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2013 Neighborhood Profiles

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Neighborhood
Profiles 2013
DC
The Washington, DC Economic Partnership would
like to acknowledge our sponsors whose continued
financial support has made ...
The District of Columbia has been experiencing an urban
renewal for the past 16 years, with billions of dollars in new
inv...
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2013 Neighborhood Profiles

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The Neighborhood Profiles were first published in 2001 focusing on 13 different neighborhoods. The 2013 version offers detailed demographic information, resources and maps for 50 neighborhoods and corridors supplementing traditional market data. The annual report provides a microscopic look at a variety of neighborhood and corridors and is intended to guide investors, brokers, developers and tenants on site location decision.

The Neighborhood Profiles were first published in 2001 focusing on 13 different neighborhoods. The 2013 version offers detailed demographic information, resources and maps for 50 neighborhoods and corridors supplementing traditional market data. The annual report provides a microscopic look at a variety of neighborhood and corridors and is intended to guide investors, brokers, developers and tenants on site location decision.

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2013 Neighborhood Profiles

  1. 1. Neighborhood Profiles 2013 DC
  2. 2. The Washington, DC Economic Partnership would like to acknowledge our sponsors whose continued financial support has made the DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 possible. © 2013 Washington, DC Economic Partnership Vincent C. Gray, Mayor PUBLIC SECTOR PARTNERS PRIVATE SECTOR PARTNERS
  3. 3. The District of Columbia has been experiencing an urban renewal for the past 16 years, with billions of dollars in new investments in its downtown, neighborhoods and along its waterfront. These developments along with new retail, restaurants and entertainment options have resulted in billions of public and private sector investment. Over the past three years DC’s population has increased by more than 40,000 people. Fueling this growth has been young professionals who are attracted to DC’s revitalized neighborhoods, unique retail and restaurant offerings, strong economy and various transportation options. With Metrorail, DC Circulator, Zipcar, Metro bus and the expanding Capital Bikeshare program many residents do not need to own a car and thus have more disposable income. DC’s Population Has Increased By More Than 40,000 People since 2009 592,228 580,236 574,404 570,681 567,136 20122011201020092008200720062005 604,453 619,020 632,323 Source: Census 40,000+population increase over the past 3 years1 1.3Mretail SF under construction2 #1DC metro area is the strongest economy in the U.S.3 #7most walkable city in the U.S.4 District of Columbia
  4. 4. With only 8.0 square feet per capita of shopping center space5 (compared to 23.8 square feet nationally6 ) in DC, there is an estimated retail leakage of $1 billion annually7 . In addition, with a daytime population of more than one million people and 17.9 million annual visitors who spend more than $6.0 billion8 , investors and developers have been building new retail centers to meet this unmet demand. Since 2001, 4.8 million square feet has been built with another 1.3 million square feet under construction as of 1Q 2013. Top 10 Retail Projects Under Construction Neighborhood Retail Sq. Ft. Delivery CityCenterDC Downtown DC (17) 184,700 4Q 2013 Walmart on Georgia Avenue Georgia Avenue/Brightwood (23) 106,000 4Q 2013 CityMarket at O Street Shaw (45) 87,000 4Q 2013 77 H NoMa (36) 86,000 4Q 2013 Monroe Street Market Brookland (7) 57,000 4Q 2013 Louis at 14th/U 14th & U Streets/MidCity (1) 44,000 1Q 2014 Twelve12 Capitol Riverfront (9) 88,000 2Q 2014 Petworth Safeway Petworth/Park View (42) 62,000 3Q 2014 Cathedral Commons Cleveland Park (13) 125,000 3Q 2014 Fort Totten Square Fort Totten (21) 130,000 4Q 2014 DC’s population growth and public and private investments can be experienced throughout the City. National accolades have followed with several neighborhoods being recognized as great places to live and visit. Adams Morgan & U Street was named one of the top 12 ArtPlaces in America9 Columbia Heights/11th Street named “Washington’s hippest new strip”10 U Street named one of the Great Streets in the U.S.11 H Street, NE chosen as one of the 10 Great Urban Neighborhoods12 The Capitol Riverfront’s Yards Park was voted a top 20 Public Spaces in the United States and Canada13 H Street, NE selected as the 6th Best Hipster Neighborhood14 Columbia Heights was named one of the 10 best development projects in the Americas15 H Street Main Street (2013) and Barracks Row Main Street (2005) received the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Great American Main Street Award for their revitalization efforts16 With thousands of new residents, new grocery stores and restaurants, neighborhoods such as Capitol Riverfront, Mount Vernon Triangle and NoMa have transitioned from emerging to established mixed-use districts. Corridors such as 7th and F Streets in Downtown DC, 14th & U Streets/MidCity as well as H Street, NE are re-establishing their historical status as shopping and entertainment destinations. And with the commitments of anchor tenants such as Costco and Walmart, projects such as the Shops at Dakota Crossing, Skyland Town Center and Capitol Gateway Marketplace will create additional opportunities for restaurants and local retailers. For more information on DC’s neighborhoods, incentives and resources available to retailers please continue reading the Washington, DC Economic Partnership’s DC Neighborhood Profiles. These profiles offer a concise overview of 50 neighborhoods and commercial corridors. They provide detailed demographic information, resources, maps and the latest neighborhood updates to help retailers and related parties identify new investment opportunities. Sources: 1. Census 2. WDCEP (1Q 2013) 3. POLICOM (April 2013) 4. Walkscore.com (April 2013) 5. Delta Associates (4Q 2012) 6. ICSC (2012) 7. Social Compact DrillDown (2007) 8. DestinationDC (2011) 9. ArtPlace (2013) 10. New York Times (2011) 11. American Planning Association (2011) 12. USA Today (2011) 13. Planetizen (2011) 14. Forbes (2012) 15. ULI (2010) 16. National Trust for Historic Preservation Population DC Population1 632,323 Male 47.3% Female 52.7% High School Graduate2 + 85.5% Bachelor’s Degree2 + 47.1% Graduate/Prof. Degree2 19.0% Households Households (HH) 273,186 Average HH Size 2.1 Owner-occupied 41.2% Renter-occupied 58.8% Median Home Value $390,365 Income Average HH $89,395 Median HH $59,100 HH Income <$49,999 43.0% HH Income $50 – 74,999 15.5% HH Income $75,000+ 41.5% Median HH Disposable $44,585 Age Age <20 20.0% Age 20 – 34 31.7% Age 35 – 64 36.2% Age 65+ 11.9% Median Age (years) 34.0 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)3 Apparel & Services $628,227 Computers & Accessories $78,252 Entertainment & Rec $1,098,422 Pets $166,396 TV, Radio & Sound $441,447 Food at Home $1,599,886 Food away from Home $1,164,218 Home Improvement & Services $712,929 Household Furnishings $421,410 Personal Care $136,073 Vehicle Maint. & Repair $318,155 Avg. Spent per HH $29.4 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates & Projections 1. Census (2012) 2. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 3. ESRI, 2011 Estimates & Projections
  5. 5. Retail Incentives & Resources Great Streets Initiative The Great Streets Initiative is a multi-year and multiple agency effort to transform under-invested corridors into thriving and inviting neighborhood centers using public actions and resources, as needed, to leverage private investment in retail, housing, offices and cultural facilities. As of spring 2013 the Initiative has awarded more than $17 million to small businesses and retail developers and has spent approximately $75 million of local dollars on streetscape improvements to beautify public space and to expand transportation options. For retail development, the Great Streets Initiative continues to award grants, loans, and Tax Increment Financing along the nine Great Streets corridors. Contact: 202.727.6365 | www.greatstreets.dc.gov Great Street Corridors: Georgia Avenue/7th Street, NW | H Street, NE | Benning Road | Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue & South Capitol Street, SE | Minnesota Avenue | Nannie Helen Burroughs Avenue, NE | Pennsylvania Avenue, SE | North Capitol Street | Rhode Island Avenue, NE Supermarket Tax Credits Through the Supermarket Tax Exemption Act of 2000, the District waives certain taxes and fees to supermarkets that locate in a Priority Development Area. Qualifying supermarkets may receive the following benefits for 10 years: Real property tax exemption | Business license fee exemption | Personal property tax exemption | Sales and use tax exemption on building materials necessary for construction Contact: 202.727.6365 | dmped.dc.gov One City One Hire One City One Hire is an employer-driven hiring initiative with the goal of putting District residents back to work. The expense to businesses to hire new employees can be a costly investment in both time and money. The DC Department of Employment Services (DOES) can help employers defray some of these costs by facilitating training, recruitment, screening processes for potential hires as well as tax incentives and wage subsidies. Additional DOES programs, services and tax-based employer incentives include the following: On-the-Job Training (OJT) Program | Apprenticeship Program | Work Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC) | Project Empowerment (PE) | Senior Community Service Employment Program (SCSEP) | Virtual DC Works! Career Center System Contact: 202.698.5141 | onecityonehire.org DC Main Streets Through DC Main Streets, DSLBD provides comprehensive technical and financial assistance to build the capacity of neighborhood nonprofit organizations (i.e., DC Main Street organizations) to assist businesses and coordinate sustainable community-driven revitalization efforts. The DC Main Street organizations are Nationally Accredited Main Streets through the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Local volunteers and community development professionals organize and lead the DC Main Street commercial district revitalization efforts. Contact: 202.727.3900 | dslbd.dc.gov/service/dc-main-streets-program Main Street Neighborhoods: Barracks Row (4) | Congress Heights (15) | Deanwood (16) | Dupont Circle (18) | H Street, NE (27) | North Capitol (37) | Shaw (45) Retail incentives & resources continued on the last page The Washington, DC Economic Partnership would like to thank Cultural Tourism DC and LISC for their support and contribution to the 2013 Neighborhood Profiles.
