Streets NE. Moments later the officers found a male victim inside of a parked vehicle in the 1200 block of C St NE, the apparent victim of a shooting. DC Fire and EMS personnel responded to treat the victim and determined that the victim had no signs consistent with life. The victim was subsequently transported to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, the name of the victim is pending a positive identification. The offense is being investigated by detectives from the Homicide Branch.

The First District has deployed additional personnel, uniform and plainclothes, to patrol this area and to assist the Homicide Branch.

The Metropolitan Police Department currently offers a reward of up to $25,000 to anyone that provides information which leads to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons wanted for any homicide committed in the District of Columbia.

Anyone with information about this case is asked to call the police at (202) 727-9099. Additionally, anonymous information may be submitted to the department’s TEXT TIP LINE by text messaging 50411.

Update from the Washington Post:

Jason Anthony Emma moved to Capitol Hill from Arlington County on Dec. 1, piling into a rowhouse filled with his lifelong friends and excited about living in the city and walking to restaurants, bars and concerts.

But after returning to his new home on C Street in Northeast Washington about 2:15 a.m. Monday, police said the 28-year-old was shot several times, killed as he sat in the driver’s seat of his black Audi just moments after parking.


Streets of Washington, written by John DeFerrari, covers some of DC’s most interesting buildings and history. John is also the author of Lost Washington DC.

“Why is peace such an untellable tale?” wonders one of the patrons in a Berlin library as he is observed by a kindly angel in Wim Wenders’ classic film, Wings of Desire (1987). Just as peace is hard to write about, so it seems to be hard to erect a memorial to. We have countless monuments to wars and their heroes, but relatively few to celebrate peace. Even our Peace Monument, erected in 1877 at the foot of Capitol Hill where Pennsylvania Avenue ends, is really more about war than peace, and like the city’s many war memorials, people have bickered over it at least as much as they’ve celebrated its theme of tranquility.


The Peace Monument (photo by the author).

The monument was the brainchild of Admiral David D. Porter (1813-1891), one of the top two naval commanders of the Civil War. In 1864 Porter had led the successful naval campaign to take Fort Fisher at Wilmington, North Carolina, in what would be the last major naval campaign of the war. It was after the fall of Fort Fisher that Porter began a campaign to have a memorial erected to all of the brave Navy men who had been killed in the war, just as his famous father, War of 1812 hero David Porter (1780-1843), had commissioned the first naval monument to heroes of the Barbary Wars. That memorial, now known as the Tripoli Monument, had been completed in 1806 and originally stood in the Navy Yard but was moved to the Naval Academy in Annapolis in 1860.

When the Civil War ended, Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles (1802-1878) made Porter superintendent of the Naval Academy, where he would go on to institute many reforms that enhanced the professionalism of the navy. While at the Academy, Porter worked to get the new naval monument built so that it could join the venerable Tripoli Monument at Annapolis. He collected contributions from Naval officers and seamen totaling $9,000 and sketched out the design of the monument himself. Sculptor Franklin Simmons (1839-1913), who also sculpted the equestrian figure of General John A. Logan at the center of Logan Circle, was hired to carve the figures for the monument in fine white Carrara marble in his studio in Rome. So far so good. A reading of the National Register listing for Civil War monuments in Washington suggests that the ensuing production of the memorial was accomplished with efficiency and purpose: “The sculpture was erected by the government with contributions from Navy personnel under a Congressional Act approved July 31, 1876 (19 Stat. 114). It was sculpted and carved in Rome in 1877 and dedicated in the same year.”


The Peace Monument c. 1880, from a stereoview in the author’s collection.

However, things didn’t really go quite that smoothly. For one thing, it seems that Admiral Porter and Secretary Welles may not have gotten along well together. According to retired Navy officer C.Q. Wright, who wrote about the Peace Monument in the Washington Post in 1923, “the few surviving letters which passed between [Porter and Welles] concerning the location of this monument seem to indicate indifference in the mind of Mr. Wells to the erection of the monument or a quiet disapproval of the affair in which he may have thought he saw sign of the high-handed self-assertion of Admiral Porter.” Wright suggests that friction between Porter and Welles may have led to changes both in where the memorial was to be placed and how it was to be designed.

Continues after the jump. (more…)


Dear PoPville,

I thought I would share a photo from the addition we are currently undertaking to our building in Eastern Market on 7th St SE. We are connecting an existing office building to 13,000 sf of new office space above the restaurant Montmartre.

We are filling in an alley with an copper clad connection building (see photo above). The face of the addition above Montmartre will feature Italian laser cut tiles and zinc. Expected delivery February 2013.

As a sucker for copper I think that’s awesome. Looking forward to seeing how the Italian laser cut tiles and zinc turns out. Here’s a rendering from Stanton Development Corp.:


Big potential Capitol Hill restaurant news from Capitol Hill Corner:

This afternoon, local restaurateur Xavier Cervera confirmed to Capitol Hill Corner that he has received offers to buy all nine of his Capitol Hill operations, and that he is reviewing these offers seriously.

The article also updates the status of Hawk & Dove:

“the Hawk & Dove will open early in February


This rental is located at 624 11th St, NE:


View Larger Map

The listing says:

“Capitol Hill/ H Street Row House with parking. This beauty includes 2 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms, open floor plan and parking. Walk to restaurants on H Street or your job on the Hill.Your landlords live below in the English Basement apartment. Housing Vouchers welcome. Use L&F application. $40 per person application fee plus security deposit at time of application. Go and show.”

This 2 bed/2 bath is going for $3,200/MO.



717 8th Street, SE

A liquor license has recently been posted at the long vacant building at 717 8th Street, SE on Barracks Row. It says a new restaurant called Rose’s Luxury is coming:

“New full service restaurant serving an eclectic mix of American cuisine. No live entertainment. Seating capacity is 75. Occupancy load is 90.”

Their website says:

“DC’s most exclusively unexclusive new restaurant coming soon!”



415 New Jersey Avenue, NW

From a press release:

Four years after Celebrity Chef Art Smith opened Art and Soul in The Liaison Capitol Hill, an Affinia hotel, the regionally-inspired restaurant with a Southern accent, is undergoing a physical transformation. Plans include new interiors for the restaurant, bar, private dining room and lobby and a fine-tuned, artisanal farm-to-table menu. Art and Soul will close on January 22, immediately following Presidential Inauguration activities, and is scheduled to re-open the week of February 18.

“Our menu is constantly changing with the seasons and dining trends, and after more than four successful years, it’s time for Art and Soul to get a makeover,” said Chef/Owner Art Smith. “The soulful Southern-inspiration behind the Capitol Hill restaurant that Washingtonians have come to know and love will remain, but we are giving her a new pair of shoes, so to speak, so she can dance on for many more years to come.”

Interior Redesign
Seattle-based Hospitality Design firm, Dawson Design Associates, is the team behind the Art and Soul renovation. Using various natural and rustic elements the team will create an indoor urban market feel to compliment the approachable, modern, farm-to-table menu.

Herringbone wood flooring will replace carpet throughout the restaurant, bar and lobby. New light fixtures, various textured wall treatments and graphics will bring the look and feel of the outdoors inside. Banquettes will be replaced by free-standing tables to complement the urban market ambience, and a playful wall sculpture comprised of different types of beans will stretch along one side of the restaurant, as a nod to Southern cooking. The market-to-table motif is further strengthened by elements found in The District’s many urban gardens and expressed in wall dividers and screens.


View More Stories