BaancBlog

Blagden Alley and Naylor Court Jesting

Archive: June 2008

Fifth Street Hardware. A Review.

The editor had a chance to visit Fifth Street Hardware Sunday evening. The editor is a hardware store junkie. One word: Wow.

Most of the local hardware stores don't have enough space to have the breadth of what the editor would like. The Home Depot in Baileys Crossroads is good, now that they are paying attention. The Lowes at New Carrollton, or especially Alexandria, are very complete. The local Home Depot at Brentwood is diseased.

Fifth Street (which comes after Fourth Street, which comes after the Flop wink ) has more in some sections than the BC HD. It seems quite contractor supply oriented: Serious breadth of screwdrivers, good nail, bolt, and screw selection, painting equipment, even serious face masks for dust and paint fumes. Things you simply don't see in smaller stores. Also serious cleaning supplies, contractor trash bags, and even some common molding. All out front, not in a back room. Even a couple of older guys who sound like they know what they are talking about.

I shouldn't say this, but while the Ace paints may be perfectly fine, the Benjamin Moore store (Monarch) is half a block away. Fifth Street has most of the paint brushes they sell, though, at what seem like competitive prices. (Benjamin Moore doesn't compete on price.)

We've kept Central Lock. We now have a serious reason not to drive out to the Orange Borg in Baileys Crossroads. This is reason for rejoicing.

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1212 Ninth Bought

Hanny Chan, of Old Dominion Brewery, has purchased the 1212 Ninth Street lot from Selp Help, who got it from Walnut Street Development, who got it from Phillip Abraham, who had it for a very long time.

In 1978, the editor recalls three small townhouses there (three lots). They had recently been inhabited, but not then, and there was some discussion of the owners, wherever, having died and it was in probate, etc. Shortly the houses had the occasional fire from inexperienced or stoned people cooking crack, and soon they were leveled. Since then it has been vacant, except for parking cars. (And, back when, duct tape wrapped bodies. But they were killed elsewhere, so I don't think it counted against the neighborhood.)

Hanny has no immediate plans, but will not use the old Walnut Street drawings as a base. 18 parking places, though.

More to come. And good luck Hanny.

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BA&NC Meeting, June 26, 2008

A lot of ground covered.

The big event of the meeting was a surprise, though. Hanny Chan, of Old Dominion, stopped by to announce that he had purchased the open lot (1212 Ninth Street) across from his restaurant. Marthlu Bledsoe had a Welcome Cat for the occasion, when and if it ever happened. Even if it was a Japanese Welcome Cat.

Roadside Development/O Street Market

The Roadside Development Corporation's attempt to rebuild the O Street Market and upgrade the Jungle Giant continues apace. One of the (expected) wickets is approval of the "TIF" (CityMarket at O Street Tax Increment Financing Act of 2008). Testimony at the Finance Committee (Jack Evans) is needed from the various interested parties on July 2. Ed Horvath and Nora Olgyay volunteered. Support was voted unanimously by the members (15) present at the meeting.

Other Letters

A letter of support to the Mayor's office is requested for the Tenth Street Park (between L and M). A resolution in favor also passed, 15-0). The Tenth Street Park (name not yet final) is seen be everyone as a good thing for the full community.

A letter of support for the Marriott Convention Center Hotel was also requested at the 19 June briefing by Norman Jenkins, SVP, North American Lodging Development. Not to the details, but that it should be built. Approval of such a letter was also 15-0.

Breakwells

Discussion of the Breakwells break-in.

Parking Signs

Mark Bjorge, EOM (Executive Office of the Mayor, was asked about having the parking signs on the north side of M and N to at least that of L, where the no parking restriction goes to 8:30pm, not just 6:30pm. At the February meeting, Jack Evans said he thought the restriction was actually 24 hours, except Sundays. Mark was also asked that if the law was in fact 24 hours, could that be reflected in the signs.

Members and Dues

Members were reminded that Association elections are coming in September. As only paid up members may vote, members were reminded by Betsy Garside, sitting in for Treasurer Jim Loucks, to pay up. elections.