  6. 6. 1 14th & U Streets/MidCity 2 Adams Morgan 3 Anacostia 4 Barracks Row 5 Barry Farm 6 Bellevue/South Capitol 7 Brookland 8 Capitol Hill 9 Capitol Riverfront 10 Central 14th Street 11 Chevy Chase/Friendship Heights 12 Chinatown 13 Cleveland Park 14 Columbia Heights 15 Congress Heights/Saint Elizabeths 16 Deanwood 17 Downtown DC 18 Dupont Circle 19 East Capitol Street/Capitol Gateway 20 Fort Lincoln/Dakota Crossing 21 Fort Totten 22 Georgetown 23 Georgia Avenue/Brightwood 24 Georgia Avenue/Walter Reed 25 Glover Park 26 Golden Triangle 27 H Street, NE 28 Hillcrest/Skyland 29 Howard University/Pleasant Plains 30 Kennedy Street 31 Lincoln Heights/Richardson Dwellings 32 Minnesota & Benning 33 Mount Pleasant 34 Mount Vernon Triangle 35 New York Avenue/Bladensburg Road 36 NoMa 37 North Capitol 38 Northwest One 39 Park Morton 40 Parkside/Kenilworth 41 Pennsylvania Avenue, SE 42 Petworth/Park View 43 Rhode Island Avenue, NE/Brentwood 44 Rhode Island Avenue, NE/Woodridge 45 Shaw 46 Southwest Waterfront 47 Takoma 48 Union Market 49 Union Station/Burnham Place 50 West End/Foggy Bottom Neighborhoods
  7. 7. NE SE SW NW 1 24 47 2 14 42 30 21 7 27 9 3 4 41 15 6 28 36 16 43 35 32 11 10 29 37 46 45 12 18 25 17 22 34 26 33 13 14th & U/ MidCity Georgia Avenue/ Walter Reed Takoma Adams Morgan Columbia Heights Petworth/ Park View Kennedy Street Fort Totten Brookland H Street, NE Capitol Riverfront Anacostia Barracks Row Pennsylvania Avenue, SE Congress Heights/ Saint Elizabeths Bellevue/ South Capitol Hillcrest/ Skyland NoMa Deanwood Rhode Island Avenue, NE/ Brentwood New York Avenue/ Bladensburg Road Minnesota & Benning Chevy Chase/ Friendship Heights Central 14th Street Howard University/ Pleasant Plains North Capitol Southwest Waterfront Shaw Chinatown Dupont Circle Glover Park Downtown Georgetown Mt Vernon Triangle Golden Triangle Mount Pleasant Cleveland Park 5Barry Farm 8 Capitol Hill 19East Capitol Street/ Capitol Gateway 31 Lincoln Heights/ Richardson Dwellings 40 Parkside/ Kenilworth 20 Fort Lincoln/ Dakota Crossing 44 Rhode Island Avenue, NE/ Woodridge 50 West End/ Foggy Bottom 23Georgia Avenue/ Brightwood 38 Northwest One 48 Union Market 49 Union Station/ Burnham Place 39 Park Morton
  8. 8. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 1 MidCity, named one of APA’s Great Places in America, is at the center of Washington’s renaissance. Young professionals come to 14th and U Streets to experience the vibrancy of urban living and enjoy the diverse and growing dining, retail, residential, entertainment and cultural offerings. The MidCity experience is all about energy and vitality, experienced by thousands daily in its coffee shops, restaurants, boutique retailers, fitness centers and professional services. It is one of the District’s premier walkable neighborhoods, offering superb proximity to great retail like Whole Foods Market, Ted’s Bulletin, Matchbox, Busboys & Poets and in 2014 a Trader Joe’s grocery store along with world-class entertainment in theaters and clubs. A home furnishings niche has also been burgeoning along 14th Street with establishments like Vastu, Muleh and the recent opening of a 36,000-square-foot Room & Board in 2010. MidCity has also become home to a significant creative sector, with U Street hailed as one of ‘‘America’s Most Animated Arts Places” by ArtPlace. In addition to the neighborhood’s galleries, cultural anchors include theatres like the Lincoln, Source, and Studio, the African American Civil War Memorial and Museum, the Duke Ellington Mural, the Mary McLeod Bethune House, the Thurgood Marshall Center for Service & Heritage and Cultural Tourism DC’s visitor center. MidCity is comprised of the 14th and U Street corridors, located near the established neighborhoods of Logan Circle, Dupont Circle, Shaw, Columbia Heights, LeDroit Park and Adams Morgan. The density and demographics of this neighborhood and its environs have led to 4,272 new and refurbished loft apartments and condominiums as well as over 150 new retail businesses opening their doors since 2001. 14th & U Streets/Midcity 27,000+population within a 10-minute walk $93Kaverage HH income 50%population between 20–34 years old top 12 one of America’s Top ArtPlaces3 Image courtesy of JBG
  9. 9. M M MM M MM M M M M M M M WALKER JONES ELEMENTARY SCHOOL GONZAGA COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL TARGET BEST BUY BED, BATH & BEYOND MARSHALLS REDROCKS THE COUPE GIANT FOOD WINDOWS CAFE RUSTIK TAVERN BIG BEAR CAFÉ OLD ENGINE COMPANY NO. 12 BOUNDARY STONE CVS FUTURE WALMART CVS KOMI SAFEWAY YES! ORGANIC MARKET FUTURE HOWARD TOWN CENTER PROGRESSION PLACE FUTURE CITYMARKET AT O STREET ROOM & BOARD LAURIOL PLAZA WHOLE FOODS MARKET TOPAZ HOTEL PAUL BAKERY CHARLES TYRWHITT SOURCE THEATER STUDIO THEATER HINGTON ON RENAISSANCE MAYFLOWER HOTEL THOMAS PINK BROOKS BROTHERS RIZIK’S LINCOLN THEATER REEVES CENTER MOUNT PLEASANT LIBRARY DUPONT HOTEL HARRIS TEETER SAFEWAY FUTURE TRADER JOE’S POTBELLY FUEL PIZZA FROZENYO BURBERRY FUTURE GIANT H H H H 395 Lafayette Square McMillan Reservoir Farragut Square Logan Circle NATIONAL BUILDING MUSEUM VERIZON CENTER VETERANS AFFAIRS MEDICAL CENTER WASHINGTON HOSPITAL CENTER CHILDRENS NATIONAL MEDICAL CENTER HOWARD UNIVERSITY HOWARD UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART RENAISSANCE HOTEL EMBASSY SUITES SAFEWAY BUSBOYS & POETS KUSHI VIDA GYM FUTURE CITYCENTERDC THE HAMILTON GALLERY PLACE WOODIES HOWARD THEATER TIVOLI THEATER WASHINGTON CONVENTION CENTER FUTURE MARRIOTT MARQUIS IMF WORLD BANK GLEN CEM WALGREEN’S YO! SUSHI PANERA BREAD METRO CENTER MCPHERSON SQUARE FARRAGUT WEST FARRAGUT NORTH ONT CLE GALLERY PL/ CHINATOWN MT VERNON SQ/ CONVENTION CENTER SHAW/HOWARD UNIVERSITY SHAW/HOWARD UNIVERSITY U ST/AFRICAN AMERICAN CIVIL WAR MEM'L/CARDOZO COLUMBIA HEIGHTS GEORGIA AVE/ PETWORTH UNION STATION -- RHODE ISLAND AVE FLORIDA AVE 1STST1STST S ST R ST T ST 2NDST 3RDST ADAMS ST W ST V ST U ST LINCOLNRD 1STST 16THST CONNECTICUTAVE MASSACHUSETTS AVE 14THST NORTHCAPITOLST 7THST NEW YORK AVE 6THST 11THST NEW HAM PSHIRE AVE D NEWJERSEYAVE 9THST 8THST GEORGIAAVE 13THST COLUMBIA RD PARK RD PINEY BRANCH PK SHERMANAVE IRVING ST FLORIDAAVE N ST N ST G ST VERMONTAVE 5THST 4THST 18THST M ST M ST 19THST R ST H ST P ST Q ST S ST P ST O ST T ST V ST 4THST 5THST MONROE ST NEWTON ST KALORAM A RD LANIER PL HARVARD ST 17THST 19THST 18THST RING RD HOLMEADPL BRYANT ST U ST NSYLVANIA AVE 14THST THST 17THST K ST K ST L ST G ST H ST I ST 13THST PITOLST AVE M ICHIGAN AVE PARKPLACE MTPLEASANTST IRVING ST 18THST PARK RD LAMONT ST MORTON ST WARDERST 14th & U/ MidCity Dupont Circle Golden Triangle Adams Morgan Columbia Heights Howard University/ Pleasant Plains 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 27,285 95,352 354,938 Male 53% 51% 49% Female 47% 49% 51% High School Graduate1 + 89% 86% 87% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 67% 63% 58% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 38% 35% 33% Households Households (HH) 14,749 50,839 169,198 Average HH Size 1.7 1.8 1.9 Owner-occupied 38% 32% 39% Renter-occupied 62% 68% 61% Median HH Value $489,878 $447,510 $429,020 Income Average HH $93,277 $87,531 $96,357 Median HH $63,765 $58,503 $66,272 HH Income <$49,999 40% 43% 39% HH Income $50 – 74,999 16% 16% 16% HH Income $75,000+ 44% 41% 46% Median HH Disposable $46,812 $43,500 $49,485 Age Age <20 10% 12% 15% Age 20 – 34 50% 47% 44% Age 35 – 64 35% 34% 35% Age 65+ 6% 7% 11% Median Age (years) 32.2 32.1 32.9 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel & Services $35,147 $116,005 $415,577 Computers & Accessories $4,623 $15,066 $52,991 Entertainment & Rec $60,539 $198,627 $720,220 Pets $9,064 $29,701 $108,231 TV, Radio & Sound $24,632 $81,307 $289,899 Food at Home $88,564 $292,223 $1,047,980 Food away from Home $65,890 $216,509 $770,499 Home Improvement & Services $34,360 $113,055 $446,491 Household Furnishings $23,075 $75,741 $276,485 Personal Care $7,751 $25,356 $89,778 Vehicle Maint. & Repair $17,775 $58,223 $208,791 Avg. Spent per HH $30.0 $28.8 $31.1 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates & Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates & Projections 3. ArtPlace (2013) Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 6,926 | 9,780 U St./African-Am Civil War Mem./Cardozo Walk Score 98 Walker’s Paradise Contact Washington, DC Economic Partnership Chad Shuskey, SVP, Research Visual Communications p| 202.661.8670 e| cshuskey@wdcep.com w| www.wdcep.com
  10. 10. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 Vibrant, diverse and artistic, Adams Morgan is abuzz with colorful storefronts, friendly sidewalk cafes, restaurants with diverse cuisine from around the world, intimate coffee shops and some of the District’s liveliest nightspots. Young professionals come for the spicy urban experience…and stay to raise their families. The primary crossroads in Adams Morgan — Columbia Road and 18th Street — are the epicenter for independently owned shops that sell unique, one-of-a-kind gifts, clothing and furniture in all price ranges. It’s here that visitors will find record stores and book stores, household furnishings and local contemporary artists’ work. Adams Morgan offers a variety of dining for every palate and pocket book, featuring independent boutiques and family-friendly establishments. Savor the energy that emanates from the mingling of cultures, live music and artwork inside the restaurants — all of which make Adams Morgan a regional attraction. The neighborhood is situated between the Woodley Park-Zoo/Adams Morgan and Columbia Heights Metrorail stations. The neighborhood also offers public parking garages off of 18th Street and Florida Avenue. Discounted daytime garage parking is also available with free validation from all retailers and restaurants seven days a week. Moving beyond the murals, discover the beauty of this historic district. Turn-of-the-century homes and new residential condo developments are magnets for the steady stream of young families and professionals in search of the perfect multicultural, urban lifestyle. Adams Morgan 2 $100Kaverage HH income 24,000+population within a 10-minute walk $6.8Mnew streetscape
