October 6: Capoeira at Riggs-LaSalle Rec

Capoeira Malês DC
Batizado & Troca De Cordas
Riggs-LaSalle Recreation Center
501 Riggs Road NE
1:00 pm-4:00 pm

Mestre Curisco is often called the Bruce Lee of capoeira. Mestre Curisco is the supervising mestre of Capoeira Malês DC (Capoeira DC), our neighbors at The Capoeira Spot at 20th and Rhode Island Avenue NE. This Saturday they will celebrate the changing of the cords “Troca De Cordas” of their students at Riggs-LaSalle Recreation Center at 1:00 pm. Free and open to the public.

Capoeira Malês DC joined us for Riggs Park Day in May, so if saw them then, you know the energy they bring. Bring your children. Come yourself.

 

October 6: Bertie Backus Farm Stand

Bertie Backus Farm Stand
October 6, 2018
UDC-CC Backus
5171 South Dakota Avenue NE
9:00 am-12:00 pm

This Saturday, check out the UDC Bertie Backus Farm Stand where seasonal, local and organically grown produce will be available for sale. Even if you do not plan to make a purchase, please stop by to sign in to show your support for having the farm stand continue in the future.

Menu

Collard greens
Red Russian kale
Bok Choy
Beets
cucumbers
Holy basil
Winter squash
Kohlrabi
Peppers
Swiss Chard
Lettuce
Hibiscus Leaves

Survey on Second Phase of Art Place

The Lamond-Riggs Development Task Force has developed a survey to gather community input on the second phase of Art Place at Fort Totten, which was previously discussed in this post. This will be a useful tool to document what questions residents have regarding the project with the aim of getting written responses from the developer so that the community can be informed about the project. Before completing the survey, please take some time to review the project. A preliminary list of questions has already been developed, which can be viewed here: LRCA Task Force Questions to Cafritz 9.25.18 (pdf). Please complete the survey by clicking the link.

October 13: Free Anacostia River Boat Tour

Anacostia River Boat Tour
October 13, 2018
12:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Bladensburg Waterfront Park
4601 Annapolis Road
Bladensburg, MD 20710

The Lamond-Riggs Citizens Association & the Anacostia Watershed Society are sponsoring a free boat tour of the Anacostia River. Free roundtrip bus transportation from neighborhood, departing Lamond-Riggs Library at 11:30 am and returning to the library by 3:00pm. When you sign up, indicate whether you would like to reserve a seat on the bus. Children under 18 permitted with parent/guardian.

Registration required. Click the link for free registration and details.

October 2: Meditation at Lamond-Riggs Library

Tonight at 7:00 pm, the Lamond-Riggs Library is offering a free meditation session called “Meditation for Inner Peace During Turbulent Times.” Check it out.

Program description:

We are living in a time that feels often confusing and stressful. Join David Newcomb for this popular and engaging program. Participants will be guided through a first-hand personal experience of meditation which is the secret to profound personal well-being and global healing. For adults.

 

Design/build team selected for Lamond-Riggs Library reconstruction

From DC Public Library:

The Lamond-Riggs Library, at 5401 South Dakota Ave. NE, is going to be rebuilt. The project is fully funded at $20 million.

The DC Public Library has selected Consigli and HGA as the design/build team for the new Lamond-Riggs Library.

With this team in place, the planning for the new library will begin in October. The design process will take 12 months. Once the design is complete, the current building will be closed and an interim location will provide library service during construction. The new building will open in late 2020.

There will be a community meeting on October 23, 2018, at Lamond-Riggs Library.

September 15: UDC Bertie Backus Farm Stand

The farm stand is still on this Saturday! Weather forecast shows spotty showers, so come on out and support the farm stand.

