Store Owner Arrested for Selling Alcohol to Minors

June 12, 2013

The owner of Town Square Market on 4418 MacArthur Boulevard, Richard Dan Ki Kim, was arrested Feb. 18, briefly held by Metropolitan Police and charged with selling alcohol to a minor.??

According to 9 News Now, “A 17 year-old high school student was also arrested, cuffed and detained for buying the alcohol. Minutes before, police had observed a carload of three young men park outside the store and watch one of them go to the counter, buy the alcohol and leave. When he came outside, police asked him for identification, which he had, although it belonged to someone else. All three young men are students at a high school in Arlington.”

??Reporter Andrea McCarren, who had been investigating underage drinking for 9 News Now, including alleged sale of alcohol to minors in the store at the intersection of MacArthur Boulevard and Foxhall Road, briefly left on-air reporting after her children were harassed by classmates and McCarren herself derided on Facebook.??

Montgomery County Police have also been watching Town Square Market, according to 9 News Now. “In recent weeks, officers have issued 38 citations to minors who bought alcohol at Town Square and crossed into Montgomery County.” The store may face the loss of its liquor license.?

Matthew Donahue: 1936 – 2012 (Prospect Street)


Georgetown commercial real estate owner and executive Matthew Donahue died Jan. 19. The outgoing Donahue was known for his generous and sometimes quarrelsome nature. As easily as he might open his home on the 3600 block of Prospect Street to friends and family, he would hang a banner over his backyard fence that overlooks the Exxon gas station on Canal Road that read “Remember the Valdez.” From his retail space on Wisconsin Avenue, he once held production work of a Disney movie with a poster that read “Disney Family Values?” to protest its film about priests. Donahue was born and grew up in Georgetown close to his last residence and had been a student at Holy Trinity Elementary School and Georgetown University. He was the brother of Claire Farquhar, Mollie Dodd, both of the District, William Donahue of Bethesda and the late Michael Donahue. He is survived by 10 nieces and nephews, as well as 15 great-nieces and nephews. (Memorial contributions may be made to Holy Trinity Living Wages care of Holy Trinity Catholic Church.) To read an interview about Donahue’s life, visit www.CAGtown.org/OralHistory

ANC Approves Revised Tudor Place Plans


At Feb. 27 meeting of the Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2E, commissioners approved the revised designs submitted by Tudor Place for new buildings on the historic home’s grounds: a garage addition, re-positioned archives and collections building and a new gatehouse on 31st Street. Concerns about the scale of the property additions by 32nd Street neighbors were heard and taken to consideration, with commissioners asking if a smaller rear garage would be “practicable.” Tudor Place director Leslie Buhler defended the plans as part of the non-profit’s mission and future survival and “duty to care” for its property and collections. Other neighbors applauded “the imaginative designs” in the re-do, which will now go before the Old Georgetown Board. Commissioners express their aim was “trying to seek a balance” between nearby residents and the need for maintenance of Georgetown’s history.

In other ANC decisions, the parking of food trucks on residential streets was met with disapproval. Commissioners approved a zoning variance for Noodles & Company, which will open at 1815 Wisconsin Ave., N.W. They opposed designs for a condo at Grace Street and Cecil Place but did give a thumbs-up to renovations at 3401 Water Street for the upcoming Malmaison restaurant.

The ANC will meet next on April 2, 6:30 p.m., at Georgetown Visitation Prep.

Zoning Board Says Yes to Variance for Evermay


The Board of Zoning Adjustment approved S&R Foundation’s request to use Evermay, the historic, 3.75-acre estate at 28th and R Streets, for its headquarters. Evermay will maintain the non-profit’s offices for nine employees as well as serve as a residence for Sachiko Kuno and Ryuji Ueno, founders of S&R as well as leaders of Bethesda’s Sucampo biopharmaceutical company, one of several sponsors of the National Cherry Blossom Festival. S&R Foundation, which has promised neighbors of Evermay minimal events, strictly controlled within its grounds, is also set to complete its purchase of historic Halcyon House on Prospect Street soon.