  11. 11. M M M M M M M M M M TARGET BEST BUY BED, BATH BEYOND MARSHALLS REDROCKS THE COUPE GIANT FOOD YES! ORGANIC MARKET CVS FUTURE SAFEWAY PARK PLACE KOMI SAFEWAY YES! ORGANIC MARKET YES! ORGANIC MARKET FUTURE HOWARD TOWN CENTER PROGRESSION PLACE FUTURE CITYMARKET AT O STREET ROOM BOARD LAURIOL PLAZA WHOLE FOODS MARKET TOPAZ HOTEL PAUL BAKERY CHARLES TYRWHITT SOURCE THEATER STUDIO THEATER WASHINGTON HILTON RENAISSANCE MAYFLOWER HOTEL THOMAS PINK BROOKS BROTHERS RIZIK’S LINCOLN THEATER REEVES CENTER MOUNT PLEASANT LIBRARY PHILLIPS COLLECTION DUPONT HOTEL TRADER JOE’S HARRIS TEETER SAFEWAY YES! ORGANIC MARKET HILTON GARDEN INN PARK HYATT FAIRMONT HOTEL RITZ-CARLTON FUTURE TRADER JOE’S POTBELLY FUEL PIZZA FROZENYO ACE HARDWARE BURBERRY FUTURE GIANT H National Zoological Park McMilla Reservo Logan Circle Sheridan Circle Washington RDMAN HOTEL HOWARD UNIVERSITY HOWARD UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL SAFEWAY BUSBOYS PO KUSHI VIDA GYM HOWARD THEATER TIVOLI THEATER WASHINGTON CONVENTION CENTER FUTURE MARRIOTT MARQUIS FARRAGUT NORTH DUPONT CIRCLE MT VERNON SQ/ CONVENTION CENTER SHAW/HOWARD UNIVERSITY SHAW/HOWARD UNIVERSITY U ST/AFRICAN AMERICAN CIVIL WAR MEM'L/CARDOZO COLUMBIA HEIGHTS GEORGIA AVE/ PETWORTH WOODLEY PARK/ ZOO/ DAMS MORGAN -- RHODE ISLAND AVE 16THST CONNECTICUTAVE 14THST 7THST NEW 6THST 11THST NEW HAM PSHIRE AVE COLUMBIARD NEWJER 9THST 8THST GEORGIAAVE 13THST COLUMBIA RD T PARK RD PARK RD PINEY BRANCH PKWY AR KANSASAVE SHERMANAVE KLINGLE RD IRVING ST K C REE KPKWY FLORIDAAVE N ST VERMONTAVE 5THST 18THST M ST M ST 19THST KALORAMA RD WYOMING AVE CALIFORNIA ST 24THST 23RDST BELMONT RD R ST P ST Q ST S ST O ST T ST V ST 4THST 5THST MONROE ST NEWTON ST EY RD CATHEDRALAVE KALORAM A RD LANIER PL HARVARD ST 17THST 19THST 18THST SPRING RD HOLMEADPL UPSHUR ST 18THST SHEPHERD ST TAYLOR ST 17TH SHEPHERD ST RANDOLPH ST QUINCY ST BRYA U ST L ST 20THST 21STST 13THST M ST 25THST FLORIDA AVE TAVE PARKPLACE MTPLEASANTST 18THST PARK RD LAMONT ST MORTON ST WARDERST Dupont Circle Golden Triangle Adams Morgan Mt Pleasant Columbia Heights 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 24,145 83,858 337,211 Male 49% 50% 48% Female 51% 50% 52% High School Graduate1 + 92% 86% 87% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 77% 66% 59% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 43% 38% 34% Households Households (HH) 13,684 45,273 158,357 Average HH Size 1.7 1.8 2.0 Owner-occupied 34% 33% 38% Renter-occupied 66% 67% 62% Median HH Value $497,061 $492,680 $447,982 Income Average HH $99,835 $100,515 $100,604 Median HH $71,531 $70,865 $69,758 HH Income $49,999 35% 37% 37% HH Income $50 – 74,999 16% 15% 15% HH Income $75,000+ 48% 48% 36% Median HH Disposable $51,557 $51,155 $51,341 Age Age 20 10% 11% 16% Age 20 – 34 47% 46% 40% Age 35 – 64 36% 36% 34% Age 65+ 7% 8% 10% Median Age (years) 32.9 32.8 32.5 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $35,993 $115,391 $403,305 Computers Accessories $4,679 $14,873 $51,453 Entertainment Rec $61,932 $197,220 $698,881 Pets $9,238 $29,421 $104,886 TV, Radio Sound $25,090 $80,435 $280,920 Food at Home $89,606 $289,635 $1,015,033 Food away from Home $67,088 $214,352 $746,950 Home Improvement Services $36,107 $113,909 $433,743 Household Furnishings $23,793 $75,491 $268,474 Personal Care $7,832 $25,004 $87,014 Vehicle Maint. Repair $18,031 $57,530 $202,416 Avg. Spent per HH $33.0 $31.9 $32.2 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 7,214 | 11,306 Woodley Park/Zoo/Adams Morgan 12,359 | 16,004 Columbia Heights Walk Score 92 Walker’s Paradise Contact Adams Morgan Partnership BID Kristen Barden, Executive Director p| 202.997.0783 e| kbarden@adamsmorganonline.org w| www.adamsmorganonline.org
  12. 12. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 Located near the banks of the Anacostia River, this historic neighborhood is enjoying a renaissance with a burgeoning small businesses community, entrepreneurs and arts scene. Anacostia’s commercial corridors are located in both HUB and Enterprise Zones with excellent access provided by Metrorail, I-295, I-395 and the Suitland Parkway. Investment in the arts has resulted in several new additions to Anacostia including the Honfleur Art Gallery, The Gallery at Vivid Solutions and in 2013 the new home for the Anacostia Playhouse which re-located from H Street, NE (formerly called the H Street Playhouse). These new amenities combined with anchors such as the Smithsonian’s Anacostia Community Museum, American Poetry Museum and Frederick Douglass National Historic Site create a distinctive arts and culture hub. The Lumen8 Anacostia festival, a celebration of Anacostia’s arts and culture that debuted in 2012, serves as a showcase of the neighborhood’s emergence on the regional arts scene, drawing over 100,000 visitors to the neighborhood during the two month exhibition. For all of these reasons, Anacostia was named by Urban Turf DC as DC’s neighborhood with the “Most Improved Reputation” in 2012. Anacostia’s commercial corridors have also experienced new investment with ARCH Development Corporation opening two business incubators, The HIVE and The HIVE 2.0, the establishment of the DC Department of Housing Community Development’s new headquarters, the 46-unit Grandview Estates condominiums and the 114-unit Sheridan Station (Phase I). In addition, Four Points and Curtis Development have plans to redevelop Riverview Plaza into a 1.6 million square foot mixed-use center. These plans have already garnered interest from government contractors in need of space close to the Saint Elizabeths Campus, which will be the new home for the 3,700-employee U.S. Coast Guard in 2013. 3 Anacostia 100Kattendance to Lumen8 art + music festival 150seats at the new Anacostia Playhouse 70KSF demand for new retail/ restaurants by 2015 Image courtesy of The Hive Image courtesy of The Hive
  13. 13. M M M M M MARTIN’S D TOWN Y POPEYES CONGRESS HEIGHTS METRO REDEVELOPMENT FAIRLAWN MARKET H A n a c o s t i a R i v e r 295 295 295 Fort Davis Park Fort Stanton Park Anacostia River Park MARINE BARRACKS HARRIS TEETER MATCHBOX HELLO CUPCAKE NAVY YARD CAR BARN NAVY YARD IZABETHS AMPUS SAINT ELIZABETHS EAST CAMPUS CONGRESSIONAL CEMETERY SAINT ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL HONFLEUR GALLERY DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING COMMUNITY DEVELOPEMENT DC LOTTERY FUTURE SKYLAND TOWN CENTER GOOD HOPE MARKETPLACE SAFEWAY GIANT FOOD ANACOSTIA PLAYHOUSE HQ GATEWAY PAVILION UNIFIED COMMUNICATIONS CENTER ONGRESS HEIGHTS SCHOOL POTOMAC AVE ANACOSTIA ANACOSTIA CONGRESS HEIGHTS CONGRESS HEIGHTS M ARYLA YLAN D 27THST GOOD HOPE RD FAIRLAWN AVE 16THST Q ST ANACOSTIA RD 30THST NASH PL N ST 28THST F 33RDST M PL U ST V ST W ST 16THST 14THST R ST S ST T ST 13THST R RD HO W ARD RD SHANNONPL N AYLO R RD MARTINLUTHERKINGJRAVE M ARTIN LUTHER KINGJRAVE 25THST ALABAMA AVE STANTONRD S UITLAND PKWY NAYLORRD TEXAS AVE HO W ARD RD ELVANS RD ELVANSRD POMEROY RD W ADE RD GAINESVILLE ST AIN G ER PL STANTO N TER BR UCE ST 15THPL 18THST SAVANNAH ST 22NDST SAVANNAHTER SAVANNAH ST ALLEY SQ 7THST PARK DR HARTFORD ST JASPER ST 23RD ST STANTON RD PE BRANCHAVE ALABAMA AVE HILLCRES T D R 32NDST 31STPL 31STST ERIE ST 33RDST 30THST ST L ST K ST G ST I ST 8THST 14T MINNESOTA AVE MINNESOTA AVE ERIE ST M O RRIS RD Anacostia acks Row 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 10,218 29,294 220,398 Male 45% 44% 47% Female 55% 56% 53% High School Graduate1 + 80% 79% 84% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 10% 11% 30% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 5% 4% 15% Households Households (HH) 3,892 10,927 94,654 Average HH Size 2.6 2.2 2.2 Owner-occupied 30% 26% 37% Renter-occupied 70% 74% 63% Median HH Value $222,846 $250,276 $277,488 Income Average HH $42,264 $50,491 $68,429 Median HH $29,965 $31,817 $46,235 HH Income $49,999 70% 67% 53% HH Income $50 – 74,999 17% 15% 17% HH Income $75,000+ 13% 18% 30% Median HH Disposable $25,067 $26,151 $36,510 Age Age 20 33% 33% 24% Age 20 – 34 22% 22% 27% Age 35 – 64 36% 36% 38% Age 65+ 9% 9% 11% Median Age (years) 31.3 31.5 34.2 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $4,758 $13,916 $165,691 Computers Accessories $549 $1,606 $20,311 Entertainment Rec $8,009 $23,515 $289,763 Pets $1,218 $3,578 $44,304 TV, Radio Sound $3,474 $10,107 $118,130 Food at Home $12,561 $36,634 $429,329 Food away from Home $8,851 $25,849 $308,973 Home Improvement Services $4,606 $13,905 $186,822 Household Furnishings $3,005 $8,832 $110,513 Personal Care $1,043 $3,030 $36,380 Vehicle Maint. Repair $2,389 $6,975 $84,731 Avg. Spent per HH $15.4 $16.0 $22.6 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 7,608 | 6,343 Anacostia Traffic Counts (avg. weekday) 10,200–15,300 Good Hope Road 15,400 Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue 63,000–87,600 I-295 Contact Anacostia Economic Development Corporation Stanley Jackson, President CEO p| 202.889.5100 w| www.anacostiadc.com
  14. 14. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 Steeped in U.S. history, the 8th Street, SE corridor’s trade area offers more than 30,000 employees by day and another 17,000 residents by night. Experience the diverse dining and retail opportunities in one of the most prominent of the thriving Capitol Hill neighborhoods. This 2005 Great American Main Street Award winner is the oldest commercial corridor in Washington. Between 1999 and 2003 an $8.5 million streetscape investment turned Barracks Row into a pedestrian friendly and ecologically urban corridor that blends perfectly with the professional, yet progressive Capitol Hill neighborhood it serves. Close in proximity to the Washington Navy Yard and the United States Marine Corps Barracks, for which it is named, the corridor serves the federal workforce by day and then unwinds evenings and weekends in the company of residents and fun-seeking visitors. The Historic Eastern Market, a regional tourist destination located just across Pennsylvania Avenue, enhances retail and restaurant traffic. Within the shadow of the Capitol Dome and with transportation options such as the DC Circulator route that connects to Union Station (Red Line), Eastern Market Metrorail Station (Orange/Blue Lines), Navy Yard Metrorail Station (Green Line) and two Capital Bikeshare stations, Barracks Row is easily accessible by DC residents and day visitors. 4 Barracks Row 30+restaurants and outdoor cafes 17,000trade area population 12new businesses in 2012
