Posts Tagged ‘foria

24
Jan
12

Friends of Rhode Island Ave Meeting Recap

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Last night, the Friends of Rhode Island Ave NE (FoRIA) hosted their first strategy meeting for the 2012 calendar year. The turnout could not have been better; nearly 60 people crowded into Art Enables to participate with other residents, both black and white, old and young. Many of the FoRIA members had never participated in community activities but they joined their more active neighbors for one common goal: revitalization of the Rhode Island Ave NE corridor.

The evening was kicked off by the Chair of FoRIA, James Holloway, a 20+ year resident of Woodridge and former DC police officer. Holloway introduced the FoRIA board and executive committee members. Stephanie Liotta Atkinson, President of FoRIA, gave a brief report on what the organization has done up to this point since its founding nearly six months prior. Then the meeting was handed over to Daniel Brewer, FoRIA board member, to explain how this meeting was going to move from talk to action.

The crowd of “Friends” were broken down into four different groups: Community Service, Events, Business Development, and Streetscapes. The group enthusiastically started playing musical chairs as they decided what committee they wanted to serve on. As everyone got settled, the work began. Each group began their discussion related to their topics and great ideas were being hatched (Committee reports will be posted on the FoRIA website by the moderators soon). After about 20-30 minutes, the group session ended and the moderators gave their reports.

Before the reports were given though, Holloway introduced our host, Art Enables, was thanked for providing the space for the meeting. Joyce Muis from ArtEnables spoke about her organization and some future events (which will be posted on here in the near future), and she commented on how this meeting was the largest she has personally seen for RIA!

The Committees reported back and some of their ideas are below (further reports will be reported by FoRIA in the near future).

Events (reported by Daniella Gibbs Leger):

  • Possible street festival
  • Food truck fiesta
  • Community Movies screening

Business Development (reported by Stephanie Liotta Atkinson):

  • Organize “Rhode Trips”, sort of a flash mob, to bring Ward 5 residents to other small businesses
  •  Research project to look at commercial space and what businesses fit those molds

Community Service (reported by Daniel Brewer):

  • The group is committed to finding organizations on the Avenue and in the surrounding area to work with and volunteer the group’s members time with. The goal is to strengthen and build relationships with these organizations in the community.

Streetscape (reported by R. Kyle Todd):

  • Bike lanes
  • Trash Clean Up days
  • Planter boxes and maintenance

The evening ended with James Holloway giving the final recap that the action plans that were created during these sessions are just that: plans of action. The group also talked about that FoRIA t-shirts are being produced…more details on that coming soon. The night did not end after folks left the meeting. Many of the “Friends” met at Optimism in Brookland for a later-than-usual happy hour.

This meeting was also featured in DC Urban: http://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/rhode_island_avenue_has_organized_friends/4977

21
Jan
12

Woodridge’s Spotlight

Great article on the Woodridge community from the Washington Post once again that a community only improves:

Where We Live: Woodridge, a slice of suburbia in Washington, D.C.

Vanessa Small/THE WASHINGTON POST – WASHINGTON, DC – JANUARY 18: Trees line the streets of Woodridge, adding to the suburban atmosphere of this Northeast Washington, D.C. neighborhood, January 18, 2012. The neighborhood is home to many African American retirees, mostly former government employees. (Photo by Vanessa Small/The Washington Post)

By , Published: January 19

There’s nothing particularly special about the new dog park in Woodridge. Tucked between the neighborhood pool and the community center, it’s an expanse of rough granite surrounded by a low black fence. Unassuming. Average. But quite possibly the most vivid illustration of another Northeast neighborhood transforming — albeit more slowly than some others.More and more young professionals looking to escape rising rents while keeping a D.C. address have stumbled upon the quiet community and discovered its suburban flavor.Although she has lived in the District since 2002, Daniella Gibbs Leger had never heard of Woodridge before moving to the neighborhood, which borders Maryland’s Prince George’s County.Leger, 36, and her husband, Matthew, 38, thought Northern Virginia was the only place they’d be able to become homeowners and kiss their Capitol Hill rent goodbye without breaking their bank accounts. But one day her real estate agent took her to an unfamiliar Northeast neighborhood — driving her through the bungalows, farmhouses and Colonial-style homes that blanket the community’s rolling hills and tree-lined streets.