Boathouse Study Continues at March 3 Workshop


The National Park Service held a March 3 workshop on the future of the non-motorized boathouse zone along the Potomac River with almost 90 concerned users of the river and shoreline, including rowers and bicyclists, at the School Without Walls near the George Washington University. The four-hour meeting had attendees break into group for brainstorming. After checking each team’s points of view, NPS’s Peter May and Tammy Stidham along with Margaret Stewart of the Louis Berger Group, consultant on the project, listed some basic agreements: increase access to the shore, plan at least two new boathouses, install a parking area and restore the Washington Canoe Club.

Crew teams from Georgetown University and GW – with some local high schools – are expected to get some kind of rowing facility. The space, west of the Georgetown Waterfront Park to Key Bridge, was touted as a good spot for a boathouse; others worried about bike traffic from the Capital Crescent Trail coming into the soon-to-be busier area and the scale of any new buildings. Of particular concern to some were the protection of the Potomac Boat Club and the possible encroachment on Jack’s Boathouse which might threaten its livelihood. Comments on the NPS website will be accepted on the feasibility study until noon March 30. The NPS will complete its study and set a meeting, possibly in late September.

Evans’ Meet-and-Greet at Lisa and Mike Baly’s House


Despite the downpour on Feb. 29, neighbors stopped by the 35th Street house of Lisa and Mike Baly and their children to meet Ward 2 councilmember Jack Evans, who reminded the group that he liked to get out and talk to his constituents, even if his re-election seemed assured. Evans answered questions, touted his fiscal responsibility on the budget and taxes and contrasted D.C.’s tax environment with Maryland and Virginia.

Sexual Assault on 36th, Armed Robbery on N Street


Early Sunday morning, Feb. 26, a female Georgetown University student reported being sexually assaulted on 36th Street, near Holy Trinity Church and School as well as one block from the university’s main gates. According to the Metropolitan Police Department, she said she believed she was pushed to the sidewalk by a white college-aged male. She was slightly injured and went to the hospital.

MPD also reported an armed robbery in the evening of Feb. 26: two male students were robbed at gunpoint of more than $2,000. One of two black suspects pulled out a gun, and the two students were mugged. The suspects were last seen fleeing east toward Wisconsin Avenue.

According to the Hoya, one of the university’s two student newspapers, “the Department of Public Safety reported 57 crimes on and around campus in February, a 67 percent increase from the same period last year and a 15 percent increase since January, when 48 cases were reported. Fifteen of February’s cases are severe enough that they are being handled by MPD, more than double the seven cases referred to MPD in January. A slight increase in theft contributed to the jump in overall crime incidents. DPS reported 25 cases of theft this month, compared to 20 in February 2011 and 22 in January 2012.”

U.S. Mint Releases 2012 Star-Spangled Banner Commemorative Coins


Francis Scott Key, a Georgetown resident in the early 1800s, would be so proud, as are we. The United States Mint is now accepting orders for the 2012 Star-Spangled Banner Commemorative Coins. The bureau is authorized by Public Law 111-232, the “Star-Spangled Banner Commemorative Coin Act,” to strike and issue up to 100,000 gold $5 coins and 500,000 silver $1 coins to commemorate the bicentennial of the writing of our national anthem.

Collectors can obtain both the gold and silver coins in “proof” and “uncirculated” condition. A “proof” silver dollar is $54.95, with an introductory price of $49.95 available through April 5. The “uncirculated” silver dollar is $49.95, or $44.95 through April 5. Costs of the “proof” and “uncirculated” gold coins, and the two-coin (gold and silver) set, are based on the mint’s pricing structure for numismatic commemorative products containing gold and will be priced weekly. Opening day prices for the gold coins will be $529.30 for “proof,” $519.30 for “uncirculated” and $579.30 for the two-coin proof set.

Visit www.USMint.gov for more information and to order.

GT Observer


Watch Your Step: IRS Goes After Easement Deduction Abuse
Those brass medallions seen on the front of some homes around the town add a nice little design feature, but they are also known to the buyers of that house, contractors and real estate agents as a way to get a nice big tax deduction. It is part of the tax code and perfectly legal. When giving a donation to a non-profit whose mission is to maintain the historical nature of the neighborhood, the homeowner is assisted by the non-profit with the tax accounting paperwork. It then holds an easement on that home’s facade which can no longer be significantly changed by the new or any owner. A win-win situation, right? Not so fast, says the Internal Revenue Service.

