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Photo by PoPville flickr user NCinDC

From a press release:

In anticipation of the upcoming premier of Woody Allen’s latest film, Blue Jasmine, the Washington DCJCC is launching two weeks of nightly double features of the director’s movies along with trivia and a happy hour. Each night during the week of July 8-14, the DCJCC will be showing Annie Hall and Purple Rose of Cairo with a special Woody Allen-themed happy hour on July 11. During the second week, July 15-21, the DCJCC will play Manhattan and Crimes and Misdemeanor with a trivia night on July 18. The events will serve to celebrate the work of Woody Allen while allowing Washingtonians to escape the summer heat. The films shown will all be in 35 mm format. Tickets are $11.

WHAT: Woody Allen Fest
WHERE: Washington DCJCC, 1529 16th Street NW, Washington, DC 20036 (unless noted)
WHEN: July 8 – 21
(Every day except Fridays), full schedule follows (more…)


Teddy_bully_bar_front
1200 19th Street, NW

Last week we saw a press release for Teddy and the Bully Bar opening June 24th in the old Sam and Harry’s space at 1200 19th St, NW. To say the space has been transformed is the understatement of the year. It is freaking awesome. You can get all the details from the press release and you’ll soon be able to see their menus here. In the meantime, have a look at the transformation:

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front dining room

Lots more photos after the jump. (more…)


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Thanks to a reader for sending this link from Let My Flowers Grow:

Dear Metro Officials:

As you may not know, after considerable expense of my time and money and at some cost to the peace in our home, I planted over a thousand flowers at the Dupont Circle Metro North Station. Metro ordered me to Stop. If I stop, the flowers will die before they bloom.

Tears are in my eyes as I write this letter with a very heavy heart. I was stunned and saddened by your Fed Ex response that I would face “arrest, fines and imprisonment” if I continued to tend to the thousand flowers I planted at the Dupont Circle Metro North Station.

Your Order that I “cease and desist with this activity immediately” seems a little inappropriate for this situation. The previously abandoned and filthy terraced garden squares had been neglected for years. They did not appear to be high on your list of priorities, in spite of the considerable efforts Metro expends elsewhere to make their properties attractive.

Out of the goodness of my heart, last Fall I planted over 100 bulbs in the very same neglected garden squares. Months later they bloomed, sharing their joy and beauty with fellow Metro Riders.

This Spring I returned. I weeded and two trash bags were filled with more than 300 discarded cigarette butts, shards of glass, wads of gum, tree branches and assorted fast food restaurant garbage.

But when your representative writes that Metro wants to explore “affordable and sustainable” ways to improve the station’s appearance, I wonder what you have in mind and on what time table?

What could be more “affordable” to Metro than an artist who gives away a garden of a thousand flowers? What could be more “sustainable” than an artist who’s willing to provide the labor this Summer and Fall to water and care for the garden and then clean up when everything is brown and dead after our First Frost?

Gardening on those terraces is no more physically challenging than hiking on the Billy Goat Trail near Great Falls, MD or Old Rag in Virginia. I respectfully disagree that this performance art piece “endangers not only yourself but the public as well.” Nevertheless, I offered to sign a waiver to hold Metro harmless as I recognize your concerns are part of the fear filled society we currently live in. But flowers are nature’s way of affirming how beautiful life can be.

During this time when our country faces numerous challenges, it does not makes sense to discourage and delay the creation of something beautiful. Nevertheless, I understand your reluctance and am willing to forgo re-entering the site and installing the whimsical sculptures and trellises for the flowers to climb up and cover…. if I can merely have watering rights.

As a working solution which will create a win win situation for Metro, its riders and the flowers, I propose to stand outside the four foot tall concrete wall that encircles the station and water the flowers from the flat sidewalk that everyone walks on. A local vendor has volunteered to share his truck which can deliver 400 gallons of water at a time.

I have received assistance and moral support from many individuals and organizations. People I don’t know have offered heartfelt thanks, notes of appreciation and offers of assistance. A Swiss Embassy official thinks I should “get an award”. Someone at the National Gallery of Art understands. The Downtown Cluster of Congregations, the Israeli Embassy, GlobalWaterDances.org, Marylee Hardenbergh, an employee at Razoo.org, Mike Barnes, David Catania’s staff, Bob Halligan, Joanne Newhouse, Dan Oran, Leon Wieseltier, Barry Louis Polisar (the person who wrote the theme song to the movie “Juno”), Jackson Carnes of the Dupont Historic Main Street organization, and even a Hollywood Producer so far.

In light of this spontaneous groundswell of support I intend to actively gather support with a petition.

I hope you’ll accept a win win solution and allow me watering rights. I do not wish my flowers to die when the inevitable heat returns to Washington.

I am willing to work with you to explore long term solutions to making the Dupont North Station entrance more attractive.

Sincerely,
Henry Docter

The world is not as bad as it is often portrayed in the news. This is an opportunity for all of us to make something beautiful.

You can see the Change.org petition here.

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This is very cool. PoPville flickr user NCinDC writes:

“The Washington, D.C. Jewish Community Center (DCJCC) in 1926, via the Library of Congress.