Destination Neighborhood

It seems that Saturday nights are again popular in Blagden Alley. PSA307 has been made aware of the returned popularity.

A couple of months ago it was Saturday evenings of Bondage, S+M, Wife Swapping, and something which attracted a bunch of transvestites. No DCRA permits for liquor, or anything. LT Smith and crew did tickets in the low thousands (that's dollars, not tickets).

This another of the reasons that they invented PG County. There's plenty of parking, not in fire lanes, out there. The organizers should take advantage of that.

CCH Advisory Committee

The Convention Center Hotel is setting up one of those advisory committees, a la the one for the Convention Center. They meet every few months, and basically track as outside observers, but observers with a neighborhood, or other, interest.

These are actually quite useful. While they wouldn't be able to make big changes, they can avoid all sorts of problems, both for the project managers and the neighborhood.

Stephen Warren and Nora Olgyay volunteered for seats, if and when they become available.

"Problem" house discussion.

Stephen Warren and Betsy Garside brought up the problem of 1258 Tenth Street, and the suspicious activity there. Then followed discussion of 916 N and 906 O.

So we have three long-standing problem houses in the neighborhood. It seems that in all cases, the house is owned by an older person and problems are with younger relatives. The crimes are just this side of "go to jail", in general. (Although LT Smith and his crew managed it for a resident of 916 N a month or two ago, with good results so far.)

There was discussion with Mark Bjorg of whether or not there were good enough procedures for handling an owner, perhaps no longer competent because of age, in a humane manner and making sure they keep the accumulated value of the residence, rather than lose it to too many code violations and other ways of stopping the crimes coming out of the place. [OK. That's too long a sentence.]

Dave Salter noted that there was a "spite house" in the back of 906 O. Wikipedia has it as
"also relates to an old Southern United States custom of consigning an ostracized family member to a very small, second house on the family land "where he was expected to live in solitude as punishment for having embarrassed his family. See also here.

Illegal Parking

There was discussion of the illegal/impromtu parking lot at Tenth Street behind 943 M. Under the Mulberry tree. And, no, Lynda Wright doesn't own it. At any rate, a new post or two have appeared. These make parking more than a Yugo difficult. So, for the moment, problem solved.

Eleventh Street

Mark Bjorge said the start of renovation has been delayed until about September. It has a project manager, and should actually happen.

Gas. Natural Gas.

The subject of brick sidewalks was presented. It became a discussion of Washington Gas. And the gas line replacement they are doing and the tearing up of the brick alleys in Naylor Court and the sidewalks on the 900 block of P Street and when was it going to get replaced. Work crew foremen are apparently instructed to say: "When the project is complete." Since the entire area's gas line replacements (except for Ray Milefsky's block) seem to be one big project, this means a very, very long time. Enough time for a hostile takeover of Washington Gas by some European brewery, in fact.

There were questions about what kind of bricks would be used to replace those removed. Mark Bjorge commented that in Georgetown, where folks are a mite persnickety about the bricks matching, Washington Gas saves the bricks and then brings them back. Bricks change color over decades, of course, and make a tough match for newly fired bricks. People at the meeting were not convinced that we were getting our disturbed bricks treated as soigneusement as Georgetown's.

Ed Horvath commented that the newer, high end, gas appliacences don't really depend on high pressure. They just suck that gas right outta the line. However, low gas pressure and old leaky lines does lead to water getting into the lines, and thus into the appliacences, shortening their usefulness.

This neighborhood was apparently one of the first to get gas. So our gas lines are really, really old.

The gas line replacement project was described by Bjorge as "sprawling". He didn't "tightly scheduled" or "clearly planned", which does not eliminate those possibilities, of course.

Fire Hydrants

In the middle of the brick replacement discussion, fire hydrants were mentioned. Mark Bjorge commented that the "stick out above ground" profile they now have is actually a cost saving measure: When someone hits them, they break off above ground (or at least not too deep down) and so cost much less to repair.