A conflict of different interests involve the fact that places, such as Georgetown, already have significant constraints on a home’s or building’s facade through the likes of the Old Georgetown Board and the contention by the IRS that deductions taken by homeowners are excessive – especially when the new owner says by agreeing not to change, the facade the value of the property may decrease. The IRS is especially annoyed by groups which it insists exist only to promote those tax deductions. Such a case was decided last week.

The Department of Justice, on behalf of the IRS, related the following on July 18: “A District of Columbia federal court has entered a permanent injunction order against Steven McClain and the Trust for Architectural Easements, Inc. (formerly known as the National Architectural Trust). The civil court order bars the defendants from promoting a scheme that, according to the government complaint, encouraged taxpayers in Boston, New York City, Baltimore and Washington, D.C., to claim unwarranted charitable tax deductions for donations of façade conservation easements on historic buildings. The defendants consented to the injunction without admitting the allegations against them. The injunction order does not preclude the Internal Revenue Service from assessing monetary penalties against the defendants for past actions and also does not preclude the defendants from challenging any such penalties.”

According to the government complaint, the defendants falsely told prospective customers that, in exchange for donating easements on their historic properties preventing façade alteration, the customers could claim charitable deductions equal to 10 to 15 percent of the property value, and that this range reflected official IRS policy. In fact, the complaint alleges, the IRS never had any such policy, and the actual value of façade easements, if any, must be determined on a case-by-case basis. The complaint also alleges that the defendants manipulated the easement appraisal process by steering donors to appraisers who the defendants knew would employ the 10-to-15-percent valuation method, leading to improper appraisals that yielded large tax deductions regardless of the easements’ actual effect on property value.

Weeks before that decision, a different tone was struck on June 21 by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia: it affirmed the Tax Court’s 2009 ruling in Simmons v. Commissioner and concurred with the Tax Court that the donor of two preservation easements in the Logan Circle historic district qualified for a deduction despite IRS objections.

Here is what the Foundation for the Preservation of Historic Georgetown, which supported the Logan Circle property owner in her case, advises:

“Potential donors should be aware that despite Internal Revenue Service court losses to taxpayers in the United States Tax Court in its challenges to conservation easement deductions (e.g., Simmons v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, T.C. Memo. 2009-208 (September 15, 2009)), the IRS continues to audit returns, disallow 100 percent of deductions and assert significant valuation penalties where taxpayers have donated conservation easements. This current IRS ‘zero deduction’ audit program has numerous cases pending in Washington, D.C., and other test cities, and the outcome of such cases will likely be decided between 2011 and 2012.

“On Feb. 4, the first federal court of appeals to consider the IRS ‘zero deduction’ audit program held an oral argument in the Simmons case. The two main issues before the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia were whether the easements granted were exclusively for conservation purposes and the donated easement caused a diminution of value in the properties. The foundation joined the National Trust for Historic Preservation and L’Enfant Trust in filing an amici curia brief in support of the taxpayer, Dorothy Simmons.

“While the foundation strongly believes in its preservation mission and in the viability of a properly prepared and documented conservation easement donation, potential donors should consult with their own tax advisors about the advisability and timing of taking conservation easement deductions.”

Scientist Couple Ryuji Ueno and Sachiko Kuno Are New Owners of Evermay
Ryuji Ueno and his wife, Sachiko Kuno, founders of Bethesda-based Sucampo Pharmaceuticals and S&R Technology Holdings, have purchased Evermay, for $22 million, 55 percent off its 2008 asking price of $49 million. The purchase price of the historic 3.5-acre estate on 28th Street, which borders Oak Hill Cemetery at R Street, is a record sale for D.C.

The names of the new Evermay owners were first reported in the Wall Street Journal on July 22 in its “Private Properties” section. The buyers’ representative Mark McFadden of Washington Fine Properties spoke with the Georgetowner and confirmed that, indeed, Ueno and Kuno are the new owners of the 12,000-square-foot house and grounds, adding that they will continue the preservation of the estate, founded by Samuel Davidson in 1792 and sold by the Belin family two weeks ago, through a limited-liability company, Evermay LLC. The listing agent was Jeanne Livingston of Long and Foster, a Christie’s International Real Estate affiliate, whose other big sale was Katharine Graham’s estate on R Street. Livingston said the new owners would be “good stewards” of Evermay, a property which was once rumored to have caught the interest of Oprah Winfrey.

