Featured
Kennedy Center’s Rutter to Step Down
Featured
Business Ins & Outs: Alara, Octobre Éditions, Arc’teryx, Ateliers Jacob
Arts & Society
Social Scene: The 2025 Peachtree Ball
Arts
‘Make Way for Berthe Weill’ in New York
Real Estate
Real Estate: Featured Property-3314 Volta Place NW
Business Ins & Outs: Osteria Mozza, Barnes & Noble, Club Pilates
October 15, 2024
•There will be at least two big openings for Georgetown next month. In: Osteria Mozza to Open Next Month Almost ready, Georgetown. The highly anticipated Osteria Mozza DC will open […]
Georgetown BID’s Spring Cleaning Projects, Canal Repairs
May 8, 2023
•As May flowers bloom, annual rites of spring often involve cleaning and decluttering the home, but for the Georgetown Business Improvement District (BID), sprucing up Georgetown’s commercial district is a […]
ANC Highlights, July 2022
July 11, 2022
•Briefings from Anthony Lanier of EastBanc, Mayor Bowser’s office, Ward 2 Council Member Brooke Pinto’s office, the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD), and Georgetown Main Street highlighted this month’s Advisory Neighborhood […]
Experiential, Experimental Concept 31/M Is Retail 2.0
March 22, 2021
•The former Georgetown home of Brooks Brothers has been given new life as a retail laboratory by EastBanc’s Anthony and Philippe Lanier.
Georgetown Retail: Bringing Vibrancy Back
March 10, 2021
•As we begin to imagine the post-pandemic world, creative entrepreneurial minds in Georgetown are exploring strategies for revitalizing commercial market spaces.
Plans Progress for Open-Air Market at Georgetown Gateway
December 14, 2020
•The triangle where M Street and Pennsylvania Avenue converge was the longtime site of a gas station, demolished in 2018 when developer Anthony Lanier bought the property.
Open-Air Holiday Market Coming to M St.
October 13, 2020
•The market is Georgetown developer Anthony Lanier’s latest idea for the vacant property he owns at the prominent juncture of M Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW.
Glass-Encased West End Library Opens
December 11, 2017
•The 21,000-square-foot library is the first in D.C. to be entirely planned, funded and constructed as a public-private partnership, according to Deputy Mayor Brian Kenner.