“I couldn’t believe these cute detached homes with yards and porches and well-manicured lawns and gardens. It wasn’t anything I was expecting to see in that neighborhood,” said Leger, a nonprofit executive who now grows tomatoes in the yard of their three-bedroom Woodridge house.

“I love the fact that it’s like living in the suburbs but you get the convenience of living in the city,” she said.

It’s what brought Nora Wheatley and her family from Arlington County.“We were looking for more house for our money,” said Wheatley, an executive secretary at the Federal Election Commission. They moved to Woodridge in 2004 after visiting a friend living in the area. “We were so pleasantly surprised that there were such beautiful homes in Washington, D.C., with grass and a back yard.”

The average home price is $276,719, down from $320,851 in 2008. The average sale price last year in neighboring Brookland was $345,263.

“It’s like living in Cleveland Park Northwest, but for a third of the price,” said Dreyer, who added that the average home in Cleveland Park is $733,489.”

But you don’t see many for-sale signs hanging in the front yards. The neighborhood had only about 100 home sales last year.

Though Woodridge Civic Association President Anthony Hood says he regularly receives phone calls from people expressing interest in the neighborhood, he adds: “There’s not a lot of moving in and out,” Hood said. For that reason, he describes the neighborhood in three words: “stable, consistent and predictable.”

The affordability that most residents boast has also attracted investors looking for a quick profit, as shown by the homes currently on the market with refurbished insides.

But there isn’t nearly as much investment in Woodridge as in its denser neighbors, Capitol Hill North, the Atlas District and Trinidad, which are, as a result, experiencing more rapid appreciation.

Many residents attribute the low sales activity to the strip of dark, metal-cased storefronts along the main artery that cuts through the community, Rhode Island Avenue.

“It’s like a ghost town,” said longtime resident Carol Fleming, a retired community supervision officer. The only visits she would make to the Rhode Island strip were to get her hair done. The businesses along the busy, wide road are mostly salons, storefront churches and a few liquor stores. Residents praise the subs at Carl’s Foods, one of the few eateries on the strip, but it closes before 5 p.m.

The lackluster business presence frustrated one newcomer, lawyer Stephanie Liotta Atkinson, into action. She and her partner moved into their Woodridge bungalow in 2010 after outgrowing their one-bedroom brownstone condominium in Dupont Circle.

“When driving along Rhode Island Avenue, it looks uncared for,” she said. “But it doesn’t reflect the people living in the neighborhood,” whom she describes as welcoming.

So she galvanized a few neighbors, creating the Friends of Rhode Island Avenue, an organization that wants to revitalize the community by attracting businesses such as pet-food stores, coffee shops, banks, sit-down restaurants, curbside cafes, dry cleaners and entertainment attractions.

In the meantime, as the organization courts developers, other residents have come together to build community amenities such as the Langdon Dog Park in the heart of Woodridge. It was started by residents, most of whom moved into Woodridge or neighboring communities in the past 10 years.

“I would say Woodridge is being shaped today by those who participate, engage and express interest,” said Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Corey Griffin, whose constituency includes parts of Woodridge.

A new brewery, DC Brau on Bladensburg Road, attracts residents on the weekends with beer tastings, tours and barbecue. Plans to refurbish the community center and the Woodridge Neighborhood Library have also stirred excitement.

“Woodridge is a community that has a varied past but an evolving future,” Griffin said.

The suburban vibe in many parts of the community harks back to its emergence as subdivision in the early 1900s.It remained a region of woodlands and farms even as downtown Washington began to develop. The tree-filled hills and ridges — perhaps the inspiration for the community’s name — had made it the ideal place for two forts to defend the nation’s capital during the Civil War.

The name of one street in Woodridge, Mills Avenue, pays homage to the home and studio of Clark Mills, the the early-1800s sculptor of the equestrian statues of George Washington in Washington Circle and Andrew Jackson in Lafayette Square

It wasn’t until the 1930s that the neighborhood acquired its current borders: Eastern Avenue, Michigan Avenue, 18th Street, New York Avenue and Bladensburg Road.