While the Japanese-born drug researchers Ueno and Kuno – who own a house on P Street – are not well known to most Washingtonians, they are known in philanthropic circles, such as the Washington Opera and the Smithsonian. The couple founded the S&R Foundation in 2000, a non-profit whose mission is to encourage and stimulate scientific research and artistic endeavors among young individuals – and “to recognize talented young scientists and artists for their distinguished work in fields of science and fine arts, especially those who contribute to U.S.-Japanese understanding.” Their foundation awards the S&R Washington Award and the S&R Ueno Award.

Ueno and Kuno’s Sucampo Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company on Wisconsin Avenue in Bethesda, focuses on the development and commercialization of medicines based on prostones. Ueno, who is also a medical doctor, discovered “the therapeutic potential of prostones, which are bio-lipids that occur naturally in the human body.” The company markets the drug Amitiza for gastrointestinal disorders. One of the couple’s first successes was Rescula eye drops, the first bioactive lipid used to treat glaucoma.

Together, the accomplished couple holds several degrees from universities in Japan and the U.S. and have other interests as well. A Class A race car driver, Ueno is a member of the Leica Historical Society of America, Ferrari Club of America and Miles River Yacht Club. Involved in fundraising for the Washington Opera, Kuno was also cited by the Washington Business Journal two years ago in its list, “Women Who Mean Business.” She even studied in the neighborhood at Georgetown University’s International Business Management Certificate Program. Add to their resumes: “Keepers of Evermay.”

ANC Redistricting Underway
After redrawing the District’s wards, local politicians are now at work redrawing the boundaries of its advisory neighborhood commissions. For Ward 2, one of Georgetown’s ANC 2E commissioner Tom Birch heads up the work – with its individual ANCs getting their own subcommittee. For Georgetown’s and Burleith’s ANC 2E, commissioner Ron Lewis chairs the group along with Jennifer Altemus of the Citizen’s Association of

Georgetown and Lenore Rubino of the Burleith Citizen’s Association. As mentioned in the latest ANC meeting, anyone interested in working with them can contact the redistricting team, which is assisted by the Board of Elections and Ethics and the Office of Planning. ANC single-member districts serve approximately 2,000 citizens. The task force must report its progress on Aug. 1 and Sept. 1; its work must be completed before mid-October.

Requests for information on the process of redistricting should be directed to the Subcommittee on Redistricting. Call Drew Hubbard at the subcommittee – 202-724-8198. Direct requests for data in hard copy or electronic media can be made to the Office of Planning, which will provide at cost to the public 2010 Census maps and population data in hard copy or machine-readable form. The Office of Planning is located at 1100 4th Street SW, Suite E650, Washington, D.C. 20024 – 202-442-7600.

Under new redistricting, Ward 2 gains more of the Penn Quarter and Judiciary Square. It loses the Shaw neighborhood to Ward 6 but keeps the Washington Convention Center within its boundaries. Have any questions? Want to help with the ANC redistricting? Visit JackEvans.org.

Safeway Ready to Redevelop Retail, South of Store
Gone is the bagel shop, and pawn shop in the building on Wisconsin Avenue, just south of the Georgetown Safeway. The Safeway-owned property will be reconstructed with additional new space on the empty lot next to the grocery store’s driveway as well. So, get ready for construction activity between S Street and the store. It should begin in August or September and be completed in a year.

Retail spaces between 1,362 and 8,956 square feet will be available at the “neighborhood center” – 1815-1825 Wisconsin Ave., NW – broker Steve Combs of KLNB Retail told the Washington Business Journal. No leases have been signed, but plenty of retailers have expressed interest in the space, he said. It makes for a total 13,838-square-foot retail space, according to Safeway.

Georgetown Ministry at Grace Church Gets $100K Rehab
After more than a month of construction, the Georgetown Ministry Center, which has served the homeless of Washington since 1987, reopened July 14 – with expanded space, new computers (iMac desktops), spruced-up showers and a laundry room. GMC executive director Gunther Stern said he was pleased at the results of the $100,000 makeover and thankful for the donors to the non-profit housed along the alleyway of 1041 Wisconsin Ave., part of the Grace Church property. Stern is enthusiastic about the center’s “club house model.” Here, the homeless – who are also called clients – become members and must contribute with routine work for the center, such as helping the dishwasher or making coffee, and may attend staff meetings. Membership is open to all on an individual need basis, seven days a week.