  15. 15. M M M M M M M RFK MEMORIAL STADIUM H STREET CONNECTION FAIRLAWN MARKET HECHINGER MALL GOURMET H A n a c o s t i a R i v e r 395 295 295 Lincoln Park Stanton Square Poplar Point Anacostia River Park ATLAS THEATER LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CANNON HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING SUPREME COURT MARINE BARRACKS HARRIS TEETER YES! ORGANIC MARKET EASTERN MARKET MATCHBOX HELLO CUPCAKE NAVY YARD CAR BARN NAVY YARD YARDS PARK US DOT DOT ALS PARK AMOND UE PARK COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT CANAL PARK BOILERMAKER SHOPS FUTURE HARRIS TEETER CONGRESSIONAL CEMETERY UNION STATION DC GENERAL HOSPITAL HONFLEUR GALLERY DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING COMMUNITY DEVELOPEMENT DC LOTTERY TED’S BULLETIN GOOD STUFF EATERY ANACOSTIA PLAYHOUSE SEC CAPITOL SOUTH EASTERN MARKET POTOMAC AVE STADIUM-ARMORY NAVY YARD UNION STATION ANACOSTIA ANACOSTIA 27THST GOOD HOPE RD FAIRLAWN AVE 16THST Q ST U ST V ST W ST 16THST 14THST R ST S ST T ST 13THST S SHANNONPL N AYLO R RD M ARTIN LUTHER KINGJRAVE C ST 19THST D ST A ST 22NDST OKLAHOMA AVE CONSTITUTION AVE INDEPENDENCE AVE MASSACHUSETTS AVE M ST NEWJERSEYAVE NORTH CAROLINA AVE SOUTH CAROLINA AVE EAST CAPITOL ST E ST 14THST 17THST L ST 15THST K ST KENTUCKYAVE 16THST C ST C ST D ST D ST E ST G ST C ST I STI ST K ST L ST 8THST 1STST TINGEY ST 1STST BENNING RD H ST MARYLAND AVE F ST E ST 2NDST 3RDST 4THST 2NDST 2NDPL 4THST 5THST 6THST 9THST 8THST 7THST 10THST 11THST 12THST 13THST G ST TENNESSEEAVE 26 21S 14THST MINNESOTA AVE WATER ST Anacostia Capitol Riverfront Barracks Row 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 11,335 35,211 241,558 Male 50% 49% 48% Female 50% 51% 52% High School Graduate1 + 91% 92% 83% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 74% 69% 37% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 41% 38% 19% Households Households (HH) 5,580 17,583 108,331 Average HH Size 1.9 1.9 2.1 Owner-occupied 45% 46% 36% Renter-occupied 55% 54% 64% Median HH Value $602,052 $530,665 $330,560 Income Average HH $107,973 $98,480 $68,575 Median HH $85,014 $76,096 $44,539 HH Income $49,999 30% 33% 54% HH Income $50 – 74,999 14% 16% 16% HH Income $75,000+ 56% 51% 30% Median HH Disposable $59,031 $53,788 $35,502 Age Age 20 14% 14% 21% Age 20 – 34 39% 39% 31% Age 35 – 64 37% 38% 37% Age 65+ 10% 10% 10% Median Age (years) 34.0 34.2 33.6 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $15,377 $45,776 $192,329 Computers Accessories $2,021 $6,032 $23,832 Entertainment Rec $27,531 $81,113 $332,308 Pets $4,415 $12,202 $50,373 TV, Radio Sound $10,514 $31,379 $136,185 Food at Home $38,274 $114,614 $495,493 Food away from Home $28,262 $84,452 $357,375 Home Improvement Services $18,734 $52,994 $205,756 Household Furnishings $10,805 $31,577 $126,4643 Personal Care $3,312 $9,901 $41,852 Vehicle Maint. Repair $7,810 $23,196 $97,176 Avg. Spent per HH $36.10 $33.3 $22.6 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 6,163 | 7,687 Eastern Market Walk Score 92 Walker’s Paradise Contact Barracks Row Main Street, Inc. Martin Smith, Executive Director p| 202.544.3188 e| martin@barracksrow.org w| www.barracksrow.org
  16. 16. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 One of four New Communities Initiatives, the Barry Farm rede- velopment program will replace low income residential units one-for-one, add as many at 900 market rate units and as much as 30,000 square feet of retail. Its 26 acres is generally bound by Suitland Parkway to the north, Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue to the east, Firth Sterling Avenue to the west, and Saint Elizabeth’s West Campus to the south. Although the neighborhood has been generally isolated for years, new redevelopment plans signal the community’s rebirth and will be further bolstered by nearby development activity at Saint Elizabeths as well as the ongoing revitalization of downtown Anacostia. Just across Suitland Parkway from Barry Farm, WC Smith has already delivered 136 new residential units as part of Phase I and a portion of Phase II of the 344-unit Sheridan Station development. In addition, Matthews Memorial Terrace added 99 residential units to the immediate area in 2012 across Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue, SE from Barry Farm. Furthermore, a new 22,000 square foot Barry Farm Recreation Center will open in summer 2015. Consistent with the New Communities Initiative, the goal of this redevelopment effort is to transform the public housing development into a vibrant mixed-income, mixed-use community. In this new community, residents will have access to high quality housing options, as well as the supporting services necessary to help prepare residents to take advantage of new economic opportunities. Barry Farm’s name comes from the post-Civil War freedmen’s community begun in 1867 on Juliana and David Barry’s farmland. Anacostia’s Barry Farm housing development arose during World War II and will be undergoing a major makeover. Barry Farm 1.13Mpotential SF of Barry Farm redevelopment 22,000SF new recreation center 15.4Kaverage traffic volume on Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue 5
  17. 17. M M M M M MARTIN’S FOOD TOWN SUBWAY POPEYES CONGRESS HEIGHTS METRO REDEVELOPMENT H A n a c o s t i a R i v e r 295 295 Fort Stanton Park Poplar Point Oxon Run Parkway Anacostia River Park NAVY YARD CAR BARN NAVY YARD SAINT ELIZABETHS WEST CAMPUS SAINT ELIZABETHS EAST CAMPUS YARDS PARK US DOT DDOT NATIONALS PARK DIAMOND TEAGUE PARK COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT CANAL PARK BOILERMAKER SHOPS FUTURE HARRIS TEETER JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA-BOLLING SAINT ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL HONFLEUR GALLERY DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING COMMUNITY DEVELOPEMENT DC LOTTERY GIANT FOOD ANACOSTIA PLAYHOUSE U.S. COAST GUARD HQ GATEWAY PAVILION UNIFIED COMMUNICATIONS CENTER CONGRESS HEIGHTS SCHOOL NAVY YARD ANACOSTIA ANACOSTIA CONGRESS HEIGHTS CONGRESS HEIGHTS SOUTHER GOOD HO FAIRLAWN AVE 16THST Q ST U ST V ST W ST 16THST 14THST R ST S ST T ST 13THST SUM NER RD HO W ARD RD SHANNONPL N AYLO R RD MARTINLUTHERKINGJRAVE M ARTIN LUTHER KINGJRAVE JRAVE ALABAMA AVE STANTONRD S UITLAND PKWY MALCOM X AVE CAPITOLST HO W ARD RD ELVANS RD ELVANSRD POMEROY RD W ADE RD STEVENS RD GAINESVILLE ST AIN G STANTO N TER BR UCE ST 15THPL 18THST SAVANNAH ST 22NDST SAVANNAHTER SAVANNAH ST 10THPL CONGRESS ST ALLEY SQ 7THST 2NDST NEW CO M B ST 5TH ST 4TH ST OTHERSPL SAVANNAH S T T 2 STANTON RD ANACOSTIAFREEWAY SOUTHCAPITOLST M ST RSEYAVE L ST K ST I STI ST K ST HALFST L ST HALFST POTOMAC AVE 1STST N ST TINGEY ST 2NDST 2NDPL 4THST MINNESOTA AVE ERIE ST M O RRIS RD WATER ST Barry Farm 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 3,757 14,611 202,302 Male 44% 45% 47% Female 56% 55% 53% High School Graduate1 + 71% 77% 85% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 13% 9% 35% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 5% 4% 17% Households Households (HH) 1,297 5,088 89,102 Average HH Size 2.9 2.7 2.2 Owner-occupied 24% 24% 35% Renter-occupied 76% 76% 65% Median HH Value $216,726 $229,444 $294,203 Income Average HH $41,650 $42,678 $72,048 Median HH $24,590 $26,318 $49,231 HH Income $49,999 74% 72% 51% HH Income $50 – 74,999 15% 14% 17% HH Income $75,000+ 12% 14% 32% Median HH Disposable $20,500 $21,581 $37,891 Age Age 20 39% 35% 23% Age 20 – 34 24% 23% 29% Age 35 – 64 31% 35% 38% Age 65+ 6% 7% 10% Median Age (years) 26.5 29.2 33.8 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $1,418 $6,093 $163,651 Computers Accessories $164 $703 $20,268 Entertainment Rec $2,381 $10,250 $285,169 Pets $361 $1,557 $43,402 TV, Radio Sound $1,037 $4,441 $116,350 Food at Home $3,750 $16,075 $422,440 Food away from Home $2,639 $11,325 $305,105 Home Improvement Services $1,332 $5,893 $179,768 Household Furnishings $891 $3,843 $108,797 Personal Care $312 $1,332 $35,941 Vehicle Maint. Repair $711 $3,052 $83,456 Avg. Spent per HH $13.6 $14.6 $23.6 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 7,608 | 6,343 Anacostia Traffic Counts (avg. weekday) 15,400 Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue 63,300–87,600 I-295 Contact Washington, DC Economic Partnership Chad Shuskey, SVP, Research Visual Communications p| 202.661.8670 e| cshuskey@wdcep.com w| www.wdcep.com
  18. 18. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 Bellevue is a residential neighborhood located in far Southwest Washington. With new community investment coming to the area, both Martin Luther King, Jr. Avenue and South Capitol Street are on the cusp of new economic development growth. New development is also occurring in the immediate area, such as the new 22,500-square-foot Bellevue Neighborhood Library that opened in 2012 and Danbury Station, which delivered 125 townhomes in 2007. Community of Hope is currently developing a 50,000-square-foot world- class Health and Resource Center on Atlantic Street, SW for delivery at the end of 2013. Covenant Baptist United Church of Christ is also developing a new senior citizen residential and wellness center with over 30 rental units with an expected delivery in 2015. Future development will also include Trinity Plaza, a mixed-use development consisting of 28 apartments, 6,000 square feet of retail space and 12,000 square feet of office space and the redevelopment of the South Capitol Street Shopping Center into a $108 million, 283,000-square-foot mixed-use project with 150 residential units, 36,000 square feet of retail space and 78,000 square feet of office space. The CVS’ Regional Training Center, PNC Bank, Joint Base Anacostia Bolling (JBAB), the Naval Research Laboratory, the Blue Plains wastewater treatment plant, the Metropolitan Police Academy, Washington Firefighters Training Center, a federal Job Corps center, the Architect of the Capitol’s Botanic Garden’s production facility and Specialty Hospital of Washington-Hadley bring a solid daytime population to the area. Numerous planning, transportation and design studies have been completed over the past several years and recent projects have begun to implement interim improvements as well as important elements of an overall vision. Plans for extensive streetscape improvements are underway and several blighted properties have been acquired. 6 Bellevue/South Capitol 14,000employees at the JBAB 125new homes delivered at Danbury Station in 2007 36,000SF of new retail planned at the South Capitol Street Shopping Center