Adjourned

The meeting adjourned before the 9:00 deadline.





Breakwells Broken Into

Breakwells was broken into last night, some time before midnight. Petty cash, from the cash drawer ready for this mornings business, was taken. Basically , the thieves busted the safety glass door in around the deadbolt knob, and turned it.

Turns out that some of Alem Abebe's customers every day are three construction guys working a job somewhere around here. He called them, or they saw it and stopped, and had plywood up in no time. Enough lag bolts, hammer drill (a serious one), and a well used piece of 3/4" plywood. Door made safe for the evning in no time.

The police took fingerprints. We'll see.

Breakwells was open for business as usual this morning (June 26).

Read more...

O Street Market. Press Conference.

The editor has tracked, but not compulsively, the Roadside Development Project. Sure sounds like a good thing, and the presentation to the Zoning Commission (second try) was one of the best he's ever seen. What they were presenting looked good, besides.

The editor and wife also shopped the O Street Market for several years. There was a meat stall, run by the Hohensee's out of Pennsylvania. Also a great Korean food stall, run by Mr. Hang. Very good noodles and just right fried chicken. Mr. Hang also put one daughter through Reed and another somewhere similar. Last heard, and many years ago, he opened a restaurant in Northern Virginia.

Two acounts of the project are here and here. Pictures, too.

Mayor Fenty has scheduled a press conference for this Friday at
12:15 pm (note this is the new time) at the O Street Market to announce
the TIF legislation that will be subject of the public roundtable on
Tuesday. Councilmembers Evans and Brown will be attending as well.

The Roadside folks have asked for $35m in TIF assistance to cover the cost of the
infrastructure, the preservation and restoration of the historic
building, restoration of the 8th Street right-of-way, development of the
below grade truck court for all loading and servicing of the project,
and construction of 563 parking spaces.

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Poker Musings, Part I, Apologia Pro Poker Sua...

The editor has a minor addiction to poker. Doesn't claim to be a great expert, but is not totally bad. That is, not a complete donkey.

There is a "free" poker league in the area that he takes part in. There are apparently a couple of others, and a couple of local restaurants which have regular games.

These are not for money. There are prizes, sometimes $50.00. Sometimes quarterly regionals, with prizes of up to $1,500, and a qualification of a full paid trip to the WSOP. (That's the World Series of Poker, of course.)

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Just Like the Old Days

A few days ago, the editor had an entry (here) which included:

I talked with Ed and Richard at the corner of Tenth and M Saturday morning. We were watching the cleanup of an accident in which a nice black Mercedes was totalled by a DC cab. T-Boned, actually. Don't know if anyone in the Mercedes was hurt, and it may have been parked.

I have since learned that the Mercedes had been parked, eastbound, just at the southeast corner of Tenth and M. It was just pulling out, probably without looking. The cab hit it. It was 5:00am. After the accident, a (presumed) prostitute got out, talked on her cell phone, and was picked up by someone and was out of there in no time. (Note the "her" in the last sentence. A few years ago, that was a sign of progress in the neighborhood.)

Read more...

Convention Center Hotel Briefing, June 19, 2008

The Convention Center Hotel (CCH) folks gave a briefing on the current state of the development for the Blagden Alley and Naylor Court Association, and others, the evening of June 19, 2008. Bob Neal, lead architect, of the architectural firm of Cooper Carry did the presentation.

It was good. Lots of facts, projections, and the occasional "we don't know, yet" since the planning isn't final. In particular, there is no traffic plan at this point, but it was pointed out that it will obviously have to be done in the near term.

