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Downtown (Washington, D.C.)

Downtown is the central business district of Washington, D.C., located in Northwest D.C. It is the third largest central business district in the United States. The "Traditional Downtown" has been defined as an area roughly between Union Station in the east and 16th Street NW in the west, and between the National Mall on the south and Massachusetts Avenue on the north, including Penn Quarter. However, nowadays, Downtown D.C. usually refers to a larger area, as the DC Office of Planning states:

Downtown Historic District
Pink area was designated in 2008 as "existing Downtown areas of Washington, D.C.; blue indicated then-emerging areas of Center City Washington.
LocationRoughly, 7th St. from Pennsylvania Avenue to Mt. Vernon Sq., and F St. between 11th and 7th Sts., NW, Washington, D.C.
Area50 acres (20 ha)
ArchitectMultiple
Architectural styleLate 19th And 20th Century Revivals, Late Victorian
NRHP reference No.84003901[1]
Added to NRHPSeptember 22, 2001

…most residents, workers, and visitors think of Downtown in a broader sense — including areas as far north as Dupont Circle, as far west as Foggy Bottom, and as far east as Capitol Hill. Only about half of the central city workforce is located within the city’s traditional Downtown. [2]

ِِِA small portion of this area is known as the Downtown Historic District and was listed on the NRHP in 2001.[1]

Geography and subdistricts edit

 
Aerial view of Foggy Bottom, which the Washington D.C. Planning Department includes in its broader definition of Downtown Washington, D.C.

The Washington, D.C. government does not officially define neighborhoods or neighborhood boundaries,[3] so there are varying definitions of which areas constitute Downtown D.C. or the central business district of D.C.

In a 2008 map, the city's planning department showed as existing Downtown areas a broad swathe of everything between Georgetown on the west and Union Station on the east, with a northern boundary of and Massachusetts Avenue, and a southern boundary, roughly, of E Street, thus including the West End, Foggy Bottom, Golden Triangle, Traditional Downtown, Chinatown, Mount Vernon Square, and Downtown East.[4]

This diamond-shaped area stretches from Union Station in the east, south to the National Mall, northwest past the White House to Washington Circle in Foggy Bottom and northeast to DuPont Circle. It includes not only the Traditional Downtown and the Golden Triangle (which is the southern part of DuPont Circle neighborhood), but also West End and Foggy Bottom.[2]

Traditional Downtown edit

 
Ford's Theatre on 10th St. NW, part of the traditional Downtown

The Downtown BID boundaries roughly conform with the more traditional definitions of Downtown and those of the Downtown Urban Renewal Action Area[5] and are:[6]

The Downtown BID thus encompasses Penn Quarter, Chinatown, CityCenterDC, and the F Street shopping district.

Golden Triangle edit

 
Farragut Square Park, in the Golden Triangle

The Golden Triangle is an area defined by the Golden Triangle Business Improvement District (BID). It is part of a larger Downtown area according to The Washington Post and DC Department of Planning. The Golden Triangle boundaries are, very roughly:[7]

Character, attractions, and services edit

 
The Shakespeare Theatre Company has a theatre located in Penn Quarter.

By the 1990s and continuing into the 2010s, the core of the downtown district was almost exclusively commercial, and its primary commercial use was as office buildings.[8] The area also featured a number of attractions, including museums (such as the International Spy Museum, National Aquarium, National Archives, National Building Museum, National Museum of Women in the Arts, National Portrait Gallery, Newseum, and Smithsonian American Art Museum) and theaters (such as Ford's Theatre, National Theatre, Shakespeare Theatre, Warner Theatre, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre).[9] The Penn Quarter and Chinatown areas in particular are home to many bars and restaurants,[10] and the observation deck in the tower of the Old Post Office Pavilion is known for its views of the city.[11] 7th Street NW between H and F Streets NW—a short commercial strip known as "Gallery Place"—has become a major hub of bars, restaurants, theaters, and upscale retail shops.[12]

