GTC -- 03/09/2011

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Serving Burleith, Foxhall, Georgetown, Georgetown Reservoir & Glover Park

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Vol. XX, No. 33

THE GEORGETOWN CURRENT Assessments up after two-year fall

FLAPJACK FUN

■ Real estate: Commercial

growth outpaces residential By CAROL BUCKLEY Current Staff Writer

Newly released property assessments for fiscal year 2012 show a turning point in the city’s fortunes after two consecutive years of declining values: Both commercial and residential property rose over

last year’s levels. Commercial property was the success story of this year’s assessments. Overall, the category is up 16.33 percent. The section of the city that includes the K Street corridor, Penn Quarter and the West End rose by nearly $7 billion, or 19.73 percent. Smaller commercial zones in the area that the city calls Garfield (which comprises the bulk of the Woodley Park neighborhood) and in Kalorama (which includes part of

Adams Morgan) also saw big gains, of 32.49 and 14.16 percent respectively. Georgetown also saw a jump of over $220 million, or 9.47 percent. That gain was expected, said Lance Marine, vice president of retail services for CB Richard Ellis. “There’s been a lot of repositioning this year in Georgetown,” he said. “The economic downturn opened up a lot of new opportunities, and See Assessments/Page 7

Mall likely to house Target, Bloomie’s By CAROL BUCKLEY Current Staff Writer

Bill Petros/The Current

The Washington National Cathedral’s annual Shrove Tuesday pancake races drew contestants from the clergy and staff, as well as students from St. Albans, National Cathedral and Beauvoir schools.

The to-be-redeveloped Shops at Georgetown Park is closing in on deals with two large retailers to anchor a revitalized mall, according to sources familiar with the negotiations. Big-box retailer Target and a Bloomingdale’s boutique will occupy large swaths of the long-troubled Georgetown shopping center, say the sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Representatives of Minneapolis-based Target and mall management declined to comment on the reports, and a Bloomingdale’s spokesperson did not reply to The Current by deadline. The inclusion of Target may spark a long-running debate over the nature of retail in historic Georgetown. A survey by the neighborhood’s business improvement district last year revealed that some see the presence of See Mall/Page 7

Bill Petros/The Current

Bloomingdale’s “SoHo” concept was slated for the mall before the property changed hands. Now it’s back on the table, along with a Target store.

AU set on dorms despite ANC vote

Appeals court hears debate over Giant redevelopment

By BRADY HOLT

■ Zoning: Neighborhood

Current Staff Writer

While neighbors have formally requested that American University not build student housing on the site of its Nebraska Avenue parking lot, university officials say they remain committed to building dorms on the East Campus. The Spring Valley/Wesley Heights advisory neighborhood commission voted last Wednesday to send the university a nine-page letter outlining dozens of requested changes to a draft version of the American University campus plan — with the housing stipulation among them. Neighbors are concerned about noise and the aesthetic effects of putting hundreds of students on a plot that backs to the Westover Place town houses. Many

PA S S A G E S ■ Takoma writer pens Marian Anderson opera. Page 13. ■ Producer nabs two spots in Environmental Film Festival. Page 13.

groups challenge procedures By ELIZABETH WIENER Current Staff Writer

Bill Petros/The Current

Neighbors say the university should find an administrative use for the Nebraska parking lot. residents have said they would have no complaint if the parking lot were redeveloped into administrative space, if the new buildings were shorter and if there were more green space. See Campus/Page 5

SENIOR LIVING ■ New wellness center opens on Georgia Avenue. Page 20. ■ Two ‘senior villages’ take different paths. Page 19.

The decade-long battle over the Giant supermarket site on Wisconsin Avenue is now playing out at the D.C. Court of Appeals, which heard arguments Tuesday that the city Zoning Commission erred when it approved an ambitious retail and residential development for two blocks in 2009. A three-judge panel handling the

SPORTS ■ St. John’s girls win second title this year. Page 11. ■ Roosevelt boys fall short against DeMatha. Page 11 .

case was clearly interested not only in arcane zoning questions but also in the impact — on both the city and immediate neighborhood — of a new 56,000-square-foot supermarket and other shops, set to go south of Newark Street, and a five-story residential and retail building planned for the low-scale block to the north. Controversy over the project that has divided the community for years may not be resolved until the court rules. “We all want a new supermarket,” said Dan Hecker, who lives across the street from the project See Giant/Page 10

INDEX Business/17 Calendar/28 Classifieds/28 District Digest/4 Exhibits/31 In Your Neighborhood/24 Opinion/8

Passages/13 Police Report/6 Real Estate/23 School Dispatches/14 Service Directory/33 Sports/11 Theater/31


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