Arts & Society
Martin’s Hosts CAG’s April Take Over the Bar Event
Living
In Old Town: A Garden Tour and 2 Reborn Hotels
Arts
April Onstage, Georgetown
Featured
Weekend Roundup: April 10-13
Social Scene
Local News Booster Petula Dvorak Hailed by News Women
Mapping Georgetown: The Passions of Preservation
November 22, 2021
•In this season of thankfulness, we’re so grateful to receive so many passionate recollections of our local history. Clearly, we’re not the only ones with a passion for preservation. Today, […]
Mapping Georgetown’s Rose Park Visit Sparks New Recollections: Tell Your Story
July 26, 2021
•A unique table dedicated to the art of preservation appeared at the Georgetown Farmers Market at Rose Park last Wednesday — not of the pickling or canning variety, however, but […]
Citizens, ANC Sound Alarm on Sidewalk Repairs
May 17, 2021
•May 15, 2021 [Via Electronic Mail] The Honorable Muriel Bowser Mayor, District of Columbia Re: Georgetown’s Sidewalk Repairs Dear Mayor Bowser, DDOT’s destruction of Georgetown’s sidewalks […]
ANC Monday: Towpath, Hyde-Addison, 5G, Washington Gas
February 27, 2019
•At the March 4 meeting, the Georgetown Business Improvement District will give a presentation on its pilot project for the C&O Canal Towpath.
Canal Renewal: Lock 3 Gates Installed
October 11, 2018
•In the coming year, the NPS will refill the Georgetown section of the C&O Canal with water. In 2020, a replica canal boat, for rides and educational purposes, is expected.
Profs & Pints: The Life of a DC Beer King
May 14, 2018
•Profs and Pints presents: “The Life of a DC Beer King,” a biographical portrait of DC brewing magnate Christian Heurich, with Mark Benbow, associate professor of American History at Marymount […]
ANC Monday: MedStar, S&R, ABC, the Wing
April 2, 2018
•On the April agenda: an update from MedStar Georgetown University Hospital Regarding Georgetown University’s Central Utility Plant Project.
2 Men — and Dog — Confront DDOT Contractor in Georgetown
August 24, 2017
•A large portion of sidewalk on 30th and Dumbarton Streets, traditionally Georgetown brick, was nearly covered with a cement-based surface.