Thursday, May 14, 2009
Saturday, February 28, 2009
Historical D.C. Jewish Synagogue to again be moved,
even though St Vincent de Paul could not budge for the South Capitol Mall
Washington, D.C.'s oldest Jewish Synagogue moved several blocks in 1969 to accommodate WMATA subway construction
and placed next to I-395
From the Triangle [near I-395] not just parking lots anymore:
http://mvtriangle.blogspot.com/2009/02/i-395-air-rights-update.html---I-395 Air Rights update
Louis Dreyfus Property Group presented an update on their I-395 air rights project at both the ANC6C Planning, Zoning and Environment (PZ&E) committee meeting and the full commission meeting this February.
Si Kailian attended the PZ&E meeting and provided a recap on the MVSNA blog.
From RobA:(Dreyfus) submitted the PUD application for the first phase of development at the end of the year and will now be going through the process of scheduling the official ANC and Zoning hearings as well as working with the Federal Highway Authority on the project. It's an exciting development, planned to be LEED Platinum certified and will add commercial, retail, residential, and green space to what is now the I-395 cavern.From Si's recap:(Dreyfus is) proposing to construct an approximately 2.2 million square foot mixed-use development, which consists of approximately 2 million square feet of commercial use (which includes approximately 75,000 square feet of retail) and 180,000 square feet of residential. One Committee member did remark how the conceptual design of the north elevation was reminiscent of Tech World, its has a similar element of 2 big buildings with a 3 story connection element - but with green space below instead of an expanse of concrete.I did not attend the PZ&E meeting, but did see the presentation at the full ANC6C commission meeting. Below is what I sketched translated to a Google satellite image. This is an approximation not exact - PLEASE DON'T TAKE IT TOO SERIOUSLY.Click to enlarge; Blue=commercial, Red=Residential, Dark Green=relocated buildings
Some points I picked up during the presentation:
- Decking will cost ~$210 million; Office component must be maximized to cover capitalization costs
- Area is zoned for medium density office or high density residential/hotel. Requesting zoning relief to allow high density office.
- All parking and loading docks are below ground between 3rd Street NW and I-395.
- The P1 parking level showed substantial bike parking
- Residential building will have 150 units; 50 affordable with a mix of 30 and 60 AMI
- Jewish Historical building will need to be relocated
- At the moment neither F or G Streets will be fully restored to vehicle traffic from 3rd to 1st Street. The Holy Rosary Church and Georgetown Law each want sections to remain pedestrian only.
Labels: I-395, Louis DreyfusPosted by fourthandeye at 18:00
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http://www.goethe.de/Ins/us/was/pro/vtour/dc1/C2/13/en_index.htmLillian and Albert Small Jewish Museum, housed in the historic Adas Israel Synagogue, listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the oldest surviving synagogue in the District of Columbia. The synagogue was built by German Jewish immigrants who broke off from Washington Hebrew Congregation, and President Ulysses S. Grant attended its dedication in 1876 at the invitation of Simon Wolf. The historic synagogue was originally located at 6th and G Streets.
http://www.goethe.de/Ins/us/was/pro/vtour/dc1/C2/13/en_tmb_1.htm
Plaque marking the original location of the historic Adas Israel Synagogue at 6th and G Streets NW.
---http://www.goethe.de/Ins/us/was/pro/vtour/dc1/B1/05/en_tmb_2.htm
Simon Wolf (1836-1923), lawyer, statesman and prominent member of Washington's German-American community, was born in Hinzweiler, then and now a very small village (current population: 460) northwest of Kaiserslautern in today's German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. In the period after 1815, the Palatinate was administratively, but not culturally part of Bavaria. He emigrated to the United States as a boy in 1848 and settled in Uhrichsville, Ohio. He was admitted to the Ohio Bar in 1861 and came to Washington the following year, where he spent most of the rest of his life.
A friend of presidents from Abraham Lincoln to Woodrow Wilson, Wolf was named Consul and Agent Diplomatique to Egypt in 1881 and was at other times in his life Recorder of Deeds for the District of Columbia and a member of Washington's Board of Charities and Board of Education. He was a prominent member of Washington Hebrew Congregation and was known as a spokesman for Jewish causes in Washington.
As a friend of President Grant's, he was responsible for convincing Grant to attend the dedication of the historic Adas Israel Synagogue (now the Lillian and Albert Small Jewish Museum) as well as for convincing President McKinley to attend the ground-breaking ceremonies for the Washington Hebrew Congregation's building on 8th Street (now Greater New Hope Baptist Church). He was also a member of the Sängerbund and other German-American organizations.
The Washington City Directories in the 1890s list Wolf & Cohen, the law and insurance business that he ran with his son-in-law, Meyer Cohen, at 921 F St. NW in 1890 and at 926 F St. NW in 1898.
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A day away: Small museum has big role in D.C.'s Jewish historyCharles J. Adams IIIReading Eagle Correspondent
http://www.readingeagle.com/article.aspx?id=124185Washington, D.C. - It is a small museum. In fact, it is the Small Museum. More specifically, it is the Lillian & Albert Small Jewish Museum.
Even more precisely, it is the Adas Israel synagogue in Washington, D.C.
Described as a brick structure of "stripped-down Romanesque Revival," the small (60 by 25 feet) building looms large in the growth of the capital's Jewish community.
