The underground sand vaults at McMillan, photographed in 2006. (Robert A. Reeder - The Washington Post)
Posted at 05:25 PM ET, 06/25/2012
By Mike DeBonis
On and off for
two decades, District residents and other curious parties have been free to
tour the historic and atmospheric premises of the McMillan Sand Filtration
Site, the fenced-off former water treatment facility at North Capitol Street
and Michigan Avenue NW famous for its ethereal masonry towers and underground
vaults.
In
the past two years, community leaders from neighboring Bloomingdale have held a
number of well-attended public tours of the site, in addition to giving access
to smaller groups including art and architecture students. They’re awesome; I
highly recommend taking one.
But
now, as the site moves toward redevelopment, the public’s access is on hiatus.
Earlier
this month, the D.C. government’s real estate director, Jeff Miller, e-mailed
John Salatti, one of the Bloomingdale activists who have led the recent tours.
Miller wrote that due to concerns about the “safety and stability of portions
of the site,” the only access given to the site will be for “survey,
stabilization work, or other development-related studies.” The locks were
changed, making Salatti’s key useless.
That
terse missive prompted Salatti to do two things. First, a set of tours
originally planned for this past weekend was put on hold. Second, he tried to
figure out what prompted the change in policy. Miller blamed the city’s
Department of General Services, which in turn put the blame back on Miller.
That incensed Salatti enough to issue a news release this weekend decrying the
change.
Miller
responded today in an e-mail to Salatti, writing that he supports the tours but
a “safety assessment” of the site is needed. Once completed, he wrote, “we will
then be able to determine how best to proceed with future tours on a case by
case basis.”
So,
long story short, it is unclear when, if ever, the public will be able to tour
McMillan before the redevelopment plans proceed to construction — something
that’s at least 18 months away.
Salatti
still wants answers on why the status quo ante had to change. “It’s not that
they’re about to bring the steam shovels in and tear the place apart,” he said.
“They’re really being spare about what’s driving this.”
Jose
Sousa, a spokesman for the city economic development office, suggested that
it’s unusual and unwise to give private citizens like Salatti the keys to a
25-acre piece of city property without much supervision. “We have to basically
regulate access to the site to maintain safety and security at that location,”
he said.
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And, unrelated to this Mike DeBonis post above -- Hugh Youngblood has supplied a link to a cross-section of a McMillan underground water filtration cell.
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And, unrelated to this Mike DeBonis post above -- Hugh Youngblood has supplied a link to a cross-section of a McMillan underground water filtration cell.
Of course the site is a dangerous one and there are many safety issues; finally, someone with some sense in DC government. Thank you Mr. Sousa.
ReplyDeleteSo Mr. Salatti who thinks he owns Bloomingdale has had a set of keys to McMillan??? Shut the front door!!! THE Mr. John Salatti, Esq., the former ANC Commissioner and failed Ward 5 candidate for DC Council; who took campaign donations from a 501c3, who doesn't even live in the SMD that McMillan is located in, has a set of keys? Mr. Salatti who wants the district to invest in a plan by a professor at CUA that calls for a petting zoo and bee farm that will be the most expensive farm land in the world! Are you actually telling me Mr. Debonis that the John Salatti, you know the one that had a constituent state that he “likes to hear the sound of his own voice” and was quoted in WCP…. actually has keys to McMillan?
HTJR must have given him the keys when he gave Mr. Salatti all those proclamations. I have had an epiphany now, that’s why Mr. Salatti thinks he owns Bloomingdale…he has the keys!!!! Mr. Debonis you must file a FOIA and find out who has he been taking on visits to this DC Govt. site? Any midnight visits to the Garden of Good and Evil?
pentagon40 posted on WashPost
ReplyDelete12:36 AM EDT
How pompous can one guy get...Just because he has had a key to McMillan doesn't mean anything other than the city USED to give him access to the property...Now for the reasons named they are protecting themselves from civil liability..Salatti understands this, he's just spoiled sand thinks he is entitled to access...He has no claim to the property or what the cityh decides to do with it...Grow up!!!!!
Someone's a little unhinged here, and I don't think it was anyone written up in the post...
ReplyDelete