However, even as late as 2010, most of the core area tended to be empty of pedestrian foot traffic at night, except for streets immediately around theaters and restaurants.[8][13] Downtown D.C. has been adding residents, however, and pedestrian traffic at night is increasing. In 1990, the area had about 4,000 residents, but this had increased to 8,449 by 2010.[14] Such increases appear small, but are more significant than they seem because the city's height restrictions limit population density.[15] The completion of the $950 million CityCenterDC project in late 2013 is estimated to add another 1,000 or more residents.[14] One exception to the low nighttime foot traffic is Gallery Place, where large crowds gather day and night, especially after sporting events at the Capital One Arena.[12] Crime and street brawls increased in the area and its adjacent Gallery Place Metro station between 2008 and 2010, primarily due to the large groups of teenagers from across the metropolitan area gathering there.[12]

Notable downtown restaurants include Fogo de Chão, Loeb's NY Deli, Old Ebbitt Grill, and Wok 'n' Roll (located in the Mary E. Surratt Boarding House). Chinatown and Gallery Place are noted for being geographically small but also having a very large number of restaurants.[10]

Capital One Arena (originally MCI Center, later Verizon Center), a major basketball, hockey, and events venue, opened on Mount Vernon Square in 1997.[16] It proved to be a major attraction, drawing more than 20 million visitors in its first decade of operation.[16]

Union Station anchors downtown on the east and besides serving as a hub for Amtrak, VRE and MARC suburban rail, Metro rail and buses, was also an important shopping and dining destination from 1988[17] until COVID-19 in 2020 foreced most tenants to close. As of 2022, authorities are considering plans for renovation and new construction over the railyards behind the station connecting it to the burgeoning NoMa neighborhood.[18]

Cityscape edit

 
The Willard Hotel was designed in the Beaux-Arts style.

The majority of downtown Washington is composed of office buildings of varying architectural styles. The oldest tend to be of the Federal school, as are the White House, the Treasury Building, Blair House, and the rowhouses that line Lafayette Square. Others run the gamut from Neoclassical (such as the buildings at Federal Triangle)[19] to Second Empire-style (the Eisenhower Executive Office Building)[20] to postmodern (One Farragut Square South[21] and Franklin Tower at 1401 I Street NW).[22] The historic Willard Hotel was built in the Beaux-Arts style.[23]

Height restriction edit

 
This 2007 aerial view of Downtown D.C. shows the low height of buildings due to the city's height restrictions.
 
The intersection of K and 17th streets in Downtown Washington.

Unlike other large cities in the U.S., Washington's downtown has a low skyline. With the advent of the skyscraper and the construction of the Cairo Hotel, residents were concerned that the city's European feel might be dwarfed by high-rise buildings. Congress therefore passed the Heights of Buildings Act in 1899, limiting any new building in Washington to a height of 110 feet (34 m). The act was amended in 1910 to allow buildings 20 feet (6.1 m) higher than the width of the adjacent street.[24]

As of 2006, the tallest building in downtown Washington—excluding the Washington Monument, U.S. Capitol, Washington National Cathedral, and the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, all of which are outside of the downtown district—is the Old Post Office Pavilion, whose 315-foot (96 m) tall clock tower looms far above other nearby structures.[25] The tallest commercial building is One Franklin Square, at 210 feet (64 m).[26]

Parks and public squares edit

 
The Hamilton Hotel located off Franklin Square in Downtown Washington.

A number of public urban parks exist in the downtown area. Among the more prominent are: Farragut Square, Franklin Square, Judiciary Square, Lafayette Square (the portion of President's Park north of the White House), McPherson Square, Mount Vernon Square, the National World War I Memorial (formerly Pershing Park), Scott Circle, Thomas Circle, and Washington Circle.