Bertie Backus Farm Stand
September 15, 2018
9:00 am-12:00 pm
UDC Backus
5171 South Dakota Avenue NE

Vegetable list
Butternut Squash
Eggplant
Beets
Delicata Squash
Acton Squash
Hot Peppers
Kohlrabi
Collard Greens
Kale
Swiss Chard
Hot Peppers
Basil
Bell Peppers
Tomatoes
Hibiscus Leaves*

* Hibiscus leaves are a part of the ethnic crops initiative. They are eaten in parts of Africa, Asia and the Caribbean. They have a lemony tang and are delicious cooked down like kale or eaten raw as part of a salad.

Upcoming Events at Culture Coffee Too

If you are not following our neighborhood coffee shop Culture Coffee Too on facebook, you really should. Located at 300 Riggs Road NE, the coffee shop always has cool events going on, such as music performances, workshops, artist exhibits, and open mic nights. It has a nice selection of food along with coffee, tea, smoothies, coffee cocktails, beer, and wine.

A few upcoming events

September 7, 6:00 pm-8:00 pm: Opening night of The Grace of Movement exhibition by artist Kimeke Robinson

September 8, 11:00 am-3:00 pm: Plant popup shop by Lillith Plant Company

September 15, 3:00 pm-6:00 pm: Sip and Sow Workshop – This interactive planting party will cover everything from feeding, watering, and harvesting to quick recipes, pickling demos, and a juicing lesson. Guests will choose a combination of: beet, carrot, radish, & onion to plant while enjoying a collection of food, beer, and wine. Tickets available for purchase at the link.

CANCELLED-September 7: Fridays at Fort Totten Concert with Eastern Standard Time

Last concert of the Fridays at Fort Totten Concert Series 2018 summer season this Friday! This week’s event features the band Eastern Standard Time and eats by CapMac food truck. 6:00 pm-8:00 pm on the corner of South Dakota Avenue and Galloway Street NE.

This free concert series sponsored by On Tap Magazine and The Modern at Art Place has been really great for the neighborhood. Most of the featured bands and food trucks were really good. It was nice to have something to walk to, meet neighbors, chat with friends, and show that the neighborhood can support food and activities. Come on out to enjoy the last concert of the series.

 

Updated Plans for Art Place at Fort Totten Phase 2

Perspective of Block B from application

Post update 9/7/2018 (see ed. note*)

Yesterday the Cafritz Foundation filed an application for a second-stage review and approval of a planned unit development (PUD)  and modification of the first-stage PUD approval for Art Place at Fort Totten. The Zoning Commission previously told the developer to go back to the drawing board for the second phase (then referred to as Building B) and required the team to file a second-stage PUD application review by September 4 along with a phasing plan for the third and fourth phases of the project. The previous plan can be found here: Art Place Building B (pdf). Below is a perspective of the previous plan.

The updated second phase plan (now referred to as Block B) is quite different, interesting, and a little more cohesive. Block B would sit in a square roughly bounded by Ingraham Street NE to the south, South Dakota Avenue NE to the east, Kennedy Street NE to the north, and the public alley just beyond 4th Street NE to the west. As mentioned in a previous post, the team is proposing to move some elements from previously approved future phases to the second phase, such as the children’s museum and other cultural uses. There will be residential and retail uses. The plan would close 4th Street NE between Ingraham Street and Kennedy Street to maximize the footprint of Block B. Recall the first phase closed 4th Street between Galloway Street and Hamilton Street. closed Hamilton Street west of South Dakota to 4th Street, and extended Ingraham Street west of South Dakota Avenue.

Still need to look at the plan more in-depth, but here is what I can tell so far:

:

