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Home arrow Community arrow Progress on Public Realm Framework
Progress on Public Realm Framework PDF Print E-mail
Written by Columbia Heights News   
Wednesday, 28 November 2007

Public Realm Framework Plan

Reader submitted post.  Thanks John!

The Columbia Heights Public Realm Plan is getting closer to implementation. After YEARS of planning and community meetings (since 2003), the city is almost ready to start work on the central area of Columbia Heights.

Jim Graham and the DC government's Office of Planning hosted a community meeting last week at the Bell Multicultural High School to give an update on the Plan. The Office of Planning gave a presentation with the latest illustrations and photo renderings. For some reason they haven't included these on their website (you might call them or Jim Graham's office to get the latest), but the overall description of the project is here:  Columbia Heights Public Realm Framework Plan

It will include new and distintive trees lining 14th Street from Newton Street to Columbia Road, as well as new pavement on 14th Street. The main focus will be a pedestrian plaza in front of the Triangle Apartments / Tivoli square -- which will include a lighted fountain (that can be shut off on weekends for a farmer's market). A second, though smaller, pedestrian-focused area will be at the Columbia Heights metro entrance on the southwest corner of Irving and 14th Streets. The plan also includes expanding some sidewalks and pedestrian areas, a bike lane on the roadway, permanent benches for sitting, lots of areas to lock up bikes, and new automated parking meter stands (like the ones in Georgetown) along 14th Street in front of the storefronts, which allow more parking spaces and the fares and allowable parking times can be adjusted for different times of day. DDOT will also be updating its traffic study conducted several years to make sure that the traffic flows are planned for properly (I still have many doubts about this, especially with the increased traffic that will accompany the Target opening). DDOT is also planning adjustments to the traffic flows in some of the intersections, such as 14th and Park Road.

The implementation will begin in the coming weeks and will be finished at some point in 2009 - contact the Office of Planning for more details on the timeline (they distributed a handout with the details but I don't have it anymore). This process has taken a very long time, and it's still long from over, but once it's finished I think it will give a nice and distinctive feel to the central area of Columbia Heights.

Comments
Written by GforGood on 2007-11-29 05:24:24
Woohoo!! Finally!! It would be great if someone who happens to have the presentation and the timeline details would post them here.
Written by bogfrog on 2007-11-29 12:59:29
Farmer's market! Yeah!
Written by GforGood on 2007-11-29 13:49:56
Bogfrog, yes, but the space making it possible it does not mean there will necessarily be one. But I sure hope there will! :)
Where Are the Streets?
Written by NameWithheld on 2007-11-30 07:38:14
Nice picture, enhanced by the exclusion of 14th, Kenyon and Park Road.
Written by Steve on 2007-11-30 10:51:10
Dang, I'm going to be SO sad to see all the gravel go. I've heard that it's made it as far away as Georgia Avenue on the east, and the zoo on the west.
Written by your mom on 2007-11-30 11:18:52
The streets are actually there -- they just have graphics running across them, as if the plan involves some design work in the pavement itself that will extend from the triangle. Somehow I doubt that will make it into the real version, but I think it's kinda cool.
Written by CoHebiker on 2007-11-30 11:24:35
I've wondered since the get-go, why they planted those sycamore trees in the gravel since this plan was already in the works. 
Oh well.
Written by GforGood on 2007-11-30 12:43:38
They may be able to replant some of those trees, hopefully. 
 
I've seen another (I think a later design) that is a bit more subdued, and, frankly, more realistic looking. Cannot recall where I saw it though, might be found somewhere on the city pages. 
 
Written by ColHeightsChic on 2007-11-30 14:19:17
Good point GforGood. Where the heck are Park and Kenyon Roads??? And what on earth is with the bizarre plastic Miami-looking tree-like statues?
Written by brian on 2007-11-30 15:42:28
sucks the neighborhood is being straight robbed of any character left.
Written by GforGood on 2007-11-30 20:47:02
ColHeightsChic, those statues/"trees" is one of the details that was not in the other design I saw.. :)  
 
Brian, so you rather liked the empty lots that were there before, eh? ;-) Or do you mean the current oh so wonderful concrete sidewalks with half dead trees in front of Tivoli and around the metro entrance for example?  
 
My guess is that most of it will look like the sidewalk put in place in front of the new condo already (the one with the Heights restaurant etc, never remember the name of the building), and to me that looks nice enough.  
 
Character of the neighborhood is somewhere else (and I don't mean the crime wave, drug dealing etc. a couple of blocks south). 



Last Updated ( Wednesday, 28 November 2007 )
 
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