Bank of Georgetown Celebrates Curt Winsor, New Building

April 11, 2016

Bank of Georgetown, founded in 2005, celebrated the life of its co-founder, Curtin Winsor III, who died in December 2012, as well as a new corporate headquarters at 1115 30th St., NW, March 5, at its 11th branch — the Winsor Branch. Friends and colleagues gathered to observe the ribbon cutting and wish the bank continued success, as its co-founder Mike Fitzgerald, chairman, president, and CEO, toasted his business partner, Curt Winsor, remembering the early days of the bank. Bank of Georgetown has 112 employees and assets in excess of $925 million — and offices in Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia. [gallery ids="101660,145037,145041,145045,145051,145060,145054,145058" nav="thumbs"]

ANC Meeting Moved to March 4: Duke Ellington School, Exorcist Steps Condos Are Top Items


Because of the snow storm, the Georgetown-Burleith Advisory Neighborhood Commission (2E) has moved its monthly meeting to Tuesday; it usually meets on Monday. Top attention-getters for the meeting are the proposed designs for the renovation of Duke Ellington School for the Arts on 35th Street and the proposed condominiums at 36th Street and M Street (Canal Road), next to the Exorcist Steps and the Car Barn. The condos by EastBanc will occupy the property where the Key Bridge Exxon now stands; the gas station will be closed.

Here is Tuesday evening’s agenda, as provided by ANC 2E:

We will be meeting this month at the Georgetown Visitation School, 35th and Volta Place, Little Odeon Room, first building on left by gatehouse, 3rd floor. Councilmember Jack Evans has kindly accepted our invitation to join us at this meeting and speak with the community — and will join us during a break in the regular meeting agenda.

Approval of the Agenda

•Approval of March 3, 2014, ANC 2E Public Meeting Agenda

Administrative

•Approval of February 3, 2014, Meeting Minutes

•Public Safety and Police Report

•Financial Report

•Transportation Report

•DPW Report

Community Comment

New Business

•DC Water Green Infrastructure Project Plan – Georgetown Waterfront implications

•Marine Corps Marathon – October 2014

•American Diabetes Association’s Tour de Cure – September 27, 2014

•West Side Club Volta Park Picnics – Memorial Day, July 4th and Labor Day

DDOT Public Space

•3206 N Street, NW, Neyla Mediterranean Grill, DDOT Tracking No. 10126007, Application to occupy public space for the purpose of Valet Staging Area

ABC License renewal:

•1063 31st Street, NW, Il Canale, ABRA License No. ABRA-83707, Requesting to expand to 1065 31st Street, NW/1st and 2nd floors/ Sidewalk Café increase to 30 seats/Summer Garden to 150 seats/Increase Seating Occupancy Load to 442 (Petition March 17, Hearing March 31, 2014)

The following establishment is not anticipated to be reviewed by ANC 2E for license renewal. Please contact ANC 2E by Friday, February 28, if you have an issue.

•1025 31st Street, NW, Zenobia Lounge, (Petition March 17, Hearing March 31, 2014)

Zoning

2803 Dumbarton Street, NW, BZA Application No. 18739, Application for special exception for a two story rear addition to a one-family row dwelling not meeting the court requirements (Hearing April 15, 2014)

CFA/HPRB
SMD 01, 1680 35th Street, NW, Duke Ellington School of the Arts remodeling – DGS design revisions to earlier proposal

Old Georgetown Board

MAJOR PROJECTS: SMD 05, 3601-3607 M Street, NW, OG 14-113 (HPA 14-220) Residential, New
building, Concept

PRIVATE PROJECTS: 1. SMD 06, 1337 27th Street, NW, OG 14-108 (HPA 14-213) Residence,
Alterations to brick wall, Concept

2. SMD 06, 1339 27th Street, NW, OG 14-107 (HPA 14-212) Residence, Alterations to brick wall, Concept

3. SMD 06, 1341 27th Street, NW, OG 14-105 (HPA 14-210) Residence, Alterations to brick wall, Concept

4. SMD 06, 1343 27th Street, NW, OG 14-106 (HPA 14-211) Residence, Alterations to brick wall, Concept

5. SMD 02, 1675 35th Street, NW, OG 14-114 (HPA 14-223) Residence, Pergola, Permit

6. SMD 03, 3238 P Street, NW, OG 14-103 (HPA 14-206) Residence, Three- story rear addition, Concept

7. SMD 03, 1357 Wisconsin Avenue, NW, OG 14-14-084 (HPA 14-158) Commercial, Three-story rear addition, Revised Concept

8. SMD 04, 3700 O Street, NW, OG 14-110 (HPA 14-216) Georgetown University – Shaw Field, Accessory building, press box, alterations, Concept