  19. 19. M M PNC BANK AUTO ZONE SOUTH CAPITOL SHOPPING CENTER MARTIN’S FOOD TOWN SUBWAY POPEYES CONGRESS HEIGHTS METRO REDEVELOPMENT WASHINGTON HIGHLANDS LIBRARY H H H 295 SAINT ELIZABETHS EAST CAMPUS JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA-BOLLING JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA-BOLLING GREATER SOUTHEAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL SAINT ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL HADLEY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL G GATEWAY PAVILION CONGRESS HEIGHTS SCHOOL CONGRESS HEIGHTS CONGRESS HEIGHTS M ARYLAN D M ARYLAN D MARTINLUT SOUTHCAPITOLST MARTIN LUTHERKING JRAVE SO UTH ERN AVE ALABAMA AVE W HEELER RD MISSISSIPPI AVE 4THST MALCOM X AVE BARN ABY ST CHESAPEAKE ST ATLANTIC ST ATLANTIC ST LIVINGSTONRD VALLEY AVE 3RDST 9TH ST CO N DO N TER 1STST1STST M ISSISSIPPI AVE MARTINLUTHERKINGJRAVE JOLIET S T FORRESTER ST DANBURY ST CHESAPEAKE ST 2ND ST 4THST BR UCE ST 15THPL SAVANNAH ST 10THPL CONGRESS ST ALLEY SQ 7THST 2NDST NEW CO M B ST 5TH ST 4TH ST BROTHERSPL SAVANNAH S T 6THST HORNERPL 6THST ANACOSTIAFREEWAY Bellevue/ South Capitol Congress Heights 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 8,929 27,006 153,081 Male 46% 46% 46% Female 54% 54% 54% High School Graduate1 + 79% 80% 84% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 8% 11% 28% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 2% 4% 12% Households Households (HH) 3,957 10,914 63,812 Average HH Size 2.2 2.4 2.4 Owner-occupied 22% 22% 34% Renter-occupied 78% 78% 66% Median HH Value $232,240 $221,709 $234,447 Income Average HH $60,454 $57,425 $77,413 Median HH $29,361 $33,579 $50,969 HH Income $49,999 64% 63% 49% HH Income $50 – 74,999 12% 15% 17% HH Income $75,000+ 24% 22% 34% Median HH Disposable $24,514 $27,401 $39,993 Age Age 20 29% 32% 28% Age 20 – 34 23% 25% 25% Age 35 – 64 39% 35% 38% Age 65+ 10% 8% 9% Median Age (years) 33.7 30.4 33.5 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $5,218 $15,000 $117,648 Computers Accessories $602 $1,750 $14,546 Entertainment Rec $8,876 $25,323 $207,215 Pets $1,357 $3,850 $31,696 TV, Radio Sound $3,765 $10,789 $84,313 Food at Home $13,690 $39,244 $304,989 Food away from Home $9,688 $27,878 $220,211 Home Improvement Services $5,473 $15,209 $133,037 Household Furnishings $3,336 $9,534 $79,110 Personal Care $1,128 $3,252 $26,177 Vehicle Maint. Repair $2,614 $7,497 $60,757 Avg. Spent per HH $16.7 $17.4 $23.9 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Traffic Count (avg. weekday) 22,500–31,800 South Capitol Street 71,200 I-295 Contact Washington, DC Economic Partnership Chad Shuskey, SVP, Research Visual Communications p| 202.661.8670 e| cshuskey@wdcep.com w| www.wdcep.com
  20. 20. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2012 With tree-lined streets, single-family residences, a new town center under construction and proximity to the Brookland/CUA Metrorail station, the neighborhood of Brookland offers tremen- dous retail and restaurant opportunities close to the heart of the nation’s capital. Catholic University (CUA) along with Abdo Development and the Bozzuto Group are building a new mixed-use development adjacent to the Metrorail station that is scheduled to deliver by the end of 2013 and will consist of 720 housing units, 83,000 square feet of retail space, an Arts Walk with studio space for artists and a clock tower that will anchor an active public square. Other complementary projects in the neighborhood are Chancellors Row, a 237 single-family home development built by EYA and 901 Monroe Street, a 213-unit apartment building with 13,000 square feet of retail space. Brookland is also home to several tourist destinations and major employment centers. The Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, the largest Catholic Church in the United States, forms the architectural heart of Brookland, while Catholic University, Trinity University, the Howard University Divinity School and the Franciscan Monastery provide a population in excess of 10,000 students, faculty and staff. In addition, nearby hospitals include Washington Hospital Center, Children’s Hospital, the Hospital for Sick Children Pediatric Center, the Veteran’s Administration Hospital and Providence Hospital. Largely constructed during the Art Deco era, Brookland’s commercial district, 12th Street, NE, is the neighborhood’s main street. Area students and residents come here for a wide range of neighborhood goods and services, such as eateries, hardware stores and grocery stores, including Yes! Organic Market. 7 Brookland $80Kaverage HH income 91walk score—walker’s paradise 10,000+ combined Trinity + CUA student staff population 237new EYA townhomes at Chancellor’s Row
  21. 21. M M M YES! ORGANIC MARKET CVS CUA TOWN CENTER BROOKLAND TRUE VALUE FORMAN MILLS RHODE ISLAND ROW GIANT FOOD HOME DEPOT FUTURE WALMARTHECHT COMPANY’S WAREHOUSE RITA’S WOODRIDGE LIBRARY CHUCK BROWN PAVILION RITE AID COMFORT INN SUITES DAYS INN FAIRFIELD INN HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS SAVE A LOT FLIP IT BAKERY TRINITY COLLEGE THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA FRANCISCAN MONASTERY THE BASILICA FORT TOTTEN BROOKLAND/ CUA RHODE ISLAND AVE M ARYLAN D 4THST 5THST T ST 3RDST VISTA ST MYRTLE AVE CLINTONST SO UTH DAKO TA AVE BLADENSBURG RD NEW YORK AVE RHODE ISLAND AVE MICHIGAN AVE SO UTH D AKO TA AVE 13THST SARGENTRD FRANKLIN ST TAYLOR ST MONROE ST 4THST BREN TW O O D RD 18THST W ST 17THST 16THST 15THST 14THST 15THST QUEENSCHAPEL R D V ST BROOKLANDAVE BUCHANAN ST CRITTENDEN ST DECATUR ST 7THST 6THPL 12THST PUERTORICOAVE 10THST 8THST 7THST 22NDST BRYANT ST 24THST 20THST GIRARD ST 9THST HAMLIN ST IRVING ST LAWRENCE ST OTIS ST 14THST BUNKER HILL RD 19THST WEBSTER ST VARNUM ST HAREWOODRD CHANNING ST M O N TAN A AVE M O N TANA AVE EVARTS ST NEWTON ST 13THST FRANKLIN ST GALLATIN ST 14THST Rhode Island Avenue, NE Brookland 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 5,341 26,217 329,704 Male 47% 47% 49% Female 53% 53% 51% High School Graduate1 + 91% 83% 81% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 39% 34% 39% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 23% 18% 20% Households Households (HH) 2,039 9,955 141,357 Average HH Size 2.4 2.3 2.2 Owner-occupied 60% 51% 42% Renter-occupied 40% 49% 58% Median HH Value $384,995 $357,621 $347,993 Income Average HH $80,296 $74,967 $75,145 Median HH $58,540 $54,851 $51,701 HH Income $49,999 40% 44% 48% HH Income $50 – 74,999 23% 20% 18% HH Income $75,000+ 37% 35% 34% Median HH Disposable $44,739 $41,930 $39,569 Age Age 20 20% 22% 19% Age 20 – 34 25% 24% 33% Age 35 – 64 41% 36% 37% Age 65+ 14% 17% 11% Median Age (years) 39.0 38.4 34.1 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $4,072 $19,227 $268,612 Computers Accessories $476 $2,250 $33,827 Entertainment Rec $7,249 $33,528 $470,451 Pets $1,117 $5,128 $71,536 TV, Radio Sound $2,864 $13,510 $189,054 Food at Home $10,472 $49,380 $691,167 Food away from Home $7,511 $35,307 $499,876 Home Improvement Services $5,416 $23,758 $303,448 Household Furnishings $2,782 $12,826 $179,756 Personal Care $859 $4,035 $58,704 Vehicle Maint. Repair $2,069 $9,623 $136,979 Avg. Spent per HH $26.2 $24.7 $24.4 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 6,883 | 5,078 Brookland/Catholic University of America Walk Score 91 Walker’s Paradise Contact Washington, DC Economic Partnership Chad Shuskey, SVP, Research Visual Communications p| 202.661.8670 e| cshuskey@wdcep.com w| www.wdcep.com
  22. 22. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 $119Kaverage HH income 40Mannual Union Station visitors $735Kaverage closing price for homes + condos in 20123 Brimming with community spirit, Capitol Hill residents are passionate about everything their neighborhood has to offer: charming architecture, quaint shops, superb eateries and friendly cafes. The urbane blend of highly educated locals, Washington power players and young, energetic professionals creates an electric vitality attracting new residents and businesses every day. Located in one of the nation’s largest historic districts, the Capitol Hill trade area includes the U.S. Capitol, Senate and House office buildings, Supreme Court, Library of Congress and the District’s oldest commercial corridor—Barracks Row. Throughout Capitol Hill a unique mix of national chain and specialty retail stores, welcoming restaurants, modern amenities and professional services dot the tree-lined streetscape giving the neighborhood a small-town feel. In addition, the neighborhood is home to Eastern Market, the bustling weekend magnet for residents and visitors alike since 1873 and the oldest of the District’s public markets. With several transportation options including Union Station, the Metrorail’s Orange, Blue and Red lines, two DC Circulator routes and numerous Capital Bikeshare stations Capitol Hill offers residents, shoppers and visitors an easy commute. Capitol Hill 8
  23. 23. M M M M M M M M M COLLEGE SCHOOL RFK MEMORIAL STADIUM FUTURE WALMART HARRIS TEETERCVS FLORIDA AVENUE MARKET GIANT FOOD TRUORLEANS H STREET CONNECTION FAIRLAWN MARKET HECHINGER MALL UNION MARKET TAYLOR GOURMET H A n a c o s t i a R i v e r 395 295 295 295 Lincoln Park Stanton Square Langston Golf Course Driving Range Fort Davis Park Fort Stanton Park Poplar Point Union Station Plaza Anacostia River Park ATLAS THEATER UNITED STATES APITOL LIBRARY OF CONGRESS HOUSE LDING CANNON HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING SUPREME COURT MARINE BARRACKS HARRIS TEETER YES! ORGANIC MARKET EASTERN MARKET MATCHBOX HELLO CUPCAKE NAVY YARD CAR BARN NAVY YARD ATF U.S. DOJ YARDS PARK US DOT DDOT NATIONALS PARK DIAMOND TEAGUE PARK COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT CANAL PARK BOILERMAKER SHOPS FUTURE HARRIS TEETER CONGRESSIONAL CEMETERY GALLAUDET UNIVERSITY UNION STATION DC GENERAL HOSPITAL HONFLEUR GALLERY DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING COMMUNITY DEVELOPEMENT DC LOTTERY FUTURE SKYLAND TOWN CENTER GOOD HOPE TED’S BULLETIN GOOD STUFF EATERY ANACOSTIA PLAYHOUSE SEC CAPITOL SOUTH EASTERN MARKET POTOMAC AVE STADIUM-ARMORY NAVY YARD UNION STATION ANACOSTIA ANACOSTIA NOMA/GALLAUDET U/ NEW YORK AVE 27THST GOOD HOPE RD FAIRLAWN AVE 16THST Q ST ANACOSTIA RD 30THST NASH PL N ST 28THST 33RDST M PL U ST V ST W ST 16THST 14THST R ST S ST T ST 13THST SUM NER RD HO W ARD RD SHANNONPL N AYLO R RD M ARTIN LUTHER KINGJRAVE TEXAS AVE HO W STEVENS RD PARK DR FLORIDA AVE C ST ALABAMA AVE 19THST D ST 1STST A ST 22NDST OKLAHOMA AVE HILLCRES T D R 31STPL 31STST NORTHCAPITOLST N ST CONSTITUTION AVE INDEPENDENCE AVE SOUTHCAPITOLST MASSACHUSETTS AVE M ST NEWJERSEYAVE NORTH CAROLINA AVE SOUTH CAROLINA AVE EAST CAPITOL ST E ST AN A AVE VE 14THST 17THST L ST 15THST K ST KENTUCKYAVE 16THST C ST C ST D ST D ST E ST G ST C ST I STI ST K ST HALFST L ST HALFST 8THST POTOMAC AVE 1STST T TINGEY ST 1STST BENNING RD H ST BLADENSBURGRD MARYLAND AVE W EST VIRG IN IA K ST HOLBROOKST TRINIDADAVE MORSE ST NEAL ST F ST E ST I ST 2NDST 3RDST 4THST 2NDST 2NDPL 4THST 5THST 6THST 9THST 8THST 7THST 10THST 11THST 12THST T OLIVET RD 13THST G ST L ST L ST M ST MARYLAND AVE TENNESSEEAVE 26THST 21STST 17THST 14THST MINNESOTA AVE MINNESOTA AVE M O RRIS RD 6THST 5THST 4THST I ST MONTELLO AVE WATER ST NEAL ST Capitol Riverfront Capitol Hill Union Station/ Burnham Place 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 