  • Within a year: Digging will have started.
  • Completion: 2012, if all goes well.
  • There will be a website soon. There is no website or handout yet as, quite frankly, things aren't far enough along to have them. But soon.
  • 100K FT2 meeting space. ("K" here means, 1,000, not 1,024.)
  • Uses the existing convention center loading docks, underground. Mostly under Ninth Street between Massachusetts Avenus and L Street already.
  • Most meeting space is underground.
  • Cars load/unload off Massachusetts Avenue (3 lanes), Buses off L Street.
  • Two parking levels, 100% valet.
  • Second Floor: Guests. Some meeting rooms. Big atrium. Pools. Weight training.
  • The Plumbers Union facade and some structure saved (and prominent in design). Roof used for guest parties/functions. Outdoor dining.
  • Fitst level below main floor: Two 100K (?) ball rooms. First level down from that: 300K ball room.
  • Will be able to go under Ninth Street to the Convention Center.
  • Question from audience: Will the gym be open for public membership? No. Or at least not considered at this point.
  • Will the Pepco building be integrated? Or camoflaged? Answer: There have been lots of meetings, but can't really address at the moment.
  • Q: There have been rumors of a Ninth Street Metro stop. A: No plans.
  • The North Side of L is only part of the PUD (Planned Unit Development), but not part of the briefing.
  • Q: Will the buses park and idle on L Street? A: No. Somewhere else.
  • Q: What about L Street motorists? A: Traffic plan not done yet, but the plan will be ready by the time of the PUD application.
  • Q: The building at Ninth and L? A: Looking at.
  • Q: (Si Kailian) Jobs and training? A: $2Mill will be authorized for the training plan. 50% of the jobs will be DC residents.
  • Q; How high on the north (L Street) side? A:
  • Q; The two/three smaller hotels on the north of L? A: Within about 6 months of the big one.
  • There was one of those several block layouts that architects do to place their project in neighborhood context. It was obviously based on maps/photos which did not include the Whitman, the Quincies, and other recent structures. Several folks noticed and commented. The authorities said that would update it.
  • Q: Retail? What kind? A: Food mostly. No concrete agreements yet. But stores like Starbucks and a sports bar and a high end restaurant.All accessible from the street. Don't want the hotel restaurant feel. Significant sidewalk presence.
  • (Terri Payne) We have three coffee shops and a sports bar right now. Couldn't you add variety?
  • Q; Will you work with the new (Hines) development downtown?A: We have talked.
  • 400 parking spaces (underground).
  • Simply can't address alley closings at this point.

Street Closure

Theresa Dubois, of the Convention Center, sent out the following streed closure notice (she loves to close the streets) last Friday after the power came back on:

---------------------------------------------------------

Washington Convention Center Authority (WCCA)
Traffic Advisory

The Walter E. Washington Convention Center will host the Army's 233rd Birthday Ball on Friday, June 13th until Sunday, June 15th. In association with this event, the District Department of Transportation (DDOT) has issued a public space permit to the show producer for temporary closure of L Street between 7th and 9th Streets NW to accommodate the unloading, placement, display, and removal of a Non Line of Sight Cannon or NLOS-C prototype.

L Street will be temporarily closed to vehicular traffic from Saturday, June 14th at 3:00 p.m. until Sunday, June 15th at 2:00 p.m. During the closure, pedestrians will continue to have access to L Street and there will be no disruption to north- southbound vehicular traffic on 7th and 9th Streets.

As always, we appreciate your patience and understanding.


-----------------------------------------------------

What she forgot is the pretty picture, which is here. 3D needs one.

That Power Outage

Last Friday there was a power outage. Everyone in this neighborhood knows that.

It seems as if we now have an outage the Tenth and L substation about every two years. It didn't used to be that way. Before all this gentrification stuff, I don't recall many outages at all.

Given the map in the WaPo, it would seem as if the all of the traffic lights in the territory would be out. Friday morning, the editor stood at the corner of Ninth and M and saw those lights out, The Convention Center and Old Dominion's neon out, and all lights south out. But the lights at the corner of Ninth and N were running fine.

Which reminded the editor of an incident many years ago, when Suzanne (without whom there would be no Blagden Alley and Naylor Court Historical District) and Paul Abersold, who lived on N Street where the Zirkles now live, were giving a Thanksgiving dinner for several in the neighborhood. There had aben an outage earlier in the day but everything had been on for a while. The turkey was in the oven. Everything on the stove was cooked. The turkey wasn't. Turns out that the (electric) oven was on a separate main circuit from everything else in the house. And that circuit was still down.

