Search This Blog

Saturday, April 16, 2011

City Paper Forum for At Large Candidates

City Paper had one threshold each candidate had to pass.  They all had to raise over ten thousand dollars in campaign contributions.
Candidates were treated to questions from Chuck Thies, Alan Suderman and Tom Sherwood.


Acting-Councilman Sekou Biddle. 



 Former Commissioner Bryan Weaver is the darling of the philosophically liberal



 ANC Commissioner Josh Lopez has the eyes and ears of the Latino community, which is the fastest growing minority community in DC.

Patrick Mara  is the only Republican in the race.  Riding high from his latest victory as the Ward I School Board representative, he wants to leave that job after 3 months to move into a more high profile position on the Council.  I'd like to see Mara on the front lines getting arrested for the sake of democracy at home. 

 Biddle, Lopez and Mara.

 Thies, Suderman and Sherwood.


Vincent Orange would be the At Large corporate Councilmember.  As former VP of PEPCO, the corporate utilities are sure to have their voice on the Council.  
The 5 candidates who met the contributions threshold.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Permanent Supportive Housing for the Homeless in Columbia Heights

 The footprint of the old Calvary United Methodist Church at 1459 Columbia Road Northwest covers a large space.  The first of two sanctuaries and the tower are pictured here, gated off and vacant.

The second sanctuary is pictured below with the famous stained glass windows still in tact.  


  Over the years, Calvary served many purposes in the Columbia Heights, Mt. Pleasant and Adams Morgan communities.  The basement held a youth boxing club run by a sparring partner to Sugar Ray Leonard.  CCNV used the original sanctuary to distribute free produce and bread to the needy.  BB Otero began a daycare service in the basement, which evolved into Centro Nia up the street.  The Central American community found in Calvary a place to have meetings and events supporting  countrymen in struggle in their homelands.  
The building has been vacant for a couple of years.

On Sunday Architect Gregory Powe met with a handful of people of the Washington Inner Faith Network (WIN) at the All Soul's Church to discuss the plans of the Methodist Conference for future use of the church and property.



The Methodist Conference is planning to turn the building into permanent supportive housing for the homeless.  




There will be 80 studio apartment units.  Not all will be for the homeless.  Some will be affordable units for people who can afford them.  There will be one unit for the manager.  The architect said that they plan to keep the original stanctuary space to be turned into a community room for the residents first and also for the community to hold meetings in.  The church tower will also remain as it is.  The housing units will be build over the space where the second sanctuary was built.  The plans he presented included the two images herein.

The building will be built as a matter of right, so there will be no need for a zoning variance.  The height accomodates four floors above ground and one English basement floor.