October 11, 2013
14 Comments
by Shilpi Paul
Right
now, the section of North Capitol Street close to Bloomingdale, Truxton Circle
and NoMa is not too inviting. For many, a drive-by shooting last spring at the
corner of North Capitol and New York Avenue serves as the most vivid
illustration of the atmosphere on the corridor.
But
a few imminent openings have UrbanTurf wondering if North Capitol Street will
soon have very different street activity. The stretch of North Capitol Street
between R Street and P Street, including the intersection with Florida Avenue
(map), has several intriguing items in the pipeline.
First,
several restaurants may be opening up in the near future.
On
Thursday, Prince of Petworth confirmed that restaurant and bar Pub and the
People will be coming to North Capitol and R Streets NW. Pub and the People has
working social media pages, and a peek in the windows reveals a renovation that
is actively underway.
Around
the corner, at 1626 North Capitol Street NW, the Washington Firehouse
Restaurant has begun planning for their extensive, multi-story restaurant and
bar. They recently applied for a liquor license for the establishment, which,
according to current plans, will have a seating capacity of 347. A cigar bar,
Washington Smokehouse, will be located at the rear of the 3rd floor, and a
summer garden would have seating available for 85 patrons until midnight during
the season.
The
redevelopment of the Firehouse has been touch-and-go for the last few years,
and some are skeptical that this plan will come to fruition. However, the
Firehouse seems to be moving forward this time; their Facebook page is chock
full of photos from the renovation, complete with firehouse-style detailing,
and the owners appear to be waiting for the issuance of their liquor license
and services from DC Water and Sewage Authority before announcing an opening
date.
We
also noticed the first luxury establishment to come to the strip: Fiddleheads,
a hair salon with prices reaching $75 per cut, opened up a few months ago on
the northwest corner of the intersection of Florida Avenue and North Capitol
Street.
Additionally,
a few chefs and bakers who were initially attracted to the low rents available
on the stretch have or are considering opening up their storefronts. As we
wrote about last summer, Uncle Chips has been serving up cookies and sandwiches
for the past couple of years out of their space at 1514 North Capitol Street,
which initially served as an affordable location from which to bake cookies to
send all over the country. And Revive, currently a catering service working out
of a space at 8 Florida Avenue NW, is rumored to be starting a take-out service
soon.
As
housing prices rise in Bloomingdale and Eckington, and residential buildings
keep going up in NoMa, new and old residents are itching for new establishments
to take root in the area. As the long wait at Red Hen and the elbow-to-elbow
atmosphere at Big Bear and Boundary Stone indicate, the population to fill
these restaurants exists.
Besides
the retail scene, the city is also paying targeted attention to the area
through a Small Area Plan, which launched in April. The Office of Planning and
the District Department of Transportation have been meeting with residents to
figure out what’s going on in the neighborhoods surrounding North Capitol, and
to come up with potential solutions to walkability and livability roadblocks.
They will be making formal recommendations to the Council next year, and some
residents are holding out hope for something as ambitious as decking over a
section of North Capitol Street to add green space and to improve the
connection between the east and west sides of the street.
Finally,
a long-stalled residential project at the intersection of Florida Avenue NW, Q
Street NW and North Capitol Street seems like it may be moving forward. As the
Washington Business Journal reported last summer, developer Joe Mamo is seeking
approvals for a 85- to 95-unit residential building at 1600 North Capitol
Street, after a six year hiatus.
Readers,
what do you think? Will residents be flocking to North Capitol Street in a year
or two?
14
Comments
Karen
Sibert said at 11:26 am on Friday October 11, 2013:
Washington
Firehouse is at 1626 No. Capitol Street, not R.
Shilpi
Paul said at 11:28 am on Friday October 11, 2013:
Hi
Karen,
Thanks,
we made the correction.
Shilpi
I
believe North Capitol to be the next logical commercial/retail corridor to
expand. Very much looking forward to all
the new development.
Deborah
Crain Kemp said at 2:40 pm on Friday October 11, 2013:
Visit
OP staff during “Office Hours” for the Mid City East small area plan.
The
purpose of “Office Hours” is to take comments, discuss elements of the
recommendations and/or summarize our findings for the Mid City East study area
. Please see the schedule below;
10/15-
Northwest One Library
155 L Street NWWashington, DC 20001
Office Hours: 6:00-7:30pm
10/17-
Big Bear Café
1700 1st Street NWWashington, DC 20001
Office Hours: 6:00-7:30pm
Best,
Citywide Planner
DC Office of Planning
1100 4th St SW, Ste. E650
Washington, DC 20024
v 202.724.4314 f 202.442.7638
chelsea.liedstrand@dc.gov
Northeastern
said at 2:57 pm on Friday October 11, 2013:
I
do not believe North Capitol will come to bear real estate investors the fruit
that many other DC neighborhoods have.
There is one glaring reason for this - the massive amount of project
housing in and around the north capitol area.
Concentrated poverty, crime and low literacy rates have been a factor in
this area for many years and this does not look to change under the current DC
government. In high-return areas like H
st, Logan and Mount Pleasant, you had lower income renters and homeowners
partaking in the free market housing system.
