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The Georgetown Current

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Vol. XXVII, No. 11

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

Domino’s plans Glover Park move

ROCKING OUT

■ Business: Development

to displace Georgetown store By GRACE BIRD Current Staff Writer

Domino’s is planning to open a Glover Park location, amid a chorus of opposition from residents and small-business owners concerned that a fast-food restaurant would attract rubbish, rodents and

late-night noise to the area. The pizza chain intends to lease part of the Calvert Center at 2330 Wisconsin Ave. NW to operate a dine-in and carry-out restaurant, with the other half of the space formerly used by the El Salvadoran consulate remaining vacant for now. The new Domino’s would replace a location at 3255 Prospect St. NW in Georgetown, which is slated for redevelopment into an apartment building.

However, the Glover Park site’s land-use designation requires fastfood or food-delivery establishments — of which Domino’s would be both — to secure special exception approval from the Board of Zoning Adjustment. Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3B (Glover Park, Cathedral Heights) is set to vote on the application Nov. 2, and a zoning hearing is slated for Nov. 8. See Domino’s/Page 7

Trader Joe’s outlines beer, wine request By GRACE BIRD Current Staff Writer

The Glover Park community offered widespread support for a new Trader Joe’s store there, after the grocery chain confirmed long-swirling rumors that it would occupy the ground level of a new development at 2101 Wisconsin Ave. NW. Last month, Trader Joe’s applied for a license to sell beer and wine, as well as alcohol tastings, at its new Glover Park store. Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3B (Glover Park, Cathedral Heights) discussed the plans at an Oct. 12 meeting, in advance of a planned vote on the application next month. The new Trader Joe’s will be part of The Glover House, a development that’s under construction now at the old Holiday Inn property. The building will be completed in 2019, though Perry Zettersten, regional vice president of Trader Joe’s, told residents that the grocery’s opening date isn’t yet available.

Brian Kapur/The Current

The Georgetown University Friday Music Series last week featured songwriter and musician Mdou Moctar of Agadez, Niger, and his trio performing a raw, electric set of original compositions sung in the Tuareg language.

Brian Kapur/The Current

The Trader Joe’s will be part of The Glover House, under construction at 2101 Wisconsin Ave. NW.

Once the store opens, Trader Joe’s plans to sell alcohol during its full operating hours, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. every day. Aside from beverage samples, on-site See Grocery/Page 7

Zoning panel reviews GWU office proposal

Fannie Mae developers win ANC support for landmark

By GRACE BIRD

■ Preservation: Project to

Current Staff Writer

George Washington University’s plan to build an 11-story office building at 2100 Pennsylvania Ave. NW is moving forward amid broad — though not universal — support from community members and District agencies. The project went before the Zoning Commission for a public hearing last Thursday, with endorsements from the D.C. Office of Planning, the D.C. Department of Transportation, Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2A (Foggy Bottom, West End) and the Foggy Bottom Association. However, the West End Citizens Association opposed the project, citing concerns about transportation and the building’s height, which would reach 130 feet plus a 20-foot-tall penthouse.

retain original 1958 building

By GRACE BIRD Current Staff Writer

Rendering courtesy of George Washington University

The new project is slated to replace an existing office building and university administrative space at 2100 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.

The planned 453,562-square-foot office building, designed with a striking curved glass exterior, is a joint venture between development firm Boston Properties and the university, intended as a revenue generator for the school. Boston Properties secured a ground lease on the university-owned property and is See GWU/Page 2

Key portions of 3900 Wisconsin Ave. NW are on track to become a D.C. landmark amid the parcel’s large-scale redevelopment, joining some 600 other historically significant individual properties across the District. Roadside Development, which purchased the property from Fannie Mae last year, is requesting the landmark status. On Monday,

Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3C (Cleveland Park, Massachusetts Avenue Heights, Woodley Park) backed the developer’s application to the Historic Preservation Review Board. Roadside intends to redevelop the former Fannie Mae headquarters site with six new buildings standing up to eight stories high and two public amenities: a garden and a town square. A Wegmans supermarket is among the planned retail tenants of the mixed-use development. The project calls for retaining the property’s main redbrick building and its expansive See Fannie Mae/Page 2

NEWS

SPORTS

CURRENTNEWSPAPERS.COM

INDEX

Bicycle lane

New skipper

Check out our new website, where you’ll find more of the communityoriented news, features and sports you read weekly in The Current.

Calendar/18 Classifieds/26 District Digest/4 In Your Neighborhood/16 Opinion/8

Department of Transportation proposes two-way bike traffic on stretch of 17th St. / Page 3

Wilson High School turns to alum, veteran teacher to develop its softball program / Page 11

Police Report/6 Real Estate/15 School Dispatches/10 Service Directory/25 Sports/11

Tips? Contact us at newsdesk@currentnewspapers.com


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