The largest paved square in the city, Freedom Plaza, is located on Pennsylvania Avenue NW between 13th and 14th Streets NW. The city pedestrianized a two-block-long stretch of 16th Street NW closest to the White House as Black Lives Matter Plaza and pedestrianized it in 2020,[27][28] during the series of George Floyd protests taking place in the city.[29]

Governance edit

Two business improvement districts cover the downtown D.C. area. The Downtown DC Business Improvement District (Downtown DC BID) is bounded by 16th Street NW, Massachusetts Avenue NW, and Constitution Avenue NW, and is funded by a voluntary tax provided by 825 businesses in the area.[30] The Golden Triangle Business Improvement District (Golden Triangle BID) is bounded by 16th Street NW, Massachusetts Avenue NW, 21st Street NW, and Pennsylvania Avenue NW.[30] Both BIDs work to enhance the diversity of business in their respective jurisdictions as well as the quality of life by providing directions for tourists, improving street and sidewalk cleanliness, and advising police about potential or existing problems.

Various federal (Federal Protective Service, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Secret Service, United States Mint Police, United States Park Police, etc.), city (Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia, District of Columbia Housing Authority Office of Public Safety), and regional (Metro Transit Police Department) law enforcement agencies have concurrent, overlapping jurisdiction in downtown D.C.[31] Both BIDs in the area also provide semi-uniformed unsworn police forces, which help to maintain order and provide street intelligence by communicating via cell phone with the Metropolitan Police Department and Metro Transit Police.[32] D.C. Housing Authority Police do not have jurisdiction outside public housing, but do patrol Gallery Place to pick up and provide intelligence on the activities of youth congregating there who live in city-provided housing units.[12]

Education edit

Higher education edit

The George Washington University, Foggy Bottom Campus.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ a b The Comprehensive Plan for the National Capital: Chapter 16, Central Washington Area Element (PDF). District of Columbia Department of Planning. p. 16-1.
  3. ^ "Neighborhood Clusters". opendata.dc.gov. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
  4. ^ Map p.2-3 in "Center City Action Agenda 2008", District of Columbia Department of Planning
  5. ^ "Map of Downtown Urban Renewal Action Area, National Capital Planning Commission site, accessed July 2, 2020". Retrieved March 11, 2023.
  6. ^ "DowntownDC | BID-Map". Retrieved March 11, 2023.
  7. ^ "Golden Triangle | The Heart of DC's Business District". Golden Triangle. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
  8. ^ a b Bednar, p. 243.
  9. ^ Jabado, p. 57-60.
  10. ^ a b Jabado, p. 57.
  11. ^ Jabado, p. 60.
  12. ^ a b c d Davenport, Christian; du Lac, J. Freedom; Rosenwald, Michael S.; Schulte, Brigid; Shapira, Ian; Shin, Annys; and Sieff, Kevin. "Fights, Teens Among Challenges as D.C.'s Gallery Place Entertainment Area Matures." The Washington Post. August 13, 2010.
  13. ^ Jabado, p. 59.
  14. ^ a b O'Connell, Jonathan. "Mixed-Use Project Is Coda for Downtown D.C. Revival." The Washington Post. April 5, 2011.
  15. ^ Pristin, Terry. "Washington Makes Downtown a Destination Again." New York Times. September 1, 2004.
  16. ^ a b McGregor, p. 285.
  17. ^ "How Union Station was Saved in the 1980s". November 12, 2014.
  18. ^ "Washington Union Station's 2nd Century Plan | Amtrak Northeast Corridor".
  19. ^ "Mellon Indorses Building Program of Classic Style." The Washington Post. December 11, 1927.
  20. ^ Smith, et al., p. 85.
  21. ^ "12-Story Building for District." The Washington Post. November 12, 1960.
  22. ^ Hilzenrath, David S. "Building In Defiance of the Bust." The Washington Post. December 31, 1990; "Franklin Tower." Washington Times. January 17, 2000.
  23. ^ Denby, Grand Hotels: Reality and Illusion, 2004, p. 221–222.
  24. ^ Grunwald, Michael. "D.C.'s Fear of Heights." The Washington Post. July 2, 2006.
  25. ^ Minetor and Minetor, p. 38.
  26. ^ "One Franklin Square." Emporis.com. 2011. Accessed 2011-09-02.
  27. ^ Asmelash, Leah (June 6, 2020). "Washington's New Black Lives Matter Street Mural Is Captured on Satellite". CNN. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
  28. ^ Johnson, Martin (June 6, 2020). "Bowser Addresses Record Crowd at Black Lives Matter Plaza". The Hill. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
  29. ^ Johnson, Ted (June 6, 2020). "DC Mayor Chides Donald Trump at Largest Protest Since Death of George Floyd: 'We Pushed the Army Away from Our City'". Deadline. from the original on June 7, 2020. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
  30. ^ a b Ford, p. 69.
  31. ^ Dempsey and Forst, p. 45.
  32. ^ Manning, p. 113.

Bibliography edit

  • Bednar, Michael J. L' Enfant's Legacy: Public Open Spaces in Washington, D.C. Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006.
  • Dempsey, John S. and Forst, Linda S. An Introduction to Policing. Clifton Park, N.Y.: Delmar Cengage Learning, 2012.
  • Dickey, Jeff. The Rough Guide to Washington, D.C. New York: Penguin, 2011.
  • Ford, Elise Hartment. Frommer's Washington, D.C., from $80 a Day. Hoboken, N.J.: Frommer's, 2004.
  • Gutheim, Frederick A. and Lee, Antointte J. Worthy of the Nation: Washington, D.C., From L'Enfant to the National Capital Planning Commission. Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006.
  • Jabado, Salwa. Fodor's 2010 Washington, D.C. New York: Fodor's, 2010.
  • Manning, Peter K. "The United States of America." In Plural Policing: A Comparative Perspective. Trevor Jones and Tim Newburn, eds. New York: Psychology Press, 2006.
  • McGregor, James H. Washington From the Ground Up, Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2007.
  • Minetor, Randi and Minetor, Nic. Washington, D.C.: A Guided Tour Through History. Guilford, Conn.: GPP Travel, 2009.
  • Smith, Bruce R.; Pistolesi, Andrea; and Kelly, Michael T. Art and History of Washington D.C. Florence, Italy: Bonechi, 2007.

External links edit

  Media related to Downtown Washington, D.C. at Wikimedia Commons

  • Downtown DC Business Improvement District
  • Golden Triangle Business Improvement District

38°54′9″N 77°1′58.3″W / 38.90250°N 77.032861°W / 38.90250; -77.032861

downtown, washington, downtown, central, business, district, washington, located, northwest, third, largest, central, business, district, united, states, traditional, downtown, been, defined, area, roughly, between, union, station, east, 16th, street, west, be. Downtown is the central business district of Washington D C located in Northwest D C It is the third largest central business district in the United States The Traditional Downtown has been defined as an area roughly between Union Station in the east and 16th Street NW in the west and between the National Mall on the south and Massachusetts Avenue on the north including Penn Quarter However nowadays Downtown D C usually refers to a larger area as the DC Office of Planning states Downtown Historic DistrictU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S Historic districtPink area was designated in 2008 as existing Downtown areas of Washington D C blue indicated then emerging areas of Center City Washington LocationRoughly 7th St from Pennsylvania Avenue to Mt Vernon Sq and F St between 11th and 7th Sts NW Washington D C Area50 acres 20 ha ArchitectMultipleArchitectural styleLate 19th And 20th Century Revivals Late VictorianNRHP reference No 84003901 1 Added to NRHPSeptember 22 2001 most residents workers and visitors think of Downtown in a broader sense including areas as far north as Dupont Circle as far west as Foggy Bottom and as far east as Capitol Hill Only about half of the central city workforce is located within the city s traditional Downtown 2 A small portion of this area is known as the Downtown Historic District and was listed on the NRHP in 2001 1 Contents 1 Geography and subdistricts 1 1 Traditional Downtown 1 2 Golden Triangle 2 Character attractions and services 2 1 Cityscape 2 1 1 Height restriction 2 2 Parks and public squares 3 Governance 4 Education 4 1 Higher education 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksGeography and subdistricts edit nbsp Aerial view of Foggy Bottom which the Washington D C Planning Department includes in its broader definition of Downtown Washington D C The Washington D C government does not officially define neighborhoods or neighborhood boundaries 3 so there are varying definitions of which areas constitute Downtown D C or the central business district of D C In a 2008 map the city s planning department showed as existing Downtown areas a broad swathe of everything between Georgetown on the west and Union Station on the east with a northern boundary of and Massachusetts Avenue and a southern boundary roughly of E Street thus including the West End Foggy Bottom Golden Triangle Traditional Downtown Chinatown Mount Vernon Square and Downtown East 4 This diamond shaped area stretches from Union Station in the east south to the National Mall northwest past the White House to Washington Circle in Foggy Bottom and northeast to DuPont Circle It includes not only the Traditional Downtown and the Golden Triangle which is the southern part of DuPont Circle neighborhood but also West End and Foggy Bottom 2 Traditional Downtown edit nbsp Ford s Theatre on 10th St NW part of the traditional DowntownThe Downtown BID boundaries roughly conform with the more traditional definitions of Downtown and those of the Downtown Urban Renewal Action Area 5 and are 6 North northeast Massachusetts Avenue N W and the Mount Vernon Triangle Mount Vernon Square Shaw and Logan Circle neighborhoods East North Capitol Street N W and Louisiana Avenue N W roughly Union Station and the Capitol Hill neighborhood South east of 6th Street N W by Constitution Avenue N W and the National Mall and west of 6th Street N W by Pennsylvania Avenue N W and Federal Triangle West 15th and 16th streets N W roughly the White House grounds to the west of the White House is the Golden Triangle BID The Downtown BID thus encompasses Penn Quarter Chinatown CityCenterDC and the F Street shopping district Golden Triangle edit Main article Golden Triangle Washington D C nbsp Farragut Square Park in the Golden TriangleThe Golden Triangle is an area defined by the Golden Triangle Business Improvement District BID It is part of a larger Downtown area according to The Washington Post and DC Department of Planning The Golden Triangle boundaries are very roughly 7 Northwest New Hampshire Ave N W and the DuPont Circle neighborhood Northeast Massachusetts Ave N W and the DuPont Circle neighborhood East 16th Street N W and the DowntownDC BID Southwest Pennsylvania Avenue N W and the Foggy Bottom neighborhood West 21st Street N W and the Foggy Bottom and the West End neighborhoods Character attractions and services edit nbsp The Shakespeare Theatre Company has a theatre located in Penn Quarter By the 1990s and continuing into the 2010s the core of the downtown district was almost exclusively commercial and its primary commercial use was as office buildings 8 The area also featured a number of attractions including museums such as the International Spy Museum National Aquarium National Archives National Building Museum National Museum of Women in the Arts National Portrait Gallery Newseum and Smithsonian American Art Museum and theaters such as Ford s Theatre National Theatre Shakespeare