When prices rose, these individuals either sold their houses and cashed
out or were unable to stay due to rising rents. A few restaurants opening,
maybe even a condo or two squeezing in isn’t going to fundamentally change the
character of NoCap and investors will be very hesitant to put their money in
this area.
mona
said at 3:11 pm on Friday October 11, 2013:
Northeastern—A
lot of people said the same thing about 14th st which had a lot of the same
problems and it wasn’t even as wide a street as North Capitol. Now look at it.
A lot of people said the same thing about the area where the Target and Tivoli
theater are. They had huge numbers of low income housing through out the
neighborhood. Now you can barely get into a decent house over there without
paying 700k if not more.
North
Capitol has a lot of things going for it, the location and view from the
Capitol and monument, wide accessible road, busy bus routes, and subway (NY and
RI Ave) stops. On the east and west side of the northern part of N. Capitol are
booming and affluent neighborhoods like Bloomingdale where they have had the
sale of homes > 900k. Also with the development of the McMillian Reservoir
it has huge potential even beyond H st and Logan.
jtedc
said at 4:25 pm on Friday October 11, 2013:
Joe
Mamo is a gas station owner. His revival of this project is simply to secure
the land use entitlements at his cost and sell the property for more than he
spent to secure the entitlements. If and when that property sells, then we can
get excited because the new entity will do real design/development, secure
permits, and build something. Until it sells, a building there is years away. I
wish Mamo would just sell it now.
Chris
in Eckington said at 4:44 pm on Friday October 11, 2013:
I
live in Eckington and there’s not a lot of “housing projects” in the area. Most of the Housing in Eckington, Bloomindale
and Truxton are rowhouses and flats.
Some of these used to be Section 8 housing but as the 20 year contracts have
expired, they have been converted to market rate rentals or sold.
Justin
S said at 5:04 pm on Friday October 11, 2013:
Until
someone figures out how to fix/destroy the local projects, it’s gonna be a
pretty dangerous area. Also places like SOME figuring out how to offer services
without ruining the neighborhood would help… but right now they’re giving out
almost 1,000 meals a day to people who don’t have access to bathrooms. The
result is literally poop on the sidewalks. It makes life sh!tty for us local
residents who have to deal with the cleanup.
Justin
S said at 5:08 pm on Friday October 11, 2013:
Chris,
the projects in question are around N Cap between K and NY ave. (and since the
shooting mentioned in the article was supposedly related to it, the
slightly-less-nearby projects around Q & 3rd St).
xmal
said at 5:40 pm on Friday October 11, 2013:
I
don’t think the projects and homeless are as big a deal as people make it—-the
14th street examples show that once there is enough foot traffic these concerns
fade into the background. And with the giant residential getting built on the
other side in NOMA, they will.
My
bigger worry is the width and speed of North Capitol and that the noise and
danger will keep people from strolling/dining/spending money there. That’s why
I look forward to any decking and traffic calming proposals from OP/DDOT.
rcn
said at 6:04 pm on Friday October 11, 2013:
Not
sure I agree with the emphasis on the “projects” One mentioned is across the
street from Big Bear Cafe- it seems to be doing ok. I am confident the
neighborhood will support these new establishments.
Adam
L said at 1:44 pm on Saturday October 12, 2013:
Biggest
problem with North Capitol Street is the overall highway-esque feel. The
underpasses below New York and Rhode Island avenues, especially the half-mile
stretch between Randolph and W Street, really deaden the area. For whatever
reason, similar set-ups on Connecticut at Dupont Circle and Massachusetts at
Scott Circle don’t have the same feeling, though they’re by no means perfect.
Perhaps it has to do with the green space and pedestrian-oriented nature of the
area that make the difference but something has to change around North Capitol
to make it a desirable street.
Dno
said at 7:20 pm on Saturday October 12, 2013:
Decking
over parts of North Cap would do wonders for its appeal and make it less of an
open traffic sewer. It certainly couldn’t hurt.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteGee Unknown2, could it just be that the immediate neighbors don't want 250 people drinking until 2am within 50 yards of their bedroom windows? Maybe dialing the noise down around midnight would be a reasonable accommodation, assuming you're not willing to come install new noise-proof windows and acoustic tiles in their homes on your own dime. :eye roll:
ReplyDeleteOn October 15, the ABC Board held a roll call hearing in the case of the Washington Firehouse and the Bloomingdale Civic Association, ANC5E, and two of three groups of neighbors were granted standing to protest - a third group was given conditional standing.
ReplyDeleteThis was a "non-adversarial" meeting, and all parties plan to schedule a meeting soon to prepare for mediation. Hopefully, this will be a speedy process as a voluntary agreement had been reached two years ago between many of those involved today. (The building owner is not the applicant - the operator was unknown to this neighbor.)
Most neighbors are very supportive of local businesses but would like to have their concerns about parking, noise, etc, for a restaurant that has a "load" of 398, considered from the beginning.
Good fences make good neighbors.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDelete