Fb 12 23 2015

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Serving Foggy Bottom & the West End

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Vol. X, No. 3

The Foggy BoTTom CurrenT

Agency backs 16th Street bus lanes

CHEERS

■ Transit: Parking would be

restricted during rush hours By NATHANIEL KRESH Current Correspondent

Rush-hour bus lanes and offboard bus fare payment were among possible transit improvements along 16th Street NW that the D.C. Department of Transportation presented in a meeting last

week. The agency was sharing its preliminary preferences for addressing issues with reliability, overcrowding and overall performance along the busy corridor. This “draft preferred alternative” outlines which elements of previous proposals the Transportation Department is now favoring. Perhaps most notable would be reserving a lane exclusively for bus traffic during rush hours. The

proposal calls for creating dedicated southbound lanes from 7 to 10 a.m., and then northbound lanes from 4 to 7:30 p.m. The city estimates this change could save riders up to 2.7 minutes of travel time. Additionally, off-board payments would be available for all 16th Street bus stops, buses would receive traffic signal priority at 20 intersections, automated enforceSee Buses/Page 12

Panel to hear Lanier Heights zoning case By BRADY HOLT Current Staff Writer

Brian Kapur/The Current

The Keegan Theatre presented its interactive family show “How To Catch a Leprechaun” last weekend. The story follows the comical adventures of a wistful minstrel looking to find a leprechaun in order to get enough gold to buy a fiddle.

Stricter development restrictions went into place in Lanier Heights last week, with the Zoning Commission temporarily imposing the city’s “R-4” standards as it considers a community request to make the change permanent. Yet some commissioners expressed concerns about how the change would impact property values and the city’s housing supply. Lanier Heights is currently designated for moderate-density development, with building heights of up to 50 feet tall and no cap on the number of housing units per property. Because of these R-5-B rules, the neighborhood has been a popular target for “pop-up” projects that convert single-family row houses into apartment buildings, which some residents say threaten the character and aesthetics of their neighborhood. Accordingly, a group of residents and the Adams

Brian Kapur/Current file photo

A group of Lanier Heights residents worry current zoning rules encourage apartment conversions.

Morgan advisory neighborhood commission are asking that much of the neighborhood — row houses and See Zoning/Page 5

Carolers set to serenade Chevy Chase passersby

Preservation board requests adjustment to library design

By MARK LIEBERMAN

■ Cleveland Park: Proposed

Current Staff Writer

Marelise Voss was born with a significant hearing impairment. Over the years, it’s improved somewhat, but she continues to communicate partly by lipreading. She’s also a trained musician with a strong grasp of pitch and a deep knowledge of choral traditions. “I quite literally function in the whole world through rhythm,” she said. Voss will be demonstrating her skills as a choral group singer — and also as a neighborhood leader — on Thursday morning, when she gathers a group of carolers to spread holiday cheer up and down the Chevy Chase commercial strip. Carolers, ideally clad in festive attire and silly

NEWS

entrance faulted as uninviting By MARK LIEBERMAN Brian Kapur/The Current

Marelise Voss and her family are bringing a musical Christmas Eve tradition from Capitol Hill to their new neighborhood of Chevy Chase.

hats, will meet up at the Chevy Chase Starbucks, 5500 Connecticut Ave. NW, around 11 a.m. this Christmas Eve. Everyone is welcome, whether from Chevy Chase or elsewhere, knowledgeable about singing or a total amateur, young or old. See Carols/Page 22

EVENTS

Current Staff Writer

Cleveland Park residents and community leaders remain conflicted about the revised design plans for the new neighborhood library, following a unanimous vote from the D.C. Historic Preservation Review Board calling for further revisions. Critics say the designs for the Cleveland Park Library, located at

SHERWOOD

D.C. Council weighs measure authorizing Walter Reed step

Air and Space hosts exhibit on ‘art of the airport tower’

FreshPAC, you say, and return of Gray: Our politics in rhyme

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the convergence of the neighborhood’s residential and commercial districts, will disrupt the area’s historic character. Specific points of contention include a large, elevated porch entryway on Newark Street, and an overall feeling that the materials and modern appearance of the new building will clash with surrounding storefronts. The existing 1950s library building is slated to close to the public this winter. As proposed, the new $18 million building would be comprised mainly of wood, limestone and brick. While See Library/Page 5

INDEX Calendar/16 Classifieds/21 District Digest/2 Exhibits/17 Foggy Bottom News/9 In Your Neighborhood/14

Opinion/6 Police Report/4 Real Estate/15 School Dispatches/8 Service Directory/19 Week Ahead/2

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