Theatre Warner Theatre and Woolly Mammoth Theatre 9 The Penn Quarter and Chinatown areas in particular are home to many bars and restaurants 10 and the observation deck in the tower of the Old Post Office Pavilion is known for its views of the city 11 7th Street NW between H and F Streets NW a short commercial strip known as Gallery Place has become a major hub of bars restaurants theaters and upscale retail shops 12 However even as late as 2010 most of the core area tended to be empty of pedestrian foot traffic at night except for streets immediately around theaters and restaurants 8 13 Downtown D C has been adding residents however and pedestrian traffic at night is increasing In 1990 the area had about 4 000 residents but this had increased to 8 449 by 2010 14 Such increases appear small but are more significant than they seem because the city s height restrictions limit population density 15 The completion of the 950 million CityCenterDC project in late 2013 is estimated to add another 1 000 or more residents 14 One exception to the low nighttime foot traffic is Gallery Place where large crowds gather day and night especially after sporting events at the Capital One Arena 12 Crime and street brawls increased in the area and its adjacent Gallery Place Metro station between 2008 and 2010 primarily due to the large groups of teenagers from across the metropolitan area gathering there 12 Notable downtown restaurants include Fogo de Chao Loeb s NY Deli Old Ebbitt Grill and Wok n Roll located in the Mary E Surratt Boarding House Chinatown and Gallery Place are noted for being geographically small but also having a very large number of restaurants 10 Capital One Arena originally MCI Center later Verizon Center a major basketball hockey and events venue opened on Mount Vernon Square in 1997 16 It proved to be a major attraction drawing more than 20 million visitors in its first decade of operation 16 Union Station anchors downtown on the east and besides serving as a hub for Amtrak VRE and MARC suburban rail Metro rail and buses was also an important shopping and dining destination from 1988 17 until COVID 19 in 2020 foreced most tenants to close As of 2022 authorities are considering plans for renovation and new construction over the railyards behind the station connecting it to the burgeoning NoMa neighborhood 18 Cityscape edit nbsp The Willard Hotel was designed in the Beaux Arts style The majority of downtown Washington is composed of office buildings of varying architectural styles The oldest tend to be of the Federal school as are the White House the Treasury Building Blair House and the rowhouses that line Lafayette Square Others run the gamut from Neoclassical such as the buildings at Federal Triangle 19 to Second Empire style the Eisenhower Executive Office Building 20 to postmodern One Farragut Square South 21 and Franklin Tower at 1401 I Street NW 22 The historic Willard Hotel was built in the Beaux Arts style 23 Height restriction edit nbsp This 2007 aerial view of Downtown D C shows the low height of buildings due to the city s height restrictions nbsp The intersection of K and 17th streets in Downtown Washington Unlike other large cities in the U S Washington s downtown has a low skyline With the advent of the skyscraper and the construction of the Cairo Hotel residents were concerned that the city s European feel might be dwarfed by high rise buildings Congress therefore passed the Heights of Buildings Act in 1899 limiting any new building in Washington to a height of 110 feet 34 m The act was amended in 1910 to allow buildings 20 feet 6 1 m higher than the width of the adjacent street 24 As of 2006 update the tallest building in downtown Washington excluding the Washington Monument U S Capitol Washington National Cathedral and the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception all of which are outside of the downtown district is the Old Post Office Pavilion whose 315 foot 96 m tall clock tower looms far above other nearby structures 25 The tallest commercial building is One Franklin Square at 210 feet 64 m 26 Parks and public squares edit nbsp The Hamilton Hotel located off Franklin Square in Downtown Washington A number of public urban parks exist in the downtown area Among the more prominent are Farragut Square Franklin Square Judiciary Square Lafayette Square the portion of President s Park north of the White House McPherson Square Mount Vernon Square the National World War I Memorial formerly Pershing Park Scott Circle Thomas Circle and Washington Circle The largest paved square in the city Freedom Plaza is located on Pennsylvania Avenue NW between 13th and 14th Streets NW The city pedestrianized a two block long stretch of 16th Street NW closest to the White House as Black Lives Matter Plaza and pedestrianized it in 2020 27 28 during the series of George Floyd protests taking place in the city 29 Governance editTwo business improvement districts cover the downtown D C area The Downtown DC Business Improvement District Downtown DC BID is bounded by 16th Street NW Massachusetts Avenue NW and Constitution Avenue NW and is funded by a voluntary tax provided by 825 businesses in the area 30 The Golden Triangle Business Improvement District Golden Triangle BID is bounded by 16th Street