Stern is also enthusiastic about how the digital world can help the homeless: “I use my MacBook as a computer and a phone. When I have internet available I just plug in my headphones and use Google Voice to receive phone calls. This comes from the focus of our work with homeless clients whom we are trying to train on the Google suite of tools. Perfect for a person without a home or phone. And it is free. Our database is simple and flexible and online. And the subscription is free, donated to us by Salesforce.com. Our payroll system is online. Everything is online.”

Georgetown Observer August 10, 2011


GBA Gets New Digs at Georgetown Park; Will Meet Aug. 17 at House of Sweden
The Georgetown Business Association is moving its office to 1080 Wisconsin Ave., N.W. near the main entrance of the condos in Georgetown Park. The GBA leaves its Thomas Jefferson Street space, which it shared with the offices of the Georgetown Business Improvement District.

Meanwhile, the GBA will host “Networking with a View . . . And a Salute to Furin’s” on Wednesday, Aug. 17, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the House of Sweden, 2900 K St., N.W., on the waterfront. The event is free for GBA members and $20 for non-members; hors d’oeuvres by Ridgewells Caterers; desserts by Chris Furin; beverages compliments of the Georgetown Business Improvement District.

The Georgetown BID has also recently made an office move to 1000 Potomac St., N.W., Suite 122 and can be reached at 202-298-9222.

1789 Loses Chef to ‘World’s Best Restaurant,’ Noma
Well, if your executive chef wants to go, it is nice to know he is leaving for the best – Noma in Copenhagen, considered the best restaurant in the world. Daniel Giusti, executive chef of 1789 Restaurant, visited by President Barack Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in June, says that his last day will be Aug. 28.

“It was clearly a shock,” Maureen Hirsch, director of marketing for Clyde’s Restaurant Group, which owns 1789, told the Washington Post. “But he just really wants to learn.”

Giusti began working at Clyde’s of Georgetown at the age of 15. He worked in New York and Las Vegas before returning to D.C., eventually to become 1789’s top chef for a little more than three years. He was nominated by the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington for a 2009 and 2010 RAMMY Award and received a regional nomination for “People’s Best New Chef’’ from Food & Wine Magazine. As for his new life in Denmark, Giusti does not really have a real job yet at Noma, where he briefly helped around the kitchen last month. He must get a work permit first but has rented an apartment in Copenhagen. Noma owner Rene Redzepi is apparently waiting as Giusti, who wishes to expand his culinary skills, prepares to arrive in September.

After Giusti departs, Clyde’s chef Brian Stickel will cook at 1789 where he has worked before, while the restaurant at 36th and Prospect Streets searches for a new executive chef.

First-Ever U.S. Internet Gambling Set by D.C. Lottery for Oct. 1
Ready for some iGaming from the D.C. Lottery on your iPhone, iPod or other online devices like your computer? For the first time ever, Internet gambling is coming to America, and its first bets will be in Washington, D.C., Oct. 1.

Starting with demonstration games such as Blackjack, Texas Hold ‘Em, Victory at Sea and bingo, D.C. Lottery will soon to go live with legal online betting. During the demos, players can test the games but cannot bet money or win prizes. The Lottery Modernization Act of 2012, part of the District’s 2011 budget, permits D.C. to make money by regulating and supporting Internet gambling through the D.C. Lottery.

The D.C. Lottery has delayed the start of demonstration for the online games, which had been set for July and August, until local meetings of a “comment period” are held in each of D.C. wards. There has been some opposition to online gambling. The Ward 2 meeting with Council member Jack Evans is at the Shaw Library, 1630 Seventh St., N.W., Aug. 22 from 6:30 to 8 p.m.

Here are some rules from the D.C.’s Lottery iGaming site: Players must physically be inside the District of Columbia and players must be 19 years of age or older. Technology will be employed to ensure that players are within the boundaries and that age requirements are met. No anonymous play will be permitted. Players do not need to be D.C. residents, but they must be within the District of Columbia boundaries in order to play. Gaming on the site will be shut down between 4 and 10 a.m.; no more than $250 deposited by a debit card in each account per week will be allowed.

