This building was renovated by Jubilee Housing and they explained their projects here. Their Web site says:

“Jubilee Housing is a faith based non-profit organization founded in 1973 to provide affordable housing and supportive services to economically disadvantaged residents of the Adams Morgan neighborhood of Washington, DC.”

We also had a lot of discussion about the project here.

This was what the building looked like in Dec. ’09:

Do you like the way it turned out?

You can see a few more shots of the renovated building after the jump. (more…)


Danny Harris is a DC-based photographer, DJ, and collector of stories. He launched People’s District, a blog that tells a people’s history of DC by sharing the stories and images of its residents. You can follow People’s District on Twitter @PeoplesDistrict, and can read his previous columns here.

“They say the Algonquian were the first people put on this world. Before China and Rome, there was us. The French wiped out most of the Algonquians in Canada, but many of them survived. My mother was one of them. She met my father, an American who worked for the U.S. Senate, and they had me. I never really knew him, though, and was raised by my mother on an Indian reservation in New Brunswick, Canada.

“On the reservation, we lived on welfare. We didn’t have any job opportunities, and there wasn’t much to do. You know, people talk about cabin-fever. Well, living on a reservation is like having permanent cabin-fever. I just needed to leave, and that’s why I came to Washington two winters ago. I can’t really tell you why I chose Washington. I guess that I am just nosy and looking for answers. I thought Washington might have them.

“We all spend our lives searching for our heritage and our history. Now, a lot of it has been modernized and put in books and on computers. Sometimes I wish that I could bring yesterday back so we could learn the real history of our ancestors. I wish that I could go back to the days of hunting buffalo and living in a teepee. Those were days of purity and beauty and I am searching for ways to live that way again. While I search for that, I have had to learn how to take care of myself on the streets.

“When I first moved to Washington, I lived at the shelter on 14th and R St. I didn’t like it there because it was too claustrophobic. I decided that it was better to live out on the street, so I moved to other side of 14th Street and lived on the corner. The dope addicts there used to punch me while I was sleeping and steal my stuff, so I moved to the corner of 14th and Corcoran. It’s been quieter here and they don’t bother me no more.

Continues after the jump. (more…)



Photo by PoPville flickr user pablo.raw


Photo by PoPville flickr user Mr. T in DC


Bug (right) and Dinah.

“If I had to spend Saturday in bed, with some stomach virus I brought back from China, at least the cats are being extra friggin’ cute.”

After the jump a very cute and scared lost dog. (more…)



Photo by PoPville flickr user hellomarkers!

“Dear PoP,

We went to the Safeway in Petworth the other night to pick up a frozen pizza or something for dinner. A young man came up to us in the store and said if we were paying cash, he’d like to trade our cash for his food stamps. Now, I’m sure this happens all the time, but it really made me angry. Those food stamps are for a reason, and if you are
bartering them for cash to buy whatever you can’t buy with them, then you don’t really need them. Is there a way to report such abuses? Anything that I could do next time I’m approached like this?”

What do you guys think should be done in this situation?


Danny Harris is a DC-based photographer, DJ, and collector of stories. In September, he launched People’s District, a blog that tells a people’s history of DC by sharing the stories and images of its residents. Every day, People’s District presents a different Washingtonian sharing his or her insights on everything from Go Go music to homelessness to fashion to politics. You can read his previous columns here.

“My brother and I were adopted when we were both really little. I am Bolivian and he is Spanish, and we were raised by a Cuban mother and Irish-Russian father in Annapolis. From an early age, I was pretty shy about how different I was. Annapolis was not a very open place, and kids were quick to point out differences. Because of that, I didn’t really learn Spanish, and I also felt uncomfortable with who I really was.

“I grew up in a pretty conservative environment, and being gay wasn’t even an option. At moments, I would think that there was something off about me, but I would grow out of it. I just tried not to think about it. Then, my brother came out of the closet during college. The thing is that he was born and raised as a girl, so I had a sister most of my life. After he came out, he told us that he should have been born as a man. Now, he changed his name, is in the process of taking testosterone, and lives as a gay man.

“Even for me, as a lesbian, it was hard to come to terms with the changes he has gone through. I love and support him, but it is tough to one day go from having a sister to the next day, having a brother. I have all of these memories of a person who I now call another name and refer to with another gender. It took time to embrace the change and it helped me to understand how challenging hearing this kind of news can be for parents.

Continues after the jump. (more…)



Photo by PoPville flickr user ekelly80

“Dear PoP,

1. How do you calculate how much home insurance you need?
2. What clauses should you make sure are included in your home insurance?
3. Which insurance company is the best in terms of responsiveness and handling claims?
4. What should be ideal amount for the deductible?
5. Which agent or company do you get your insurance through?”

Obviously the answers will not be the same for everyone but how did you decide on these questions for your own home?


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