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The Pennsylvania Avenue SE Small Area Plan How You Can Get Involved by Elizabeth O’Gorek
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hat do you want the Pennsylvania Avenue Corridor on the east side of the Anacostia to look like in the next five to ten years? What should be preserved, and what should change? What about development, or green space? If you have ideas or opinions on these topics, you’ll want to get involved with the Pennsylvania Avenue SE Small Area Plan. A Small Area Plan (SAP) is a neighborhood-specific companion to the Comprehensive Plan. It adds additional details, recommendations and strategies for particular corridors and sites in the city. The Pennsylvania Avenue SE SAP study area extends along Pennsylvania Avenue SE from the eastern landing of the Sousa Bridge to Southern Avenue and a quarter mile to the north and south of the corridor. The Office of Planning (OP) will take the lead in working with the community to develop a vision for a gateway corridor that is vibrant and meets the needs of adjacent neighborhoods. While an SAP was already completed for Pennsylvania Avenue SE in 2008, this round builds on the ideas and turns toward implementation. The plan is also meant to further the city’s goals around racial and socioeconomic equity. The plan will develop recommendations that can be implemented within a 10-year horizon to meet the following project goals: • Enhance a safe, accessible, vibrant public realm; • Encourage economic development and retail opportunities; • Improve transportation access and connectivity; and • Explore housing opportunities to improve access for upward mobility. • Opportunities in Pennsylvania East The SAP is not the first sign that the District is focusing on development in the area. The Pennsylvania Avenue East Corridor was designated a Main Street in July 2020. Main Streets is a comprehensive program that promotes the revitalization of business corridors. Pennsylvania Avenue East Main Street (PAEMS) Director Latisha Atkins said the organization will work to re16
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vitalize the Pennsylvania Avenue SE corridor by retaining and recruiting businesses, improving commercial properties and streetscapes, and attracting consumers. The SAP is very important to those goals, she said. “This plan will be vital in helping to address longstanding issues and concerns, such as better retail options while placing special attention on things like walkability, transportation and housing concerns,” Atkins said. The plan will also factor in the needs of existing businesses. It will also create better access to the corridor as well as surrounding amenities and resources, Atkins said, and marketing efforts to attract development. However, public participation in the SAP process is key to ensuring the voices of the residents and stakeholders are being heard, Atkins noted. “Simply put, decisions are made by those who show up,” she said. “The community must actively participate in the process if it hopes to see change that will benefit the community and its residents.” ANC 7B02 Commissioner Kelvin Brown agreed, saying the SAP is an opportunity for neighbors to advocate for changes they want to see over the next five to 10 years. Brown said this is particularly important to communities in Ward 7 and 8, who often do not receive the same resources as the rest of the city. “The plan puts into motion what is to be done as far as amenities, neighborhood improvements to infrastructure and other social services and benefits that are needed by our community,” Brown said. Brown, whose SMD borders the corridor, said he knows what he’d like to see included: participatory economic development, including grants and loans that can help build generational wealth; an equitable transportation access plan; and state-of-the-art public facilities, such as schools, libraries and recreation centers.
The Pennsylvania Avenue East Corridor is the subject of the latest Small Area Plan (SAP) from the DC Office of Planning (OP).
“It’s an opportunity [for neighbors] to ensure we have a collective part in the wave of economic prosperity [and the] updates to amenities, transportation and infrastructure that’s coming and is going to impact our lives east of the river,” Brown said.
Southwest Experience Residents of other neighborhoods have already seen the impact of that development and the useful role an SAP can play. After 18 months of work, DC Council approved the Southwest SAP in 2015. In the wake of significant development nearby, including the Wharf and Nationals Park, neighbors realized that they could be “steamrolled” by developers without some sort of guidance, said Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner (ANC) Andy Litsky (6D04). That revelation was triggered by a 2013 effort to develop a high school on the recreation space now known as Ryan Zimmerman Field. Now a brand-new recreational facility, at the time it was a less well-maintained green space that was nonetheless widely used by people throughout the city. “There was the recognition that if we didn’t step up as a community, we would wind up losing small chunks —and then larger chunks— to unbridled development,” Litsky said. Litsky said an SAP was key to defining the way that