Several years ago there was an outage on the 900 block of M Street and the 1100 block of Tenth. Several of the houses were out and many weren't. Not contiguous, just random. Turns out there are several circuits from the substation on these blocks, hooked up in no organized fashion.

Cellphones. Popcorn. "This is your brain on ..."

The editor is not really current on many things. He sometimes thinks of Victor Herbert as fairly modern, say compared to Engelbert Humperdinck.

Anyway, there is this thing about cell phones and cancer and whatever. (In the 1950's, horror comics were going to destroy the nation.) Aparently, there is this thing about using your cell phone to pop popcorn. As an example, see here at Youtube. Of course, if those two guys really believed the cell phones were that powerful, they wouldn't be standing crotch high next to that table...

Here is one of many rebuttals/explanations of how to do it. If you don't have several years of back copies of Popular Mechanics in your den, you probably should not do it at home.

Starbucks

The magic name of gentrification. Coffee priced like gas, but tasting better. Conspicuous consumption without the Cadillac.

There was a certain pride (or snootiness) of having avoided SBX (their ticker symbol) within the Blagden Alley and Naylor Court neighborhood. Actually, they may have thought we were not worth the effort. A couple of the local merchants have called Starbucks asking whether they they planned a coffee shop here or not.

There was a fairly firm "No", at least not in the next five years.

But at the Marriott briefing on the new Convention Center Hotel at the May 22 WCCA Advisory Committee meeting, the Marriott folks bragged about a Starbucks being slotted for one of the shops on the Ninth Street side. So there may very well be a Starbucks here in four years.

Whoopee!

Personally, it won't affect Azi's or Starbucks. Folks headed to the subway Metro aren't going to detour for Starbucks. Folks walking down Ninth Street will appreciate the alternatives already here.

But it does make sense for Marriott. Clyde Hassenpfeffer just in from a small town east of Indianapolis will recognize the name and think he's in a high class hotel. The second day, when he wants a decent breakfast at a non-hotel price, and he's going to the Convention Center anyway, he'll walk up to Breakwells. (Or she, I guess. Got to be careful here.)

Street Sweeping

Since this is DC and we have frequent mechanized street sweeping, and this is
on the west side of the convention center, the street has signs which say
that there is no parking from 12:30 to 2:20pm on Tuesday on the north side.
(Wednesdays are southside.)

So at 12:23, I get into my northside parked car and go search for a legal spot in the neighborhood.

900 block of N Street? Nothing. However, at 12:24 the open side of the street is being swept by the big orange machine. Early. Back on the 900 black of M. No legal parking, but the street sweeper from N at 12:26.

Since now that the street sweepers have cameras to catch those cars which don't move, are these cars caught early to be ticketed? Do these cameras have (accurate) time stamps for the photos?

Just a question.

Of course, the editor is also the kind of person who believes that if one is ticketed to not moving the car at the proper time but no cleaning occurs, not only should the fine be returned but it should also be double the money back. But that probably won't happen.

More on Gas

I talked with Ed and Richard at the corner of Tenth and M Saturday morning. We were watching the cleanup of an accident in which a nice black Mercedes was totalled by a DC cab. T-Boned, actually. Don't know if anyone in the Mercedes was hrt, and it may have been parked.

Anyway, Ed commented that he had called Washington Gas to ask about the possible work on upgrading the gas lines on the block. And believe me, if anyone knows which phone numbers to use, it's ED. He hasn't received an answer.

He did comment that several people on the block couldn't install high-end electrical applicances because the gas pressure was too low. He said that when the gas company tried to increase pressure a while back, the pipes under the 900 clock of M Street leaked so badly that you could smell gas on the block. So the gas pressure stays low until that gets fixed. And that means tearing up the street.

The upscaling is not yet complete.
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