9. SMD 05, 3034 M Street, NW, OG 14-097 (HPA 14-193) Commercial, Kate Spade, Awnings and sign for “Kate Spade – New York,” Permit

10. SMD 05, 3314 M Street, NW, OG 14-111 (HPA 14-217) Commercial, Alterations to Cady’s Alley: green screens, lighting, bumps, Permit

No Review At This Time by ANC 2E:

The following additional projects, which are on the upcoming March 6, 2014, agenda of the Old Georgetown Board, have not been added to the ANC meeting agenda for OGB-related design review, and we do not propose to adopt a resolution on them at this time. If there are concerns about any of these projects, please contact the ANC office by Friday, Feb. 28.

1. SMD 02, 1660 34th Street, NW, OG 14-062 (HPA 14-104) Residence, Rear additions, reconstruction of front façade, Concept – revised design

2. SMD 02, 3306 R Street, NW, OG 14-077 (HPA 14-123) Residence, Addition at roof level, Concept

3. SMD 02, 3210 Scott Place, NW, OG 14-109 (HPA 14-215) Residence, Retaining wall at rear, Permit

4. SMD 03, 1511 33rd Street, NW, OG 14-036 (HPA 14-058) Residence, Replacement windows at rear – existing, Permit

5. SMD 03, 3240 P Street, NW, OG 14-053 (HPA 14-077) Commercial, 2-story rear addition plus basement, Concept – revised design

6. SMD 03, 3107 Dumbarton Street, NW, OG 14-058 (HPA 14-100) Residence, 2-story rear addition to replace 2-story porch, Concept

7. SMD 03, 3261 Prospect Street, NW, OG 14-101 (HPA 14-204) Commercial, Alterations, blade sign for “Lady Camellia,” Permit

8.
SMD 03, 1351 Wisconsin Avenue, NW, OG 14-007 (HPA 14-011) Commercial, Demolition, roof top addition, alterations to garage and new loggia, Concept – revised design

9. SMD 05, 1115 30th Street, NW, OG 14-112 (HPA 14-219) Commercial, Replacement windows, Permit

10. SMD 05, 3334 Cady’s Alley, NW, OG 14-098 (HPA 14-194) Commercial, Lighting and signs for “Donghia,” Permit

11. SMD 05, 1241 Potomac Street, NW, OG 14-95 (HPA 14-179) Residence, Rear fence replacement, Permit

12. SMD 06, 2725 N Street, NW, OG 14-094 (HPA 14-172) Residence, Alterations to dormer at rear, Permit

13. SMD 06, 2531 P Street, NW, OG 14-031 (HPA 14-036) Commercial, Awnings – existing, Permit

14. SMD 06, 2531 P Street, NW, OG 14-033 (HPA 14-046) Commercial, Signs for “TTR / Sotheby’s International Realty,” Permit

15. SMD 06, 3030 P Street, NW, OG 14-117 (HPA 14-227) Residence, Partial demolition, 2-story rear addition, alterations, Permit

16. SMD 06, 3036 P Street, NW, OG 14-096 (HPA 14-192) Residence, Replacement windows at rear, Permit

17. SMD 07, 1644 31st Street, NW, OG 14-115 (HPA 14-225) Tudor Place, Alterations to west entrance, fence and sliding gate, Permit

18. SMD 07, 1644 31st Street, NW, OG 14-104 (HPA 14-207) Tudor Place, Repairs to slate roof on Administration Building, Permit

19. SMD 08, 3700 O Street, NW, OG 14-055 (HPA 14-080) Georgetown University, New construction – residence hall, Revised concept

Sent out 4 p.m., Feb. 27: GOVERNMENT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA — Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2E — 3265 S St., NW — 202-724-7098 — anc2e@dc.govwww.anc2e.com.

The Redrawn Corcoran: a Question of Leadership


On Feb. 19, the long-troubled Corcoran announced a plan for George Washington University to take over its landmark 17th Street building and the Corcoran College of Art and Design, housed there and at the former Fillmore School on 35th Street in Georgetown.

The Corcoran art collection – minus works to be distributed to other museums – is to become the property of the National Gallery of Art, which will use the 17th Street galleries to show modern and contemporary art. (There is also talk of a “Corcoran Legacy Gallery,” where some of the museum’s most famous works will continue to be displayed at that location.)