  • Family Entertainment Zone (FEZ) on South Dakota and Ingraham: The FEZ at Art Place is the highlight of the plan. The development team really went for it. The FEZ would feature a circular building that would be illuminated (in the renderings it looks blue). Described as a high-tech center that will host an innovative artist collective, it will serve as a “beacon” for the project, visible from various locations in the neighborhood. It will also potentially host a video game/virtual reality center, maker space for children, festivals, free children’s programming during the day, and music and comedy performances, book signings and lectures in the evening.
  • Food Hall along 4th Street and wrapping around onto Ingraham Street (part of the FEZ) that will host special events and cooking classes with different chefs as well as a brewery
  • Total cultural uses of just over 150,000 square feet
  • Children’s Museum of 24,931 square feet (reduced from 47,000 square feet approved in first-stage order) on South Dakota between Ingraham and Kennedy
  • Ground floor Grocery Store of 11,498 approximately 24,000 square feet* near South Dakota Avenue and Kennedy Street. The application says that the grocery store had to be reduced from the previously approved 59,000 square feet because of Walmart, which opened in 2015 and operates a full-service grocery store.
  • Closure of 4th Street to create pedestrian walkway. There would be space for various kiosks along the pedestrian walkway
  • Approximately 30 subsidized artist housing/maker space units on eastern side of closed 4th Street
  • Apartment building with approximately 210-250 rental units with ground floor retail on western side of closed 4th Street; current renderings show brick veneer and paneling of mix of neutral colors
  • Additional ground floor retail on South Dakota Avenue
  • Total retail of approximately 50,000 square feet
  • Water feature along the pedestrian walkway
  • Morris Square, outdoor plaza at South Dakota and Ingraham to serve as a grand entrance into the FEZ
  • Underground parking; 765 vehicle parking spaces (reduced from 1100 approved in first-stage order); parking entrance on South Dakota just north of Ingraham and on Ingraham just west of South Dakota
  • Max height of 75 feet (increase from previously approved 60 feet building height)
  • Truck loading access off Kennedy Street and northern portion of closed 4th Street
  • Extensive Landscaping
  • Green Roofs
  • Two existing Riggs Plaza apartments will remain on-site to continue facilitating relocation plan for remaining Riggs Plaza tenants
  • Community benefits are the project itself with some amenities for residents of the project

Proposed phasing plan

  • 1st quarter 2020: Begin construction on Block B, expected to take 30 months
  • 3rd quarter 2022: Block B construction completed
  • December 31, 2024: Applicant will file PUD application for either Block C or Block D
  • December 31, 2030: Applicant will file PUD application for final block

Initial impression is that I appreciate the attempt at placemaking. The development team hired the consultant behind Bryant Park in New York to conduct focus groups and a survey for the second phase, and much of the plan reflects ideas from those outreach engagements. I can think of a few things that residents really want that did not make it into the plan, but this is a grand project designed to promote a lot of different uses and attract people to and moving around the neighborhood, no doubt about it. The FEZ in particular will be a tall building at 75 feet. I do not mind a building that tall given that it will be separated from the residential homes on South Dakota Avenue by four lanes. The Modern at Art Place across the street from the site is fairly tall as well, and I think it has been an attractive addition to the neighborhood. The previous plan called for one huge building. The current plan breaks up the site into multiple components of varying heights. I appreciate that this plan keeps a pedestrian walkway along 4th Street NE so that pedestrians do not lose another access path to the metro station. According to the applicant, this project would rest on 5.18 acres, which is a lot, so might as well be ambitious as long as it is thoughtful.

The first phase, The Modern at Art Place, is a beautiful, well-done project with superior landscaping. It showed serious investment of resources by the developer, which cannot be said of a couple of other projects in the neighborhood. I really appreciated that the team underground the wires for the first phase because that makes such a big difference in the sight lines and we do not have to worry about butchering newly planted trees. That was not a cheap undertaking and they did it. That project really set a much-needed high bar for development in the neighborhood, and it looks like the developer intends to continue setting a high bar with the second phase.

Read the supporting statement here: Statement for PUD — APFT – Block B (Sept. 2018) (pdf). Take a look at the full plans here: Art Place at Fort Totten PUD full book Phase 2 – reduced size (pdf). Take a look at the gallery of a few images pulled from the plans below and share your thoughts.