Desegregation laws attracted an influx of African Americans to the neighborhood after World War II. Their children, many of whom are now retired government employees, make up a sizable portion of the current population.

In the late 1990s, the coffeehouse-going, cellphone-toting, dog-walking set rushed into neighboring Brookland — but not as quickly to Woodridge.

“The Woodridge train hasn’t quite taken off,” said real estate agent Lindsay Dreyer, owner of City Chic Real Estate. “People love the houses, but the location isn’t ideal for them,” she said, because the nearest grocery store and Metro station are at least two miles away.

But some are willing to make the sacrifice, she added, because of Woodridge’s greatest attraction for prospective buyers: affordability.

10
Jan
12

FoRIA All-Hands 2012 Planning Meeting

Those you who are FoRIA members already received an email about this, but for the rest of the Insider readers, we want to invite you to FoRIA’s 2012 All-Hands Planning Meeting.

Date: January 23

Time: 7:30 – 9:00 pm

Location: Art Enables 2204 Rhode Island Avenue NE.

Agenda

  • Brief introduction of FoRIA
  • Recap of Progress
  • Break-Out Planning Committees: Community Events, Business Development, and Street-Scape
  • Recap of Each Committee
  • Miscellaneous Business

Light refreshments will be served during the planning meeting.

Please RSVP if you can make it at info@friendsofria.org.

Please also join us afterward for drinks at Lace!

04
Jan
12

My Thoughts: What Now?

by Greg Roberts

As many of you already know by now, according to sources, Councilmember Harry Thomas Jr has agreed to resign in a plea agreement that will most likely also see him in federal jail for 2-3 years. We can all continue the debate of what kind of man he is and what kind of Councilmember he is/was, but I will say that his movement lately to bring a focus back on to RIA has helped energize a lot of people to get involved. The Insider has received numerous questions about what happens to RIA now? Now that HTJ is going away, how are we going to continue this movement?

How about this for a response: Revitalizing RIA NE is bigger than one man. Yes, HTJ was motivated to bring attention to RIA in the last couple of months but that motivation was brought on by the residents demanding it. There are a lot of people and groups out there that are focused on continuing the successes that RIA already has and is getting. The PCDC held its visioning session last year. Friends of Rhode Island Ave (FoRIA) has continued to garner new members and has an ambitious agenda for 2012 (if you haven’t already, join them!).

This is not the time to think that our efforts can be thwarted or slowed by one member of our community’s departure (forced or not). Personally, my involvement has helped me make some good friends thanks to our shared interest in seeing RIA revitalized and I look forward to making new ones as we continue our journey. This has helped me enjoy my community even more. I won’t let a bump in the road change my enthusiasm. Granted, our Councilmember for Ward 5 is an important ally to have on our side and we need a councilmember to help champion our cause. I am not going to waste time right now speculating on who the right person is to replace HTJ but I am sure that whomever it is will take up the torch that HTJ left on efforts to bring funds and efforts to our cause.

Also, remember, we have four Councilmembers who are At-Large. I know, I forget sometimes as well. I guess we forget because do we ever see them in our community? Exception to Mr. Orange who used to be the Ward 5 Councilmember and is from this area. They should be in our Ward and meeting with our community just as much.

Make sure to let them know that you want them to ensure that RIA NE’s revitalization efforts continue and that they also become our champions on Council:

David Catania, (202) 724-7772, dcatania@dccouncil.us

Phil Mendelson, (202) 724-8064, pmendelson@dccouncil.us

Michael A. Brown, (202) 724-8105, mbrown@dccouncil.us

Vincent Orange, (202) 724-8174, vorange@dccouncil.us

12
Dec
11

In Focus: Rhode Island Row **Updated

UPDATE: Thanks to all of our loyal readers, the article below has helped spur the busiest day for the Rhode Island Ave Insider EVER! Well over 900 1,100 1,600 2,800 3,300 people have viewed this article! Keep reading!! The second busiest day: February 7′s article on…you guessed it: Rhode Island Row! This shows any potential developer/retailer…the interest for redevelopment is here!