In the Washington Post, Philip Kennicott called the plan “the end of the Corcoran and its final dismemberment.” But there is a good chance that some of what made the Corcoran a uniquely valuable Washington institution will live on. It is a question of leadership.

GWU President Steven Knapp was provost of Johns Hopkins University from 1996 to 2007, when the formerly independent Peabody Institute, a music conservatory of national importance, expanded as a constituent school of Johns Hopkins without giving up its distinct culture, faculty and student body.
National Gallery Director Earl Powell wrote his Ph.D. dissertation on Thomas Cole, a major figure in 19th-century American art, in which the Corcoran collection is unsurpassed. Chairman of the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, Powell called the Corcoran’s exhibition spaces “arguably the most beautiful galleries of any museum in the United States” in a New York Times article about the proposed partnership.

Knapp and Powell are leaders who are likely to “get it,” at the helm of institutions with the resources to make full use of the Corcoran’s exceptionally fine building and collection. Whether they will work together to sustain the museum-school model and community engagement that helped to define the Corcoran’s identity – both locally and nationally – remains to be seen. We hope so.

Iconic Wisconsin & M Building Sells for $12.25 Million


One of the most recognized properties at Georgetown’s most famous intersection was sold Feb. 21 for $12.2 million by the Heon family to 3150 M Street, LLC, a source close to the sale told the Georgetowner.

The 6,662-square-foot trophy retail space currently houses Serendipity 3 restaurant but is best known as the place, where Nathans, a Georgetown classic restaurant and watering hole, once stood. Nathans closed in July 2009, after 40 years.

The Heon family — which sold the former Georgetown Theater property to Georgetown architect Robert Bell for redevelopment in October 2013 — had owned the corner property for 100 years. During the middle of the 20th century, the family lived in the upper floors of 3150 M St., NW. For the present generation, this was where parents and grandparents lived. One family member said it was hard to let go of the property.

Town Liquors Shut Down for 10 Days


Town Liquors at 1326 Wisconsin Ave., NW, has been shut down by the D.C. Alcoholic Beverage Control Board for serving to minors. Because of the violation, the board also fined the business $5,000. The liquor license for Town Liquors was suspended from Feb. 23 to March 4.

“It’s unfortunate,” said Bill Starrels, the Georgetown Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner who heads up the local ANC’s alcoholic beverage committee. “But they have to do what it takes not to serve minors. The rules are the rules.”

Located next to the Georgetown Inn, Town Liquors is one of only five liquor stores in Georgetown.
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Tudor Place Earns $100,000 Grant


Tudor Place Historic Home and Garden received a $100,000 grant from the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities.

When asked how the Tudor Place team felt about receiving the grant, Leslie Buhler replied, “Gratitude. The maintenance of a historic site is tremendous work.”

The money from the grant will go towards three major projects: the painting and restoration of the windows on the national historic landmark house, the repointing of the bricks on another and the replacement of a roof.

“You can actually put your fingers through the brick,” said Buhler, stressing the importance of these renovations.

Tudor Place must now focus on fundraising to match the grant.

Tudor Place has been a part of Georgetown since it was completed in 1816 by Thomas and Martha Custis Peter. He was the son of Robert Peter, who was the first Mayor of Georgetown, and she was the granddaughter of Martha Washington.
Today,

Tudor Place offers visitors a look into American history at this virtually untouched landscape along with the collections of the Custis-Peter family from the 18th through the 20th centuries. It is a popular spot for special events and weddings.

Archaeology: a Favorite Georgetown Subject


The Georgetown Public Library hosted Ruth Trocotolli, archaeologist for D.C.’s Historic Preservation Office Feb. 22 for a lecture in its Peabody Room.

Despite the beautiful weather, which Washingtonians were enjoying outside, the afternoon lecture had an impressive turn-out of 50 persons. This is no surprise, however, as the history and preservation of Washington, D.C, especially Georgetown, is so fascinating. The diversity of the audience was especially notable as well. Sprightly young students and much older grey-haired men and women scattered throughout the room. The age range within the room presented its own historical narrative, just as the historical excavations and discoveries in the area.

In her presentation Trocotolli raised an interesting observation: “People don’t realize the history that’s below their feet.” She went on to add what distinguishes archaeology: “It’s not biased the same way as written history is.”