NW Massachusetts Avenue NW 21st Street NW and Pennsylvania Avenue NW 30 Both BIDs work to enhance the diversity of business in their respective jurisdictions as well as the quality of life by providing directions for tourists improving street and sidewalk cleanliness and advising police about potential or existing problems Various federal Federal Protective Service Federal Bureau of Investigation Secret Service United States Mint Police United States Park Police etc city Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia District of Columbia Housing Authority Office of Public Safety and regional Metro Transit Police Department law enforcement agencies have concurrent overlapping jurisdiction in downtown D C 31 Both BIDs in the area also provide semi uniformed unsworn police forces which help to maintain order and provide street intelligence by communicating via cell phone with the Metropolitan Police Department and Metro Transit Police 32 D C Housing Authority Police do not have jurisdiction outside public housing but do patrol Gallery Place to pick up and provide intelligence on the activities of youth congregating there who live in city provided housing units 12 Education editHigher education edit The George Washington University Foggy Bottom Campus See also editArchitecture of Washington D C References edit a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 a b The Comprehensive Plan for the National Capital Chapter 16 Central Washington Area Element PDF District of Columbia Department of Planning p 16 1 Neighborhood Clusters opendata dc gov Retrieved March 11 2023 Map p 2 3 in Center City Action Agenda 2008 District of Columbia Department of Planning Map of Downtown Urban Renewal Action Area National Capital Planning Commission site accessed July 2 2020 Retrieved March 11 2023 DowntownDC BID Map Retrieved March 11 2023 Golden Triangle The Heart of DC s Business District Golden Triangle Retrieved March 11 2023 a b Bednar p 243 Jabado p 57 60 a b Jabado p 57 Jabado p 60 a b c d Davenport Christian du Lac J Freedom Rosenwald Michael S Schulte Brigid Shapira Ian Shin Annys and Sieff Kevin Fights Teens Among Challenges as D C s Gallery Place Entertainment Area Matures The Washington Post August 13 2010 Jabado p 59 a b O Connell Jonathan Mixed Use Project Is Coda for Downtown D C Revival The Washington Post April 5 2011 Pristin Terry Washington Makes Downtown a Destination Again New York Times September 1 2004 a b McGregor p 285 How Union Station was Saved in the 1980s November 12 2014 Washington Union Station s 2nd Century Plan Amtrak Northeast Corridor Mellon Indorses Building Program of Classic Style The Washington Post December 11 1927 Smith et al p 85 12 Story Building for District The Washington Post November 12 1960 Hilzenrath David S Building In Defiance of the Bust The Washington Post December 31 1990 Franklin Tower Washington Times January 17 2000 Denby Grand Hotels Reality and Illusion 2004 p 221 222 Grunwald Michael D C s Fear of Heights The Washington Post July 2 2006 Minetor and Minetor p 38 One Franklin Square Emporis com 2011 Accessed 2011 09 02 Asmelash Leah June 6 2020 Washington s New Black Lives Matter Street Mural Is Captured on Satellite CNN Retrieved June 7 2020 Johnson Martin June 6 2020 Bowser Addresses Record Crowd at Black Lives Matter Plaza The Hill Retrieved June 7 2020 Johnson Ted June 6 2020 DC Mayor Chides Donald Trump at Largest Protest Since Death of George Floyd We Pushed the Army Away from Our City Deadline Archived from the original on June 7 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 a b Ford p 69 Dempsey and Forst p 45 Manning p 113 Bibliography editBednar Michael J L Enfant s Legacy Public Open Spaces in Washington D C Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press 2006 Dempsey John S and Forst Linda S An Introduction to Policing Clifton Park N Y Delmar Cengage Learning 2012 Dickey Jeff The Rough Guide to Washington D C New York Penguin 2011 Ford Elise Hartment Frommer s Washington D C from 80 a Day Hoboken N J Frommer s 2004 Gutheim Frederick A and Lee Antointte J Worthy of the Nation Washington D C From L Enfant to the National Capital Planning Commission Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press 2006 Jabado Salwa Fodor s 2010 Washington D C New York Fodor s 2010 Manning Peter K The United States of America In Plural Policing A Comparative Perspective Trevor Jones and Tim Newburn eds New York Psychology Press 2006 McGregor James H Washington From the Ground Up Cambridge Mass Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2007 Minetor Randi and Minetor Nic Washington D C A Guided Tour Through History Guilford Conn GPP Travel 2009 Smith Bruce R Pistolesi Andrea and Kelly Michael T Art and History of Washington D C Florence Italy Bonechi 2007 External links edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Media related to Downtown Washington D C at Wikimedia Commons Downtown DC Business Improvement District Golden Triangle Business Improvement District 38 54 9 N 77 1 58 3 W 38 90250 N 77 032861 W 38 90250 77 032861 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Downtown Washington D C amp oldid 1193119237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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