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Friday, January 24, 2014

From Vision McMillan Partners: weekly McMillan brief -- 01-23-2014

See this message from Vision McMillan Partners:

Subject: Weekly McMillan Brief: Jan 23
From: info@envisionmcmillan.com
Date: Thu, 23 Jan 2014 14:14:39 +0000


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Dear Scott,

There will be many opportunities in the coming weeks to learn about the McMillan redevelopment and share your thoughts with the our team.  See below for a listing of community and ANC meetings where we will be on the agenda to provide updates. Visit us on Facebook for full event details and to let us know you’ll be in the crowd.

Also make sure to check out the first in an NPR series on the history of McMillan Sand Filtration Plant in which Emily Eig, local historian and prominent preservation consultant who wrote the historic report for the site, takes listeners on a tour.

Upcoming VMP Community Presentations

January 27
Bloomingdale Civic Association @ 7pm

February 3
Bates Area Civic Association @ 7pm
Stronghold Civic Association @ 7pm

February 6
ANC 1B Meeting @ 7PM

February 8
Pleasant Plains Civic Association @ 12pm

February 18
ANC 5E Meeting @ 7pm

February 24
Edgewood Civic Association @ 7pm


We look forward to continuing our work with you to create exciting opportunities for local residents while celebrating the historic legacy and character of McMillan. As always, feel free to be in touch at info@EnvisionMcMillan.com with any thoughts or questions.

Sincerely,

Tania Jackson
Vision McMillan Partners
www.envisionmcmillan.com
McMillan Sand Filtration site today
Future Community Center Pool
If you haven’t seen it, now is a good time to check out our Vision Video.
Copyright © 2014 Vision McMillan Partners, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you have expressed interest in getting updates related to Vision McMillan Partner's plan to transform the McMillan property into a model 21st century community.

Our mailing address is:
Vision McMillan Partners
1508 U St, NW
WashingtonDC 20009


4 comments:

  1. The restoration of McMillan Park will increase real estate values in the surrounding park side area. But, the VMP plan will make your houses the next place for the real estate investors to devalue, grab up, demolish and replace your block with more multi-unit development. It is already happening around the hideous, out of scale Catholic U.and 901 Monroe development in Brookland. It is called "warehousing".
    A proper balanced real historic park side community will add desirable cool, shady, breezy park side housing in a balanced process.
    The city will make revenue from healthy McMillan Park activities fees, and amazing "indoor agriculture" in the 20 acres underground. See amazing indoor farming video:
    http://youtu.be/ILzWmw53Wwo
    This agriculture can produce 5 to 10 times the vegetables and fruit of surface farming, use a tenth water, provide fresh fish in aquaponics, use no pesticides or truck transport from across the continent, fresher riper food. We can have all the things this neighborhood needs, including a full size market, with out 10,000 more cars a day, and a joke for a park. That is a mundane lawn,,,we need world class designs in park restoration,, VMP is just not up to the Olmsted level, and we lose the whole legacy, a great city deserves. Adaptive re-use of the existing land, under ground caverns and compatible concessions and commercial, can all be done with out VMP, or this mega-urbanization. Your VMP psychophants are the obsessed ones. The public owns this place, and the community can create all it needs, without handing billions to talentless developers.
    We can make this happen, we can conserve this place, just as Sen. McMillan planned for us, are you so brainwashed that EYA/VMP is the only way to "move forward in DC".
    Sorry I just believe the DC govt. has made such a miserable disaster here, the flooding, the waste of tens of millions, and we need parks, we can have the entire 113 acre reservoir site opened up for us, to jog, walk, like a real city. And extend this into AFRH, and Howard U. just like a real city where people matter. Richmond, Philly, NY, maybe your home town needs EYA/VMP?
    The DC govt. let this neighborhood flood for decades.
    Would the flooding of human sewage in the basements in Kalorama have waited 30 years for mitigation? Why in the world would you support this miserable embarrassment, called the DC govt.. go ahead keep supporting them, the ones not in prison yet. You are so scared to do anything for yourself, you let felons, embezzlers, and inbred incumbent hacks, elected by massive fraud to guide the future of DC. With this misguided government support, we are in real trouble here!
    We need parks, we have McMillan Historic District Park, it's only you and other VMP supporters who are making this hard. JOIN US,,,why in the world would you let the DC govt. continue destroying the environment, the trees, parks, and taking our taxes to spend on their privileged constituents in upper NW.
    Friends, a less SICK govt. would have re-planted McMillan in 1986, not wasted $250,000 a year on pollution for mowing this lawn,and a lush grove of trees would now be 100 feet, shading our picnics, and creating cool breezes as you enjoy a stroll to see the Autumn sunset. You can make this possible or you can help the hacks destroy it with the wrecking ball, and then suffer endless construction(good for the Chesapeake Bay!). Do you like heavy equipment exhaust fumes, with your support of VMP , you'll be breathing heavy equipment exhaust fumes for 15 years, a bargain! You get what you ask for, just get it straight in your yuppie mind and you'll figure it out, just don't wait ,,let''s do this now.

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  2. Daniel are you for real.. Everything you stated is total crap! Stick to the stainglass leave the community planing to the experts!

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  3. So Mr. Wolcoff believes the city should have planted a "lush grove of trees" that "would now be a hundred feet tall" in the two feet of soil on top of the massive unreinforced concrete cells.

    It is that sort of practical thinking and vision that the community needs in planning for McMillan.

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