13,995 41,436 251,835 Male 50% 49% 48% Female 50% 51% 52% High School Graduate1 + 94% 92% 83% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 81% 68% 39% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 46% 37% 20% Households Households (HH) 6,952 20,576 113,006 Average HH Size 1.9 2.0 2.1 Owner-occupied 48% 48% 36% Renter-occupied 52% 52% 64% Median HH Value $650,100 $522,429 $336,103 Income Average HH $118,773 $96,557 $69,778 Median HH $95,646 $74,804 $45,682 HH Income $49,999 22% 34% 53% HH Income $50 – 74,999 15% 17% 17% HH Income $75,000+ 63% 50% 31% Median HH Disposable $65,604 $53,042 $36,010 Age Age 20 13% 14% 21% Age 20 – 34 38% 38% 32% Age 35 – 64 38% 38% 37% Age 65+ 11% 10% 10% Median Age (years) 34.6 34.3 33.4 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $21,581 $52,837 $204,747 Computers Accessories $2,832 $6,994 $25,423 Entertainment Rec $38,872 $93,957 $353,496 Pets $5,842 $14,149 $53,539 TV, Radio Sound $14,664 $36,198 $144,830 Food at Home $53,070 $132,253 $526,575 Food away from Home $39,551 $97,597 $380,422 Home Improvement Services $27,244 $61,746 $218,356 Household Furnishings $15,390 $36,591 $134,532 Personal Care $4,612 $11,455 $44,508 Vehicle Maint. Repair $10,930 $26,860 $103,344 Avg. Spent per HH $40.4 $32.9 $23.1 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections 3. MRIS (2012), courtesy of Kevin J. Wood, Realtor Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 6,163 | 7,687 Eastern Market 3,505 | 2,912 Potomac Avenue 33,043 | 17,342 Union Station Walk Score 95 Walker’s Paradise Contact Capitol Hill BID Patty Brosmer, President p| 202.842.3333 e| pbrosmer@capitolhillbid.org w| www.capitolhillbid.org
  24. 24. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 DC’s businesses and residents are shaping a new community in one of the largest riverfront redevelopment projects in the United States. Located just five blocks south of the U.S. Capitol Building, the Front offers a riverfront setting with a distinct maritime heritage, accessibility, unique parks and trails, neighborhood support retail and proximity to Capitol Hill. The Washington Nationals’ baseball stadium, the new U.S. Department of Transportation headquarters and the expansion of the Washington Navy Yard are three of the catalysts for the development of the Front. The Front has also seen its residential population grow to nearly 4,000 people and is estimated to surpass 5,000 in 2015. Additionally, restaurants and retail that have opened or signed leases and will open soon include Kruba Thai and Sushi, Potbelly, the Park Tavern at Canal Park, Gordon Biersch, Harris Teeter, Bluejacket brewery by Neighborhood Restaurant Group, Buzz Bakery, Willie’s Brew Que, Osteria Morini, Agua 301, VIDA Fitness, Bang Salon, and Aura Spa. The Capitol Riverfront is a neighborhood with the density, mix of uses, and pedestrian scale to ensure that amenities and shopping are within easy walking distance. Three new parks, including Canal Park which features a seasonal ice skating rink, provide direct access to the river, communal gathering places, and neighborhood recreation opportunities. The Front is easily accessible with direct connection to the I-395 and I-295 interstate highway system; Metrorail’s Green Line and Blue/Orange Lines; the Circulator Bus linking to Union Station and the Red Line; two Capital Bikeshare stations; and is only a 10-minute drive from Reagan National Airport. 9 Capitol Riverfront 8new restaurants opening in 2013 4,000approx. population within BID 35,000 daytime employment 2.6Mvisitors in 2012 926additional residential units by 2014 Image courtesy of the Capitol Riverfront BID Image courtesy of Forest City
  25. 25. M M M M M M M M A n a c o s t i a R i v e r 395 295 295 Lincoln Park Stanton Square Poplar Point Union Station Plaza Anacostia River Park UNITED STATES CAPITOL LIBRARY OF CONGRESS RAYBURN HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING CANNON HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING SUPREME COURT MARINE BARRACKS HARRIS TEETER YES! ORGANIC MARKET EASTERN MARKET MATCHBOX HELLO CUPCAKE NAVY YARD CAR BARN NAVY YARD YARDS PARK US DOT DDOT NATIONALS PARK DIAMOND TEAGUE PARK COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT CANAL PARK BOILERMAKER SHOPS FUTURE HARRIS TEETER CONGRESSIONAL CEMETERY UNION STATION HONFLEUR GALLERY DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING COMMUNITY DEVELOPEMENT DC LOTTERY TED’S BULLETIN GOOD STUFF EATERY ANACOSTIA PLAYHOUSE SEC CAPITOL SOUTH EASTERN MARKET POTOMAC AVE STADIUM-ARMORY AL R SW NAVY YARD UNION STATION ANACOSTIA ANACOSTIA FAIRLAWN AVE 16THST Q ST U ST V ST W ST 16THST 14THST R ST S ST T ST 13THST SUM NER RD HO W ARD RD SHANNONPL M ARTIN LUTHER KINGJRAVE STEVENS C ST 19THST D ST A ST ETTS AVE 1STST 2NDST CONSTITUTION AVE INDEPENDENCE AVE SOUTHCAPITOLST MASSACHUSETTS AVE M ST NEWJERSEYAVE NORTH CAROLINA AVE SOUTH CAROLINA AVE EAST CAPITOL ST E ST LO UISIAN A AVE W ASHIN G TO N AVE 14THST 17THST L ST 15THST K ST KENTUCKYAVE 16THST C ST C ST D ST D ST E ST G ST C ST I STI ST ST 1STST K ST HALFST L ST HALFST 8THST POTOMAC AVE 1STST DELAWAREAVE 2NDST N ST TINGEY ST O ST 1STST MARYLAND AVE F ST E ST 2NDST 3RDST 4THST 2NDST 2NDPL 4THST 5THST 6THST 9THST 8THST 7THST 10THST 11THST 12THST 13THST G ST TENNESSEEAVE 14THST MINNESOTA AVE M O RR WATER ST Capitol Riverfront Barracks Row 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 8,346 32,739 239,104 Male 52% 49% 48% Female 48% 51% 52% High School Graduate1 + 95% 91% 84% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 81% 68% 40% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 44% 37% 21% Households Households (HH) 4,493 17,480 107,411 Average HH Size 1.7 1.8 2.1 Owner-occupied 31% 42% 35% Renter-occupied 69% 58% 65% Median HH Value $566,241 $442,166 $344,417 Income Average HH $88,876 $90,503 $72,222 Median HH $59,250 $64,840 $47,407 HH Income $49,999 43% 38% 52% HH Income $50 – 74,999 15% 17% 16% HH Income $75,000+ 42% 44% 32% Median HH Disposable $43,631 $48,169 $36,803 Age Age 20 9% 13% 21% Age 20 – 34 49% 38% 33% Age 35 – 64 33% 38% 36% Age 65+ 9% 11% 10% Median Age (years) 32.3 34.6 33.0 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $10,108 $41,973 $199,908 Computers Accessories $1,307 $5,373 $25,019 Entertainment Rec $17,696 $73,820 $345,476 Pets $2,651 $11,118 $52,258 TV, Radio Sound $7,054 $29,318 $141,279 Food at Home $25,410 $106,282 $513,079 Food away from Home $18,732 $77,731 $371,769 Home Improvement Services $11,050 $47,341 $212,119 Household Furnishings $6,859 $28,555 $131,598 Personal Care $2,197 $9,129 $43,559 Vehicle Maint. Repair $5,106 $21,286 $101,035 Avg. Spent per HH $28.9 $30.7 $23.7 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 7,862 | 8,790 Navy Yard 9,115 | 1,418 Capitol South Wal k Score 88 Very Walkable Contact Capitol Riverfront BID Michael Stevens, Executive Director p| 202.465.7093 e| michael@capitolriverfront.org w| www.capitolriverfront.org
  26. 26. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 Central 14th Street is an emerging and charming mixed-use corridor surrounded by well-kept row houses and single family detached homes from Spring Road to Longfellow Street. Encompassing the 16th Street Heights neighborhood, with Crestwood to the west, Petworth to the east, Columbia Heights to the south and Brightwood to the north, there is opportunity to increase the variety of offerings, both in food establishments and neighborhood serving offices to meet the increasing market demand. New public and private investments are already enlivening the corridor. At the north end, Longfellow Flats is a high-end furnished condo rehab with 10,000 square feet of leased ground floor retail space. In addition, a future restaurant is expected in the former Colorado Cleaners storefront. Between Buchanan and Decatur Streets recent streetscape improvements have created a more pedestrian friendly environment and well-kept storefronts host a number of neighborhood- serving retail businesses, including the vintage furniture store, Ruff Ready, who moved to 4722 14th Street, from the 14th and U Streets area, in 2011. The commercial area between Spring Road and Shepherd Street is characterized by numerous retail and food establishments. A former laundromat at the corner of 14th and Quincy Streets will become a local pub called Lyman’s. This area also benefits from being directly adjacent to Columbia Heights and receives significant foot traffic from residents and visitors. The Central 14th Street Small Area Plan, approved by Council in 2012, provides continued momentum and guidance for redevelopment opportunities, public and private investment, and retail vitality. 10 Central 14th Street $97Kaverage HH income $585Kaverage single-family closing price in 20123 60Kattendance at the 2012 Citi Open, held at the Rock Creek Tennis Center
  27. 27. M M TARGET BEST BUY BED, BATH BEYOND MARSHALLS REDROCKS THE COUPE GIANT FOOD FUTURE WALMART YES! ORGANIC MARKET CVS FUTURE SAFEWAY LONGFELLOW FLATS RITE AID CVS PARK PLACE MOUNT PLEASANT LIBRARY THREE LITTLE PIGS KLASSY KAKES DOMKU ACE HARDWARE RUFF READY HIGHLANDS H H H Fort Stevens Rock Creek Cemetery Fort Slocum Park Sherman Circle Grant Circle VETERANS AFFAIRS MEDICAL CENTER WASHINGTON HOSPITAL CENTER CHILDRENS NATIONAL MEDICAL CENTER KINGSBURY CENTER TIVOLI THEATER ROCK CREEK TENNIS CENTER WMATA BUS BARN EMERY RECREATION CENTER PETWORTH LIBRARY COLUMBIA HEIGHTS GEORGIA AVE/ PETWORTH 16THST BEACHDR GEORGIAAVE 13THST COLUMBIA RD 14THST D MISSOURI AVE PARK RD NEW HAMPSHIREAVE PINEY BRANCH PKWY ARKANSAS AVE KANSASAVE VE IRVING ST MONROE ST NEWTON ST O SS DR BLAG D EN AVE HARVARD ST 17THST 19THST 18THST SPRING RD HOLMEADPL DECATUR ST ARGYLETER UPSHUR ST ALLISON ST BUCHANAN ST CRITTENDEN ST EMERSON ST 18THST WEBSTER ST SHEPHERD ST TAYLOR ST 17THST SHEPHERD ST RANDOLPH ST QUINCY ST IO W A AVE DELAFIELD PL 8THST 7THST 5THST 4THST 3RDST 9THST 7THST 4THST 9THST FARRAGUT ST GALLATIN ST HAMILTON ST INGRAHAM ST JEFFERSON ST LONGFELLOW ST PEABODY ST MADISON ST KENNEDY ST QUACKENBOS ST NICHOLSON ST ILLINOISAVE ROCKCREEK CHURCH RD OGLETHORPE ST NORTHCAPITOL RIGGS 2NDST 1STST SL FORT TOTTENDR CO LO RA DO AVE KANSASAVE M ICHIGAN AVE PARKPLACE MTPLEASANTST IRVING ST PARK RD LAMONT ST MORTON ST WARDERST Central 14th Street Kennedy Street Petworth/ Park View Columbia Heights Mt Pleasant 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 10,083 49,605 340,841 Male 50% 50% 48% Female 50% 50% 52% High School Graduate1 + 77% 76% 86% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 41% 36% 55% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 20% 19% 32% Households Households (HH) 3,606 19,196 158,571 Average HH Size 2.8 2.6 2.1 Owner-occupied 58% 47% 43% Renter-occupied 42% 53% 57% Median HH Value $463,326 $397,532 $431,022 Income Average HH $97,342 $85,528 $99,633 Median HH $67,515 $56,440 $69,996 HH Income $49,999 37% 45% 37% HH Income $50 – 74,999 17% 16% 16% HH Income $75,000+ 46% 39% 48% Median HH Disposable $50,961 $42,867 $51,616 Age Age 20 21% 20% 17% Age 20 – 34 25% 30% 34% Age 35 – 64 41% 39% 37% Age 65+ 14% 12% 13% Median Age (years) 38.0 35.1 34.8 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $8,535 $39,851 $403,444 Computers Accessories $1,105 $4,813 $51,165 Entertainment Rec $16,102 $68,989 $709,023 Pets $2,485 $10,422 $107,098 TV, Radio Sound $5,966 $27,601 $281,324 Food at Home $22,041 $102,001 $1,019,332 Food away from Home $15,820 $72,788 $747,290 Home Improvement Services $12,492 $46,903 $463,154 Household Furnishings $6,264 $26,467 $273,062 Personal Care $1,904 $8,368 $87,360 Vehicle Maint. Repair $4,579 $19,816 $204,557 Avg. Spent per HH $31.7 $26.0 $32.5 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections 3. MRIS (2012), courtesy of Kevin J. Wood, Realtor Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 5,272 | 5,545 Georgia Avenue/Petworth 12,359 | 16,004 Columbia Heights Traffic Count (avg. weekday) 5,900–18,700 14th Street Contact Washington, DC Economic Partnership Chad Shuskey, SVP, Research Visual Communications p| 202.661.8670 e| cshuskey@wdcep.com w| www.wdcep.com