*Ed. note 9/7/2018: The development team stated the following regarding the square footage of the grocery store: “The size of the planned grocery store noted in this article represents the Zoning Floor Area rather than the actual floor area of the store. According to current Zoning regulations only floor area located at or above grade count towards the Gross Floor Area. Because of the site topography and the location of the grocery on South Dakota Avenue NE, more than half of the total floor area is viewed as below grade space from a zoning regulation point of view. The total store area is approximately 24,000 SF.”

Site and floor plans

Perspectives

Circulation plans and diagrams

August 31: Fridays at Fort Totten Concert Series with Cecily

This week is the rain date for the Fridays at Fort Totten Concert Series. Check out photos from last week’s concert. If it does not rain, this week will feature music by Cecily. Friday 6:00 pm-8:00 pm at the corner of South Dakota Avenue & Galloway Street NE. Bring a lawn chair for seating. Sponsored by On Tap Magazine and The Modern at Art Place.

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: 9/11 Day of Service at Bertie Backus Food Hub September 8

Be sure to register for the 9/11 Day of Service at the Bertie Backus Food Hub on September 8. Lots of volunteers are needed to make this day a big success. The Bertie Backus Food Hub is a valuable amenity in the neighborhood. Please consider joining your neighbors and local veterans in making upgrades to the food hub.

From UDC:

The College of Agriculture, Urban Sustainability and Environmental Sciences (CAUSES), of the University of the District of Columbia (UDC), is partnering with The Mission Continues for the 2nd Annual 9/11 Day of Service. This year’s service day will take place on September 8th at UDC’s Bertie Backus Urban Food Hub, located in Ward 5. The food hub has aquaponic and hydroponic systems, a native plant nursery and garden beds for the community.

Join us as we work together to beautify the food hub to better serve the Ward 5 community. We will upgrade some of the site’s current amenities and build additional ones. Some of the upgrades scheduled to take place include:

  • A painted mural
  • Handicap raised beds
  • Wood fence
  • Trench drains for the hoop houses
  • Additional grow space for the native plant nursery
  • Café tables and chairs for the outdoors kitchen

EVENT DETAILS
September 8, 2018
Bertie Backus Urban Food Hub
5171 South Dakota Avenue, NE
Washington, D.C. 20017
9:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.

This volunteer event is FREE and open to the public.

REGISTER HERE

CONTACT
Amanda Tai
amanda.tai@udc.edu
(202) 274-7193

Ramdass Pharmacy Now Open

Ramdass Pharmacy, an independent, locally-owned pharmacy and convenience store, is now open at 475 Ingraham Street NE. Conveniently located just steps from Fort Totten metro station, the pharmacy is the second business to open in the Art Place at Fort Totten development.

In addition to the pharmacy, the store offers a notary service, basic convenience products, ATM, lottery, snacks, and beverages. You can even pick up greeting cards and helium balloons for different occasions!

The pharmacy accepts major insurance plans and is currently awaiting contracts with others, which is anticipated in September. Before then, contact the pharmacy at (202) 526-2200 to find out if your plan is contracted. They also fill prescriptions on a cash basis. Check out this conveniently located pharmacy and support local!

Ramdass Pharmacy
475 Ingraham Street NE
Operating hours:
Monday–Friday 8:00 am–9:00 pm
Saturday 9:00 am–6:00 pm
Sunday 10:00 am–5:00 pm

 

Shining Stars Pediatric Dentistry 1st Business to Open at Art Place

Shining Stars Pediatric Dentistry, located at 435 Ingraham Street NE, is open for business! Conveniently located near Fort Totten metro station, the pediatric dentistry is the first business to open at the Art Place at Fort Totten Development. The practice by Dr. Gina Pham, a 15-year board-certified pediatric dentist, is accepting appointments for comprehensive dental services for infants, children, and teens. As children return to school, now is the perfect time to book those back-to-school checkups. Book an appointment online or call (202) 600-4833.