————————————–

by Greg Roberts

The Friends of Rhode Island Ave board of directors headed to the still under construction, Rhode Island Row this Sunday to take a tour of the development and look at the apartment portion of the project. This mixed-use, transit-oriented development located at the Rhode Island Metro station, has not yet been wholly completed yet but it is starting to get their letters of intent signed for the retail sections (more on that later).

The tour started next door in the parking lot of the TJ Maxx, where we met with Caroline Kenney, development manager with Urban Atlantic, co-developer of Rhode Island Row (along with joint venture partner A&R Development Corp.). The meeting in this parking lot allowed the group to get a better view of the development and learn more about the progress of this new development. This viewpoint allowed us to see the already constructed south side of the development that includes the ground-level retail and residential units over that. The new parking garage on the back of this building is a restricted garage for the building’s residents. The north side building (closest to Rhode Island Ave) is still under construction including the parking garage which will be hidden within the development. The entrance to this garage, which will be for residential and public parking, is located off of the Main Street.

The group was then led to the south building’s top floor to look at the residential model units and various other sized apartments. I was, as was the rest of the group, quite impressed with the units. The floors in the units varied from hardwood-look resilient flooring (both dark and light) to a very interesting stained concrete floor. There are three sizes of apartments (1, 2, and 3 bedrooms) available and the development has 55 affordable units and 219 market priced units. The market units vary in price as well, from as low as $1,700 for a 1-bedroom up to $3,500 for the 3-bedroom. Up to 10 units have already been occupied and are being used. Below are some of the photos from the model units.

The retail units of the development are still not completely leased but they are moving along. The largest unit, located on the north side building at the corner has been announced as a CVS Pharmacy. Next to the CVS is a 4,500sq.ft. unit that the developer believes is an ideal location and would like to lease it out to a restaurant; negotiations are currently underway with a local restauranteur but a lease has not yet been signed. Ms. Kenney is confident that she could get a chain restaurant to go into that space but they would rather the space be a unique restaurant (and I am sure we can all agree!). While several letters of intent have been executed, there are not signed leases for the other spaces so Caroline cannot say who they are talking to. She assured me, though, that she will share any new tenants with the Insider as they happen! One tenant she was excited about talking to will be a DC government agency but she could not elaborate at this time on which agency, just that it will be a great traffic driver for the entire development.

One aspect that was missing is Capital Bikeshare. Caroline is interested in bringing this to the development and metro stop but no concrete plans have been made. The development, though, will have parking for bicycles. Perhaps this development could help other organizers and DDOT to install bike lanes on RIA and make the MBT trail more accessible.

The community will also have the opportunity to use space within Rhode Island Row. Caroline reports that the development teamplans to include some space and make it available for community events, such as local art shows or exhibits to community events (did someone say, FORIA meetings?). Rhode Island Row is excited to see the residents gathering together, aka Friends of Rhode Island Ave, and the comments left on the Insider blog. Caroline uses the blog and FORIA to show potential retail tenants about the enthusiasm of this community. This is proof in point that everything positive we do does matter. So please, make sure to leave comments here and join FORIA!

Do you need another reason to join FORIA: We will be partnering with Urban Atlantic for Rhode Island Row’s grand opening in 2012 and you can be part of the fun! Join today!

06
Nov
11

It’s Alive!

On Saturday, the Premier Community Development Corporation (PCDC) resurfaced and held a community meeting to discuss the redevelopment of Rhode Island Ave NE corridor. The meeting appeared to be about 30 members of the community, including elected officials (Thomas, Orange and ANC members) and PCDC members. PCDC attempted to have a panel with Councilmembers Thomas and Orange, and a planning department staff member, discuss the vision of RIA. The panel ended up mainly being an opportunity for Thomas and Orange to speak to their redevelopment efforts and accomplishments since being in office.

The goals of PCDC, as stated on its website:

-Develop and implement new program initiatives that will help shape the nature of commercial development in the PCDC target area and assist low and moderate income residents to remain in the area.
-Ensure that PCDC’s current community empowerment initiatives remain relevant and effective for community residents.
-Expand, increase, and diversify the sources of financial support for the current and future operations, programs, projects, and initiatives of PCDC.
-Increase public awareness of past accomplishments, current programs and services, and future initiatives of PCDC.