  28. 28. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 Both high-end consumers and bargain hunters alike delight in the Chevy Chase/Friendship Heights shopping experience. With a median household income in the $115,000 range, the neighborhood offers national, regional and local retailers a wealth of opportunity. Chevy Chase Pavilion and Mazza Gallerie are the retail anchors of the neighborhood and offer over 440,000 square feet of retail, restaurants and entertainment. National retailer brands range from Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue, Williams-Sonoma, to Nordstrom Rack, DSW and many others that draw regional residents and visitors alike. Nationally known and local restaurants, movie theaters and hotels complement the retail scene. Chevy Chase Pavilion recently underwent a $32 million renovation, including the addition of a three-story LED screen, and new tenants such as a three-story HM and RANGE by chef Bryan Voltaggio will join anchors J. Crew, World Market and the Cheesecake Factory. Situated on the DC/Maryland line, Chevy Chase/Friendship Heights is easily accessible from Montgomery County, Maryland and other areas of the District via Metrorail’s Red Line. Connecticut and Wisconsin Avenues are the main commercial corridors that link the area to Georgetown, Downtown and other neighborhoods of DC. 11 Chevy Chase/Friendship Heights Image courtesy of Forest City Washington $115Kmedian HH income $32MChevy Chase Pavilion renovation 21.7KSF of new 3-story HM 81%residents with bachelor’s degree or higher
  29. 29. M M M WHOLE FOODS MARKET SAFEWAY MAZZA GALLERIE CHEVY CHASE PAVILION CONTAINER STORE NORDSTOM RACK DSW UNIVERSITY OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AMERICAN UNIVERSITY WASHINGTON UPTOWN VAN NESS/UDC TENLEYTOWN/AU FRIENDSHIP HEIGHTS M ARYLAN D WISCONSINAVE UPTON ST ORDWAY ST MACOMB ST NEWMARK ST WOODLEY RD 35THST 36THST IDAHO AVE RODMAN ST 34THST M ASSACHUSETTS AVE RENO RD NEBRASKA AVE CONNECTICUTAVE VAN NESS ST ALBEMARLE ST RIVER RD NEW MEXIC 46THST ELLICOTT ST LINNEANAVE ALBEMARLE ST BRANDYWINE ST DAVENPORT ST 36THST WARREN ST ALTON PL 38THST FESSENDEN ST 39THST 38THST 42NDST 41STST HARRISON ST ELLICOTT ST BRANDYWINE ST YUMA ST WARREN ST CHESAPEAKE ST 44THST 45THST 47THST 43RDST BUTTERWORTH PL 48THST 49THST DAVENPORT ST UPTON ST TILDEN ST UEBEC ST RODMAN ST SEDGWICK ST ROCKWOOD PKWY GLENBROOK RD 44THST 45THST MILITARY RD RENO RD UTA NEBRASKA AVE RITTENHOUSE ST NORTHAMPTON ST MCKINLEY ST 30THST 30THPL 31STST BROADBRANCHRD CHEVYCHASEPKWY NEVADAAVE 32NDST 33RDST MORRISON ST LIVINGSTON ST LEGATION ST KANAWHA ST JENIFER ST JOCELYN ST W ESTERN AVE MFRIENDSHIP HEIGHTS Chevy Chase/ Friendship Heights 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 10,296 27,020 168,060 Male 43% 45% 46% Female 57% 55% 54% High School Graduate1 + 98% 97% 96% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 81% 82% 78% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 55% 55% 50% Households Households (HH) 5,377 12,639 76,115 Average HH Size 1.9 2.1 2.1 Owner-occupied 47% 59% 56% Renter-occupied 53% 41% 44% Median HH Value $626,907 $770,544 $760,241 Income Average HH $144,645 $158,504 $150,226 Median HH $115,382 $129,801 $120,031 HH Income $49,999 18% 14% 18% HH Income $50 – 74,999 11% 9% 11% HH Income $75,000+ 70% 77% 72% Median HH Disposable $84,437 $92,994 $85,384 Age Age 20 14% 19% 20% Age 20 – 34 22% 18% 23% Age 35 – 64 38% 41% 40% Age 65+ 26% 21% 17% Median Age (years) 46.5 44.5 40.5 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $19,625 $50,203 $282,663 Computers Accessories $2,519 $6,450 $36,234 Entertainment Rec $35,899 $94,509 $522,953 Pets $5,383 $14,257 $78,970 TV, Radio Sound $13,231 $33,782 $193,084 Food at Home $47,236 $120,535 $691,218 Food away from Home $35,6421 $90,907 $516,904 Home Improvement Services $27,090 $76,194 $396,835 Household Furnishings $14,356 $37,8765 $206,085 Personal Care $4,147 $10,696 $61,049 Vehicle Maint. Repair $9,935 $25,920 $146,122 Avg. Spent per HH $47.5 $53.0 $48.9 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 9,484 | 7,759 Friendship Heights 7,824 | 6,324 Tenleytown/AU Walk Score 82 Very Walkable Contact Washington, DC Economic Partnership Chad Shuskey, SVP, Research Visual Communications p| 202.661.8670 e| cshuskey@wdcep.com w| www.wdcep.com
  30. 30. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 Compelling history, unique cultural character and growing eco- nomic opportunities make Chinatown one of DC’s hottest areas. Anchored by the Verizon Center, Convention Center and Gallery Place, Chinatown has emerged as a primary entertainment and nightlife district. As the heart of the Chinese American community within the DC region, Chinatown hosts cultural festivals and events, such as the Chinese New Year’s parade, and boasts cultural landmarks, such as the Chinatown Friendship Archway. It is also home to more than 30 Asian themed businesses and several cultural institutions. This dynamic combination of culture and economic opportunity has made Chinatown an attractive spot for new international Asian restaurants and retailers such as Ping Pong Dim Sum and Yo! Sushi. Chinatown is also home to several world-renowned cultural and tourist destinations such as the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery, Shakespeare Theatre, Smithsonian’s American Art Museum, Woolly Mammoth Theater, Goethe-Institute and the National Building Museum. Businesses located within Chinatown enjoy high growth potential with access to diverse markets, including Downtown office workers, visitors and tourists and Asian Americans throughout the region. In addition, the CityCenterDC development will add 515,000 square feet of office space, 674 residential units and 184,700 square feet of retail space in late 2013. This energy—combined with great access to public transit and major roads such as Massachusetts Avenue, New York Avenue, and I-395—continues to make Chinatown attractive to new and innovative businesses and residents. 12 Chinatown 30Chinese or Asian themed businesses in Chinatown 220yearly events at the Verizon Center 1,141new residential units by the end of 2014 within a half-mile
  31. 31. M MM M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M WALKER JONES ELEMENTARY SCHOOL GONZAGA COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL WINDOWS CAFE RUSTIK TAVERN BIG BEAR CAFÉ OLD ENGINE COMPANY NO. 12 BOUNDARY STONE FUTURE WALMART HARRIS TEETERCVS FLORIDA AVENUE MARKET L’ENFANT PLAZA RESIDENCE INN BY MARRIOTT MANDARIN HOTEL GIANT FOOD TRUORLEANS YES! ORGANIC MARKET FUTURE HOWARD TOWN CENTER PROGRESSION PLACE FUTURE CITYMARKET AT O STREET ROOM BOARD WHOLE FOODS MARKET SOURCE THEATER STUDIO THEATER LINCOLN THEATER REEVES CENTER UNION MARKET FUTURE ADER JOE’S FUTURE GIANT H 395 395 The Mall Stanton Square Union Station Plaza Logan Circle NATIONAL BUILDING MUSEUM VERIZON CENTER UNITED STATES CAPITOL LIBRARY OF CONGRESS RAYBURN HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING CANNON HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING SUPREME COURT EASTER MATCHBOX HELLO ATF U.S. DOJ FAA USDA US HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM HOWARD UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL ARTS INDUSTRY BUILDING FREER GALLERY OF ART SMITHSONIAN CASTLE HIRSHHORN MUSEUM NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART SHAKESPEARE THEATRE HOTEL MONACO RENAISSANCE HOTEL EMBASSY SUITES SAFEWAY BUSBOYS POETS KUSHI VIDA GYM FUTURE CITYCENTERDC THE HAMILTON GALLERY PLACE WOODIES BUIDLING HARMAN CENTER FOR THE ARTS WOOLY MAMMOTH THEATER WARNER THEATER NATIONAL THEATER HOWARD THEATER WASHINGTON CONVENTION CENTER FUTURE MARRIOTT MARQUIS N NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN HISTORY NATIONAL MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART NATIONAL AIR SPACE MUSEUM UNION STATION TED’S BULLETIN GOOD STUFF EATERY SEC WALGREEN’S YO! SUSHI PANERA BREAD ARCHIVES/ NAVY MEM'L METRO CENTER MCPHERSON SQUARE FEDERAL TRIANGLE GALLERY PL/ CHINATOWN MT VERNON SQ/ CONVENTION CENTER SHAW/HOWARD UNIVERSITY SHAW/HOWARD UNIVERSITY U ST/AFRICAN AMERICAN CIVIL WAR MEM'L/CARDOZO L'ENFANT PLAZA CAPITOL SOUTH EASTERN MARKET FEDERAL CENTER SW UNION STATION JUDICIARY SQ NOMA/GALLAUDET U/ NEW YORK AVE SMITHSONIAN RHODE ISLAND AVE FLORIDA AVE FLO 1STST1STST S ST 4THST R ST 5THST T STT ST 2NDST 3RDST W ST V ST U ST LINCOLNRD 2NDST SUMMITPL 1STST 1STST 3RDST MASSACHUSETTS AVE 14THST NORTHCAPITOLST 7THST NEW YORK AVE NEW YORK AVE 6THST 11THST NEWJERSEYAVE 9THST 8THST 13THST N ST N ST G ST F ST VERMONTAVE 1STST 5THST 4THST M ST M ST R ST 2NDST H ST P ST Q ST S ST P ST O ST T ST V ST 4THST 5THST U ST CONSTITUTION AVE INDEPENDENCE AVE M AIN E A NEW NORTH CAROLINA A EAST CAPITOL ST 3RDST E ST LO UISIAN A AVE W ASHIN G TO N AVE C ST D ST ST E ST G ST 1STST 14THST14THST 7THST 9THST 15THST K ST PENNSYLVANIA AVE 12THST 4THST L ST E ST D ST C ST 6THST 13THST INDIANA AVE H ST K ST I ST 2NDST 3RDST 4THST 5THST 6THST 7THST L ST 6THST 5THST 4THST 3RDST B NEAL ST Chinatown Shaw Downtown Mt Vernon Triangle 14th U/ MidCity North Capitol 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 13,552 41,010 317,634 Male 50% 52% 50% Female 50% 48% 50% High School Graduate1 + 86% 83% 86% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 60% 51% 55% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 34% 28% 31% Households Households (HH) 8,145 22,623 149,104 Average HH Size 1.6 1.7 1.9 Owner-occupied 28% 28% 37% Renter-occupied 72% 72% 63% Median HH Value $336,360 $379,557 $416,369 Income Average HH $64,276 $66,737 $89,898 Median HH $36,420 $40,278 $59,865 HH Income $49,999 59% 57% 43% HH Income $50 – 74,999 12% 14% 15% HH Income $75,000+ 29% 30% 42% Median HH Disposable $28,698 $31,981 $44,928 Age Age 20 10% 11% 15% Age 20 – 34 46% 45% 41% Age 35 – 64 34% 35% 34% Age 65+ 10% 9% 10% Median Age (years) 33.0 32.8 32.5 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $13,786 $38,959 $340,421 Computers Accessories $1,798 $5,004 $43,404 Entertainment Rec $23,734 $66,589 $586,909 Pets $3,572 $9,992 $88,162 TV, Radio Sound $9,871 $27,582 $237,680 Food at Home $35,790 $99,844 $861,441 Food away from Home $25,979 $72,858 $631,424 Home Improvement Services $13,031 $37,346 $356,861 Household Furnishings $8,948 $25,210 $224,681 Personal Care $3,093 $8,576 $73,594 Vehicle Maint. Repair $7,061 $19,649 $170,686 Avg. Spent per HH $22.0 $22.2 $28.8 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 27,671 | 32,416 Gallery Place/Chinatown 9,209 | 6,435 Archives/Navy Memorial Walk Score 97 Walker’s Paradise Contact Office of Planning Thor Nelson, Urban Design, Revitalization and Design p| 202.442.7600  e| thor.nelson@dc.gov w| www.planning.dc.gov