 

August 22: ANC 5A Public Meeting

ANC 5A Public Meeting
August 22, 2018
6:45 pm
UDC Backus
5171 South Dakota Avenue NE

This Month’s Meeting Agenda – 
1. Office of Muriel Bowser, Mayor
2. Office of Kenyan McDuffie, Ward Five Councilman
3. ABRA Application – “Tasting Endorsement” – Pax Liquor, Inc. (4944 South Dakota Ave. NE)
4. BZA Application No. 19833 – 5048 11th Street NE
5. Update – Art Place at Fort Totten

August 17: Special Edition Fridays at Fort Totten Concert Series

A special edition of Fridays at Fort Totten Concert Series is in store for tomorrow 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm. Live music by Deacon Izzy and eats by Capital Chicken & Waffles. First 100 guests get free ice cream from Dolci Gelati. On the corner of South Dakota Avenue and Galloway Street NE. Bring a lawn chair or blanket for seating. Sponsored by On Tap Magazine and The Modern at Art Place.

 

Art Place at Fort Totten Phase II

At last week’s ANC 5A meeting, zoning counsel for the Cafritz Foundation presented a few high level renderings for the second phase of Art Place at Fort Totten. This phase will be located generally on South Dakota Avenue NE between Ingraham and Kennedy. The developer must submit its second phase plans to the Zoning Commission by September 4. We generally knew about everything they presented. The second phase will be mainly commercial, but there may be some residential use. They will incorporate uses that were scheduled for future phases. They envision the space as a family entertainment zone, but think moreso a family theater and other theater and arts uses, not Dave & Busters type entertainment zone. The Explore! Children’s Museum will be in the second phase. The development team is still talking about a grocery store. The building itself is currently designed to have a grand plaza on South Dakota Avenue to serve as a “striking entrance” into the building.

Cafritz’s zoning counsel was there to talk about the second phase, but lots of residents had lots of thoughts to share about the first phase, mainly centered on when there would be sit-down restauarants and useful retailers in the first phase. The team there did not have much to say about that because of course they were hired to provide assistance with zoning not retail. We’ll be hearing more about the second phase in due time.

Providence Hospital Update

At last week’s ANC 5A meeting on August 1, Ruth Pollard, Chief Strategy Officer at Providence Hospital, provided a little more information about the hosptial’s press release that stated the hospital is ending acute care services by December 2018. Acute care include inpatient care and emergency care, so Providence will be closing its emergency room by December 2018. Providence plans to continue outpatient care for the remaining services that it offers. Recall that Providence has ceased providing several areas of care. The Carroll Manor skilled nursing facility will remain on the Providence campus and will likely become part of Ascension Living. The retired priest campus will likely move. Ms. Pollard said the retired priest campus will likely move in the future.

With respect to the health village concept floated by Providence last year, Ms. Pollard said the hospital has decided to “pause” solicitation for health village concepts. Ms. Pollard made it a point to say Providence will always have a “presence” in Ward 5 and the District. They just are not sharing what that presence looks like, and maybe they really do not know what that presence looks like at this point. Ms. Pollard talked a lot about social determinants and working to keep people healthy rather than just focusing on serving people once they become actutely ill.

Given that the mission of the hospital is to serve the poor and vulnerable, it is still unclear how all of these changes align with that mission. Ms. Pollard noted that there are other nearby hospital networks that people can use, specifically mentioning MedStar Washington Hospital Center and Children’s Medical. She made it a point to say that most nearby residents do not utilize the hospital. Ms. Pollard did mention that the hospital is looking at opportunities to provide services in Wards 7 and 8. According to Ms. Pollard, the hospital draws the highest number of its patients from Wards 4, 5, and 7. District officials have been working to open a hospital to serve residents in Wards 7 and 8.  So it sounded like Providence is exploring maybe being part of that endeavor. It is all still very unclear.

Because Providence has not been super transparent or forthcoming about what it is doing, there are lots of rumors floating around. The hospital now has a very short set of FAQs relating to its restructing on its website. It does not answer a whole lot, but it is a start. Hopefully the hospital will see value in adding more meaningful updates in the future.