The DCJCC is located at 1529 16th Street, N.W., in the Dupont Circle neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Completed in 1926 to the designs of noted local architect B. Stanley Simmons, the neoclassical style building is designated as a contributing property to the Sixteenth Street Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.”

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Photo by PoPville flickr user NCinDC


DGS_Dupont_jewish_deli
1317 Connecticut Avenue, NW

From a press release:

DGS Delicatessen and DC Brau will collaborate on a new summer beer, the “Golden Calf.” The Belgium IPA will blend DC Brau’s Yonder Cities and DGS’s slivovitz plum mash. Slivovitz is a plum brandy with a rich history in Eastern Europe that DGS Beverage Director Brian Zipin crafts in the restaurant. Yonder Cities has a bright juicy grapefruit candy palate that is animated by the richness of the spiced plums. DGS Delicatessen partner Nick Wiseman says, “We are super excited to work with the guys at DC Brau. What could be better than putting beer and slivovitz together?”

The release party will take place on June 27th at DGS from 8-­‐11pm (1317 Connecticut Avenue NW), during which there will be a celebratory tapping of the Golden Calf firkin. To complement the collaborative beer, Chef Barry Koslow has crafted a special food menu for the evening, including all beef hot dogs topped with DGS pastrami chili and DC Brau beer mustard alongside half sour pickles fermented in a Catoctin Creek whiskey barrel.


Kabin_washington_dc_bar
1337 Connecticut Avenue, NW

From a press release:

Discotheque meets après-ski chalet at KABIN, due to open in Dupont Circle on Saturday, June 29. Nestled above bustling Connecticut Avenue, KABIN dares Washingtonians to step out of the everyday and into the alps. Owners Kunal Shah, Vinoda Basnayake, Dustin Huynh and Rajeev Subramanian will spearhead the new venue just south of the circle. Shah and Basnayake are also the former owners of Eden nightclub and current partners at the Karma by Erwin Gomez salon.

The 3,200 square-foot, 252-person lounge pays homage to alpine culture, both in mise-en-scene and mood. The KABIN concept and experience, say the owners, completely upends DC nightlife norms. “At Eden, we tried to bring Miami to DC, but at KABIN we want to create something more reminiscent of destinations like the French Alps and Aspen,” Basnayake remarked. “It’s unlike anything else in the District.”

In addition to a full cocktail menu, DC partygoers will also have a chance to indulge in one very specific emblem of ski lodge culture: the Three Pins shot, named for the three pins telemark skiers used to lock their boots onto their skis, is a classic après-ski libation used to warm up after a long day on the slopes. The spirit is a traditional mountain villa herbal liqueur made with over a dozen herbs and flowers, most of which are found along the alpine trails and remote mountain passes that the Three Pinner calls home.

Designer Brien Z. Watson of Invironment Design LLC has invoked a sleek, modern aesthetic inspired by 1970s alpine culture, from Vail, Colorado to Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. Guests can expect subtle stylistic gestures to these settings – not a heavy-handed replica of a log cabin. “We did not want to recreate a literal interpretation of an alpine ski chalet,” says Watson. “It’s a 360-degree departure from DC social life.”

KABIN is a chilly reprieve from the impending summer heat and a nightlife scene where guests get a breathtaking view at every turn – without shelling out for a lift pass. Old World luxury charm permeates: man-made design elements like bronze and raw steel merge with elegant, natural materials like charred wood and polished marble. From textured, charcoal-finished wood walls (a faux bois shou-sugi-ban technique) to custom furnishings – including tanned-leather banquettes, polished brass and bronze mirrors, herringbone floors and candlelit onyx accents – the space is fraught with fine-tuned details. Overhead, the mirrored prism ceiling refracts views and light from every angle, creating a visual experience akin to that of an abstracted mountain view. A virtual infinity fire-box warms and centers the room, while stone-and-glass VIP lookouts offer panoramic vantage points from which guests can watch every moment and movement of the soiree.

HOURS OF OPERATION:
Thursday: 10 p.m. – 2 a.m.
Friday – Saturday: 10 p.m. – 3 a.m.


1737 Connecticut Avenue Northwest

This rental is located at 1737 Connecticut Avenue, Northwest:

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The listing says:

“Relax and entertain in the heart of Dupont Circle. This new two-level penthouse has a private rooftop deck with incredible views of the city. The top level open floor plan consists of kitchen-dining-living areas. Subzero, Viking, Bosch. Bedrooms share an eastern balcony, and baths are beautifully appointed. Key-locked elevator, 1-year garage parking is included in rent.”

You can see more photos here.

This 2 bed/2.5 bath is going for $6,750/Mo.


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Photo by PoPville flickr user philliefan99

Good news from ANC Rep Noah Smith:

After 8 months of poking and prodding, DDOT has found a solution that will allow pedestrians to move in and out of the circle without stopping in the median. Expect changes to the signaling by the end of the month.

Second, my colleague Kishan Putta and I have been pushing DDOT to repave the 15th Street Cycle Track since November. After several exchanges between Jack Evans, Mary Cheh and DDOT, they finally got the message that the most used bike lanes in the city are in need of repair. Planners are finalizing the placement of new signage and markings and the lanes will be repaved by the end of the summer.


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