For its first three years, the District government predicts more than $13 million in profits from Internet gambling. What could further delay or derail the debut of the U.S.’s first-ever online gaming? The Federal government, which has oversight for such things here. Otherwise, visit iGamingDC.com on Oct. 1.

Bikeshare Adds 32 New D.C. Spots; M & Penn. Makes the Cut
Capital Bikeshare, the increasingly popular bicycle-sharing partnership between D.C. and Arlington, added 32 new D.C. bike locations, most to be installed by autumn, according to the D.C. Department of Transportation. Georgetown’s one new spot will be at M Street and Pennsylvania Avenue., N.W., on the traffic island across from the Four Seasons Hotel and the Lukoil gas station. This addition brings the village’s total to five – along with 37th & O at Georgetown University’s entrance, 2001 Wisconsin Ave., N.W. (near Safeway), K Street at the waterfront and Wisconsin Avenue at the C&O Canal, which will have its bike stand expanded.

“We are grateful for the enormous support Capital Bikeshare has received throughout the past 10 months and are very pleased to release the final list of new station locations for the District of Columbia,” said Terry Bellamy, DDOT director. “With this expansion we will not only increase the overall reach of the system, but we will expand the program’s capacity by 22 percent in the downtown area, by 80 percent in our East of the River operations and by an average of 38 percent throughout each of the additional Wards.”

Arlington County is also planning an expansion with approximately 30 new Capital Bikeshare stations destined for the Rosslyn-Ballston corridor starting this fall and continuing through the spring.
The bike program is so well used that it is hard to find bikes near certain Metro stops after the morning rush, the Washington Times recently reported. Conversely, those returning bikes to a high-traffic spot might find all the stands occupied by bikes.

Capital Bikeshare is a bike-sharing program developed through a partnership between DDOT and Arlington County and operated by Alta Bicycle Share, Inc. Capital Bikeshare offers four different membership options: Annual ($75), Monthly ($25), 5-Day ($15) and 24-hour ($5) for access to a fleet of 1,100 bicycles located at over 110 stations across the District and Arlington. Visit CapitalBikeShare.com to sign up or for more information.

Mayor and Kids Cut Ribbon on Renewed Guy Mason Center
Mayor Vincent Gray, Ward 3 Councilmember Mary Cheh, the D.C. Department of Parks and Recreation Director Jesus Aguirre and other officials and community leaders officially opened the newly renovated Guy Mason Community Center at 3600 Calvert St., N.W., in Glover Park on Aug. 3. The renovation project added many new features to the facility. The community center is now fully compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act and includes an elevator, ADA accessible restrooms, and a new HVAC system. Along with familiar programs, residents will be able to enjoy a new pottery workshop in the center’s basement which includes a kiln room, glazing kitchen and spray booth. For more information, contact the Guy Mason Community Center at 202-727-7527. Additional information on the Guy Mason Renovation Project is available on the DPR website, DPR.dc.gov.

Charles Luck Stone Center Coming to 34th & Canal
Richmond-based specialty stone center, Charles Luck has announced that this fall it will be opening its first D.C. location at Cady’s Alley. Built in the late 1800s as a stable, the two-story building – overlooking the C&O Canal – has just more than 700 square feet of showroom space downstairs.

“We are incredibly happy that the lease for 1111 34th St. has been fully executed by both Luck and the property owner,” said Anderson McNeill, president of Charles Luck Stone Centers. “We have a prime location for the Charles Luck Brand’s first storefront [in D.C.]”

Selling stone architectural elements, such as countertops, interior and exterior walls, pathways, furniture and accessories, Charles Luck will place amid Georgetown’s growing design centers. “We’re also excited to join the ranks with other style-minded neighbors, including Ann Sacks, Baker Furniture, Boffi, Bulthaup, Illuminations, Janus et Cie, Design within Reach, Poggenpohl and Waterworks, to name a few,” Anderson said.

“The construction team is actively pursuing LEED certification to align Charles Luck’s sustainability commitment to that of great design and commerce,” he said. “Many of the signature brand attributes found in our existing studios will be retained, including the beacon, datum wall and striking visual appeal of our spaces. The new location will feature a 108-product display wall, along with an application patio and an office space upstairs.”
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