The Historic Preservation Office works to encourage the protection of D.C.’s historic and cultural resources through the 3 p’s: planning, protection and public education. Trocotolli reiterated these principles and emphasizing the focus on reviewing project plans. Oftentimes, this process involves looking at properties throughout time and determining what beneficial resources would be there. Emphasis is also put on the effort of protection. Artifact Rescue Projects are frequent, especially in as historical place as Georgetown.

Trocotolli mentioned several historical buildings in Georgetown, which have undergone such rescue projects. For instance, the Forrest-Marbury building, now the Embassy of Ukraine, dates to 1788, and another nearby one, Halcyon House dates to 1787.

Both the history of Georgetown and the keen interest of its community are equally impressive. Tricotolli’s work within the community as well as the audience’s participation and interest in the area reflect Georgetown’s authentic collision of the past and the present.

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Getting Warmer: Biz Group Meets at Neyla


As the snow continued to melt during this long winter, the Georgetown Business Association met for its February reception at Neyla on N Street in its special tented room that reminded all of balmier climes. Touted for its Mediterranean cuisine, the attentive staff kept the table full and the glasses full. GBA president Riyad Said thanked the guests who filled the room and said that the GBA had its 2014 to-do list ready with lobbying efforts and special events — as well as focusing on parking options and shuttle service. Also on the table are help and incentives for small businesses coming to Georgetown.
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Dean & Deluca Cited Again for Health Code Violations


Dean & Deluca at 3276 M St., NW, was closed Feb. 19 for one day by the D.C. Health Department. The fancy food store was cited for various health hazards, “including but not limited to heavy infestation of vermin.”

Last year — also in February — Dean & Deluca was closed for a day by D.C. Health for rodent droppings and more. Live birds in the outside cafe were also a problem. At the time, the coffee bar in the outside cafe was moved into the building. Also sold outside were bagels, pastries and other sweets. Now, all those items are sold in the historic market building.

The store is open again and did not comment on this citation.

The Cameras Lack One Element


I come from a rural area that at this moment is getting pounded by the “Polar Vortex.” Indiana to be exact. Coming from a place where roughly half a mile or more spans between intersections, it was startling to drive half a mile and hit 6 – 8 of them. I wasn’t used to this stop-start type of driving, but I caught on quickly when I noticed police at almost every intersection. Then I noticed the cameras…

Most people in D.C. Metro know by now the “all seeing” traffic cameras have turned on and are watching our every move. We need to get something understood right off the bat, though. These new traffic cameras are looking for license plate numbers when an automobile violation occurs. These violations include: speeding (fine $50-$300), failing to clear an intersection (fine $50), failing to yield to pedestrians at an intersection (fine $250) and overweight trucks in restricted truck weight zones (fine $150-$250). With all these automated cameras we (as drivers) need to understand the cameras do not hold the human elements of compassion and empathy. In fact, these cameras see nothing but violations. So if you think you may be reimbursed a fine or two for waiting for a cross-walker don’t hold your breath, the cameras don’t care.

The United States Census Bureau claims D.C. holds a population of 632,323 residents. In 2010, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) stated that 25 pedestrians were killed in D.C. from vehicle strikes. NHTSA then released that the fatalities had dropped to 19 deaths in 2012. That is a mere 0.003 percent of D.C.’s population. Although deaths from traffic accidents have dropped to a very low number, that number still has not reached zero and it may never do so. This is due to the “human element,” a factor of mistake and error.

What these numbers do not show is how many people illegally crossed the street and expected traffic to stop for them. These numbers don’t show how many drivers stopped, when they had the right of way, to let a mother and her child cross the street to get out of the rain. These numbers do not indicate the honest mistake that a driver can make when approaching an intersection and someone runs out from between two parked cars only to be met by an oncoming vehicle.

People are going to make mistakes and as much as we want to punish them for making those mistakes, we need to also realize there are other factors that can come into play. I’m sorry Washington, but people are not all the same nor the situations. I vote that these violations be reviewed by a human prior to being administered to a fellow human. Sounds like that could take a good deal of time, doesn’t it? Maybe the city will then learn we as residents are more than just voters, tax payers and law abiders.

As for the drivers, I suggest popping in a favorite CD or tuning into a favorite radio station. Enjoy the traffic, it comes with living in a city. I also would like to challenge every D.C. driver to make a point to smile and wave the next time a pedestrian crosses the intersection in front of you. Who knows, you may just be the person on the crosswalk next time. Oh, and if we all start driving safer and crossing intersections with more caution, those “all-seeing” cameras may just disappear, but it’s a team effort.