So who is PCDC and what have they been up to?

According to an Urban Land Institute (ULI) report, PCDC formed in 1999 as a community membership organization to improve housing, economic development and the quality of life in Ward 5. PCDC eventually became a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation in 2001, with a full-time, paid Executive Director.

In 2008 the ULI awarded technical assistance panel reports to a number of organizations, including PCDC. The report, which can be downloaded HERE, was essentially an instruction manual developed by ULI on how to redevelop Woodridge. PCDC was supposed to use that report to actually redevelop Woodridge. At the time the ULI report was published (2008), PCDC was seeking grants to support its operating costs, and pursuing funding from the DC Main Streets program. The Main Street program gives an organization funding to revitalize a neighborhood business district. The ULI report states that Harry Thomas Jr. earmarked funding for the RIA’s revitalization to implement the goals of the Main Street program. However, PCDC ultimately failed to obtain the green light to be the operator of a Rhode Island Ave Main Street under the DC Main Streets program. All that Main Street money went away, and Woodridge is no better off in 2011 than it was in 2008. Now Rhode Island Ave does not have a Main Street Program and probably can’t get one because that program isn’t taking new applicants. It appears that in the three years since receiving technical assistance from the ULI, PCDC has not implemented any of the recommendations from the ULI Report.

Although I am happy to see this group resurrect itself (more community activists are always a good thing)…I am wondering what spurred such a quick meeting on RIA redevelopment, especially from a group that has been rather dormant lately (it’s most recent attempt to set up a farmer’s market in Edgewood was not approved by ANC5C).

I had a conversation with a member of PCDC during this’s past Saturday’s PCDC visioning meeting. The woman, who claimed to have lived in the area since the 70′s, was agitated that a new group of residents was organizing and she viewed them as a young, new resident group that didn’t have a diverse group of ideas from new and old residents of the community. I quickly corrected her, pointing out the outreach the group has been doing through its website and on all of the widely used Ward5 listserves (the same mechanism used by all the ANCs, Civic Associations, Ward 5 Dems, and CM Thomas to announce meetings and events). Friends of RIA has an open survey on its website seeking ideas and membership from residents of all stripes. The group also recently elected a long time Woodridge resident and former MPD officer as its Chairman. The Friends group is also in the works of planning a project to go door-to-door to reach residents who are not using the web.

This conversation was discouraging to me for many reasons but most of all because it indicates that a small group of older residents feel threatened by not being in control and perhaps also disinterested in collaboration. This woman felt threatened that newer residents had ideas about bringing positive change to the area that may not coincide with her own ideas. She stated that bad things have already been said about FORIA, alluding that newer residents were trying to circumvent older generations in the area. This notion couldn’t have been further from the truth, and she would have known this if she had bothered to talk to anyone from FORIA (after speaking with me, she seemed to calm down a bit and understand a little more).

Reports from my contacts about the recent Happy Hour at Lace this past week hosted by Friends of Rhode Island Avenue & Brookland, was that it was impressive; that the group brought together 65+ neighbors and the diversity of the crowd was reflective of the community. It is equally, if not more, impressive that the group already has well over 120 “Friends” and they are growing everyday by encouraging open and free membership to everyone. They have only been announced for a month!

As Harry Thomas pointed out at the PCDC meeting on Saturday, we all have the same goals of positive redevelopment for Rhode Island Ave NE. We need to work together, to not be afraid of change, and to welcome collaboration. Friends of Rhode Island Ave should be welcomed with open arms by a veteran group like PCDC that needs invigoration and new ideas to move the common good of our community forward. I am looking for VERY positive things to come for our area. I am not looking forward to small-town politics and in-fighting that will keep us all down. We need to unite as a community, develop common goals, and pursue them together.

Harry Thomas mentioned at the meeting that he is immediately forming a Rhode Island Avenue Task Force. This is the perfect opportunity for all interested parties to work together in the service of a common interest.

Again, I highly encourage everyone to join “Friends of Rhode Island Avenue” and ask your neighbors to join also! Strength in numbers….we can make a difference. Go to www.friendsofria.org




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