The first Jewish congregation there met in 1852. That Washington Hebrew Congregation eschewed many orthodox rituals and, in 1869, 17 members broke away to form their own congregation that would maintain a stricter adherence to Jewish traditions. They chose the name "Adas Israel" and eventually built their own house of worship that was dedicated on June 9, 1876. Among those in attendance was President Ulysses S. Grant.
It is said that the second-floor sanctuary could hold 350 people, while the first floor contained a meeting room, classroom and the caretaker's apartment.
As the congregation outgrew the building, it found a more spacious sanctuary a couple of blocks away. In 1951, the congregation occupied its present synagogue at 2850 Quebec St., NW.
The original building spent the first half of the 20th century as a Christian church, a barbershop, bike shop, grocery and deli, and a dentist's office.
In 1966, the story of that first Adas Israel synagogue took an amazing turn, literally and figuratively.
The building was in sad shape and the city ordered it to be demolished. The Jewish Historical Society, the city and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development came to terms and it was determined that the structure could be saved if it was moved.
In December 1969, the second floor sanctuary and third floor balcony were detached from an unfit-for-travel first level, loaded onto a flatbed truck and transported to its present site.
Those upper stories were placed upon a first level that was re-created from bricks salvaged from the 1876 structure.
As much of the expense was borne by an endowment from the Small family, the resulting museum was named in their honor.
The museum was administered by the Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington, which also maintained its offices in the former synagogue. In May 2008, those offices and archives were moved into larger quarters a block away.
The society has put together an exhibition that contributes to the nationwide observance of the 250th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's birth, "Jewish Life in Mr. Lincoln's City."
The exhibit includes items from the Jewish Historical Society's collections and images from the Library of Congress and other collections. It opens at the Washington Hebrew Congregation, 3935 Macomb St., NW, on Feb. 13 and will move to the Small Jewish Museum where it will be on view from June 9 through September.
•E-mail correspondent Charles J. Adams III at weekend@readingeagle.com.
http://www.jhsgw.org/popups/sanct_tour/firstfloor.php
First Floor. After Adas Israel vacated the building (shown here during the period that it was used as a barbeque restaurant), it was reconfigured for commercial use. But the addition of storefront windows and doors weakened the first floor, so in 1969 that floor was left behind because it was not strong enough to survive the move to Third and G Streets, NW. Masons working on a replacement foundation at the Third and G site salvaged as many bricks as possible from the original location.
Physical Reality
Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington and Lillian & Albert Small Jewish Museum
Saturday, January 10, 2009
(caption and photo from Richard Layman) http://flickr.com/photos/82269993@N00/19498211/
http://www.jdland.com/dc/photobrowse.cfm?int=southcapitolm&toward=all
20 M Street looms to the rear of the St Vincent de Paul Roman Catholic Church in the exact position that thwarts the latter's sensible relocation for accommodating the promenade of the South Capitol Mall.
next to South Capitol Mall
Washington, D.C.'s oldest Jewish Synagogue moved several blocks in 1969 to accommodate WMATA subway construction
and placed next to I-395
close up
showing church like building suggestive of the idea of a few hundred foot relocation of St Vincent de Paul Church
The South Capitol Mall this relocation would have accommodated, appeared on the cover and throughout the U.S. National Capital Planning Commission's 1997 publication of "Extending the Legacy: Planning America's Capital for the 21st Century."
Alas the Roman Catholic Church is nowhere near as civic-minded.
Born November 30, 1928
Elected 29th Jesuit Order Superior General September 13, 1983;
Resigned January 14, 2008
http://z10.invisionfree.com/The_Unhived_Mind_II/index.php?showtopic=999
"W" Stadium
http://www.citypaper.com/bob/story.asp?id=12288
Best Demolished Landmark
The fact that the Rochambeau Apartments was knocked down reveals just how vulnerable old buildings are in the city. The 101-year-old Rochambeau, with its signature dormer-style front, was impeding the Archdiocese's plans to create a campus around the Basilica of the Assumption, which is in the midst of a $35 million renovation project. Never mind that the Rochambeau sat along Charles Street where office buildings are quickly being converted into condos, the Archdiocese wants to use the site as a prayer garden and told the city that it would cry "freedom of religion" in court if denied a demolition permit.It's true that one person's old decrepit building is another's link to the past and people in Baltimore get surprisingly touchy when the wrecking ball swings. But it's also true that these old buildings, whether warehouses or tiny wood-frame homes, offer Baltimore an edge over other cities that have already torn down much of their old stock or missed out on the heyday of America's industrial architecture. Just check out the buildings that were spared, like the Bagby Building near Little Italy and the A-framed foundry on Aliceanna Street that now houses Pazo's. These structures serve as Baltimore's fire wall against looking like, say, Crystal City, Va., or downtown Silver Spring, places that have the ambiance of an airport mall.
In the window of the nearby Craig Flinner Gallery.
(caption and photos from Richard Layman)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/zombie37/276933055/in/set-72157594340759268/
The Roman Catholic Church decides to tear down the Rochambeau apartment building in Baltimore to clear the view around its Basilica of the Assumption, yet apparently, they did not object to Theodore Lerner's 20 M Street project looming behind the St Vincent DePaul Church in Washington, D.C.
Richard Layman: Losing My Religion- Continued
Beside the [misplaced] Lump of Coal...
Physical Realities Of Lerner's 20 M Street Project
Physical Realities Of St Vincent de Paul Roman Church