Gt 05 18 2016

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The GeorGeTown CurrenT

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Vol. XXV, No. 42

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

Council revises mayor’s shelter plan

POWER OF MUSIC

■ Homelessness: Ward 3

site shifted to Idaho Avenue

By CUNEYT DIL

Current Correspondent

The D.C. Council yesterday overhauled Mayor Muriel Bowser’s plan to replace the D.C. General homeless shelter, giving initial approval to a new plan to relocate a number of the proposed

family shelters to city-owned land and taking cost-cutting measures. Engineered by Council Chairman Phil Mendelson, the approved plan would build all of the seven new shelters on land owned by the District government, rather than leasing most of the facilities back from developers as Bowser proposed originally. The chairman and mayor fought over the details Tuesday, with Bowser administration officials arguing that the

changes will set back their 2018 target year to close D.C. General. Mendelson blasted the mayor’s handling of her plan’s rollout, saying her administration spread “misinformation” and didn’t respond to “repeated and continual requests” for more project details. The chairman said that his plan would “speed up the acquisition, design and construction process” of the shelters and that he See Homeless/Page 21

Tenley office building slated for housing By BRADY HOLT Current Staff Writer

Brian Kapur/The Current

The Fillmore Arts Center hosted its 11th annual art show and concert on Friday night. The event featured work by Fillmore students who attend five local schools, including Stoddert, Key and Hyde-Addison.

The transformation of Wisconsin Avenue NW in Tenleytown is now on track to include yet another redevelopment project, this one located just north of the new Tenley View building just constructed on the Babe’s Billiards site. Urban Investment Partners purchased the office building at 4620 Wisconsin earlier this year from American University, and has also incorporated the two smaller commercial buildings next door — 4624 and 4626 — into its plans. The firm is proposing a new 90-foot-tall apartment house that would have 155 units and 15,000 to 20,000 square feet of groundfloor retail. The new building would incorporate the structures of the 50-foot-tall building at 4620 and the lower one at 4624, though 4626 would be razed. Developers expect that 35 percent of the units will See Tenley/Page 5

Rendering courtesy of Urban Investment Partners

The project will replace commercial buildings at 4620-4626 Wisconsin Ave. NW and sit adjacent to the new Tenley View building, shown at left.

Revised designs shown for Superfresh parcel

New plans for WIS building still face neighbors’ criticism

By BRADY HOLT

■ Cleveland Park: School

Current Staff Writer

Developers of the Superfresh site in the Spring Valley shopping area presented revised proposals last Thursday, designed to respond to community concerns about the project’s scale. Valor Development hopes to convert the vacant grocery and its expansive parking lot at 48th and Yuma streets NW into a mixed-use complex dubbed The Lady Bird. The firm is proposing about 230 housing units — 200 rental apartments and 30 condos — of which 20 to 25 units would be designated as affordable. The project would also include a new supermarket and other retail space, public gathering areas and a 330-space parking garage. Developers presented their latest plans at the May 12 meeting of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3E (American

hopes to add science center By MARK LIEBERMAN Rendering courtesy of Valor Development

The latest proposal seeks a more residential look along 48th and Yuma streets, with the most mass closer to Massachusetts Avenue (shown here).

University Park, Friendship Heights, Tenleytown). Developers said the latest changes are an effort to respect the low-density residential homes that sit across 48th and Yuma, while remaining dense enough to make the project viable. The sections of the two new buildings closest to those two streets are four See Superfresh/Page 5

Current Staff Writer

Plans for a new academic building and underground parking garage on the Washington International School campus in Cleveland Park hit another snag Monday night, when neighborhood leaders and community members raised numerous concerns and frustrations about building height, landscaping and historic preservation.

Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3C (Cleveland Park, Massachusetts Avenue Heights, Woodley Park) voted unanimously to oppose the school’s latest Historic Preservation Review Board application for the project, saying the proposal “negatively affects key features of the landmark and is thus incompatible with the preservation and protection of the landmark.” Commissioners and community members said they’re willing to work with the school on mutually agreeable plans but concluded that these plans don’t meet that standard. See Tregaron/Page 18

NEWS

SPORTS

PASSAGES

INDEX

Spring Valley cleanup

Earning their stripes

‘Labyrinth Journeys’

Calendar/22 Classifieds/30 District Digest/4 Exhibits/23 In Your Neighborhood/20 Opinion/10

Some homeowners push for testing priority for homes due to go on the market / Page 3

Burke’s softball team completes an undefeated run through the PVAC for league title / Page 13

Filmmaker explores the benefits of local labyrinths in documentary premiering this month / Page 15

Police Report/6 Real Estate/17 School Dispatches/8 Service Directory/28 Sports/13 Week Ahead/2

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