  32. 32. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 A mix of high-income families and professional singles calls this urban oasis home. Others from around the region come regularly for films in one of the District’s last great historic movie houses, a visit to the National Zoo or dinner in one of several dining establishments along Connecticut Avenue. Cleveland Park’s location is ideal for professionals seeking a touch of tranquility. Just a stone’s throw from the excitement of downtown, the neighborhood features beautifully restored historic homes, condominiums and apartments situated on both sides of the bustling Connecticut Avenue corridor. World famous Rock Creek Park and the National Zoo, which border the neighborhood, create a green edge and respite from the urban buzz. Served by Metrorail’s Red Line and several bus lines, the area is highly accessible by mass transit. The neighborhood is also convenient to many of the District’s major thoroughfares. Developed in the 1890s, Cleveland Park could be considered one of the earlier “suburbs” for DC, although now squarely part of the central urban fabric. The neighborhood obtained its name in the late 1880’s when President Grover Cleveland purchased a farmhouse in the area. Cleveland Park is unique due to its significant collection of architect-designed late Victorian frame houses reminiscent of New England summer homes. Cleveland Park is a designated DC Historic District, which enables qualified property owners of contributing commercial properties to access tax credits and other incentives to rehabilitate their space. The Cleveland Park Historic District lies between Wisconsin Avenue on the west, Connecticut Avenue on the east, Klingle Valley on the south, and Tilden Street on the north. 13 Cleveland Park $97Kmedian HH income 85%residents have a bachelor’s degree or higher 14Zagat-rated restaurants along Connecticut Avenue 2.3Mvisitors to the National Zoo in 2012
  33. 33. M M M M TARGET BEST BUY BED, BATH BEYOND MARSHALLS GIA YES! ORGANIC MARKET ROOM BOARD LAURIOL PLAZA WASHINGTON HILTON REEVES CENTER MOUNT PLEASANT LIBRARY SAFEWAY GLOVER PARK HARDWARE OLE ODS KET HARRIS TEETER SAFEWAY YES! ORGANIC MARKET FUTURE TRADER JOE’S RUFF READY HIGHLANDS National Zoological Park Dumbarton Oaks Park UNIVERSITY OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA HINGTON ONAL HEDRAL MARRIOT WARDMAN PARK HOTEL UPTOWN THEATER US NAVAL OBSERVATORY KINGSBURY CENTER TIVOLI THEATER ROCK CREEK TENNIS CENTER WMAT BUS BA COLUMBIA HEIGHTS WOODLEY PARK/ ZOO/ ADAMS MORGAN VAN NESS/UDC CLEVELAND PARK M ASSACHUSETTS AVE COLUMBIARD 1 BEACHDR 1 CALVERT ST TILDEN ST PARK RD PARK RD PINEY BRANCH PKWY ARKANSAS AVE KLINGLE RD PORTER ST CLEVELAN D AVE ROCK C REE KPKWY KALORAMA RD WYOMING AVE CALIFORNIA ST 24THST 23RDST BELMONT RD T ST V ST MONROE ST NEWTON ST UPTON ST BLAG D EN AVE RDWAY ST MACOMB ST NEWMARK ST FIELD ST WOODLEY RD 29THST 28THST 27THST CATHEDRAL AVE CATHEDRALAVE W O ODLAND DR NORMANSTONE DR KALORAM A RD LANIER PL HARVARD ST 17THST 19THST 18THST SP ARGYLETER UPSH 18THST WEBSTER ST SHEPHERD ST TAYLO 17THST IO W A A 34THPL D 35THST RODMAN ST BROADBRANCHRD U ST 34THST OBS ERVATORY CIRCLE NSIN AVE CONNECTICUTAVE S ST ELLICOTT ST ALBEMARLE ST BRANDYWINE ST DAVENPORT ST 36THST WHITEHAVEN ST FLORIDA AVE CONNECTICUTAVE CO LO RA DO AVE MTPLEASANTST 18THST Glover Park Cleveland Park 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 8,873 28,970 334,591 Male 43% 45% 48% Female 57% 55% 52% High School Graduate1 + 98% 95% 89% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 85% 79% 64% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 55% 49% 38% Households Households (HH) 5,491 16,036 155,746 Average HH Size 1.6 1.8 2.0 Owner-occupied 28% 34% 41% Renter-occupied 72% 66% 59% Median HH Value $541,640 $606,938 $515,203 Income Average HH $123,198 $129,271 $111,561 Median HH $97,244 $101,592 $80,300 HH Income $49,999 21% 19% 33% HH Income $50 – 74,999 14% 14% 14% HH Income $75,000+ 65% 67% 53% Median HH Disposable $66,855 $70,258 $57,072 Age Age 20 9% 10% 17% Age 20 – 34 39% 39% 37% Age 35 – 64 39% 38% 35% Age 65+ 13% 13% 12% Median Age (years) 35.9 35.5 33.4 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $17,184 $53,460 $440,319 Computers Accessories $2,237 $6,991 $56,283 Entertainment Rec $30,236 $93,917 $771,955 Pets $4,522 $14,065 $115,896 TV, Radio Sound $11,853 $37,020 $305,095 Food at Home $42,329 $132,364 $1,099,837 Food away from Home $31,777 $99,208 $813,307 Home Improvement Services $19,394 $59,031 $500,066 Household Furnishings $11,806 $36,453 $298,379 Personal Care $3,705 $11,615 $94,845 Vehicle Maint. Repair $8,647 $27,011 $221,891 Avg. Spent per HH $40.4 $42.7 $35.9 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 4,525 | 4,921 Cleveland Park Walk Score 91 Walker’s Paradise Contact Washington, DC Economic Partnership Chad Shuskey, SVP, Research Visual Communications p| 202.661.8670 e| cshuskey@wdcep.com w| www.wdcep.com
  34. 34. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 Alive with activity, Columbia Heights is one of DC’s most diverse and urban neighborhoods. The catalysts fueling its transformation are the addition of several major retailers, a revived arts scene and exciting new residential projects. More than 3,760 residential units have been built or undergone substantial renovations since 2001 in this exciting community. DC USA, a 500,000 square foot urban retail center anchored by Target, Best Buy, Marshalls, Bed Bath Beyond and Washington Sports Club, is ushering in a new crowd of residents, employers, retailers and tourists. In addition, the 270-seat GALA Theatre and the Dance Institute of Washington form the cultural center of the neighborhood. Columbia Heights is the densest neighborhood in DC, housing more than 34,000 residents within a half-mile. The neighborhood’s urban character, walkability, amenities and new residential construction have been drawing young professionals in their 20s and 30s to move to this area. The neighborhood’s stability, access to public transportation and proximity to the downtown core offer retailers a wealth of opportunities. With the commercial heart of Columbia Heights approaching capacity, spin-off development has occurred on 11th Street as a result of the increased demand for local, unique establishments. Several independent restaurants, cafes and taverns such as Maple, The Coupe (open 24 hours), RedRocks, Room 11 and Meridian Pint have opened over the past few years. The restoration of the Tivoli Theatre, the opening of a 53,000-square-foot Giant Food grocery store and the development of residential and retail projects such as Kenyon Square and Highland Park have all sparked new energy and excitement that Columbia Heights is ready to share. 14 Columbia Heights top 10 one of ULI’s 10 best development projects in 2010 34.7K residents within a 10-minute walk $91K average income of new HHs4 $487K average closing price for homes + condos in 20123
  35. 35. M M M M M M M TARGET BEST BUY BED, BATH BEYOND MARSHALLS REDROCKS THE COUPE GIANT FOOD WINDOWS CAFE RUSTIK TAVERN BIG BEAR CAFÉ OLD ENGINE COMPANY NO. 12 BOUNDARY STONE YES! ORGANIC MARKET CVS FUTURE SAFEWAY PARK PLACE KOMI SAFEWAY YES! ORGANIC MARKET YES! ANIC RKET FUTURE HOWARD TOWN CENTER PROGRESSION PLACE FUTURE CITYMARKET AT O STREET ROOM BOARD LAURIOL PLAZA WHOLE FOODS SOURCE THEATER STUDIO THEATER WASHINGTON HILTON LINCOLN THEATER REEVES CENTER MOUNT PLEASANT LIBRARY DUPONT HOTEL HARRIS TEETER SAFEWAY FUTURE TRADER JOE’S POTBELLY FUEL PIZZA FROZENYO DOMKU ACE HARDWARE RUFF READY HIGHLANDS H H H H Rock Creek Cemetery McMillan Reservoir Logan Circle Sherman Circle Grant Circle VETERANS AFFAIRS MEDICAL CENTER WASHINGTON HOSPITAL CENTER CHILDRENS NATIONAL MEDICAL CENTER HOWARD UNIVERSITY HOWARD UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL HOWARD THEATER TIVOLI THEATER WMATA BUS BARN PETWORTH LIBRARY UPONT CIRCLE SHAW/HOWARD UNIVERSITY SHAW/HOWARD UNIVERSITY U ST/AFRICAN AMERICAN CIVIL WAR MEM'L/CARDOZO COLUMBIA HEIGHTS GEORGIA AVE/ PETWORTH -- RHODE ISLAND AVE FLORIDA AVE 1STST S ST R ST T ST 2NDST 3RDST ADAMS ST W ST V ST U ST LINCOLNRD 16THST 14THST NEW HAM PSHIRE AVE MBIARD NEWJERSEY 8THST GEORGIAAVE 13THST COLUMBIA RD PARK RD PINEY BRANCH PKWY ARKANSAS AVE KANSASAVE SHERMANAVE IRVING ST FLORIDAAVE VERMONTAVE 18THST 19THST R ST P ST Q ST S ST P ST T ST V ST 4THST 5THST MONROE ST NEWTON ST BLAG D EN AVE KALORAM A RD LANIER PL HARVARD ST 17THST 19THST 18THST SPRING RD HOLMEADPL ARGYLETER UPSHUR ST ALLISON ST BUCHANAN ST CRITTENDEN ST 18THST WEBSTER ST SHEPHERD ST TAYLOR ST 17THST SHEPHERD ST RANDOLPH ST QUINCY ST W A AVE 8THST 7THST 5THST 4THST 3RDST 9THST BRYANT ST ROCKCREEK CHURCH RD U ST NORTHCAPITO RIDA AVE M ICHIGAN AVE PARKPLACE MTPLEASANTST IRVING ST 18THST PARK RD LAMONT ST MORTON ST WARDERST Central 14th Street Petworth/ Park View Columbia Heights Mt Pleasant 14th U/ MidCity Dupont Circle Adams Morgan Howard University/ Pleasant Plains 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 34,664 82,208 354,156 Male 50% 51% 48% Female 50% 49% 52% High School Graduate1 + 73% 80% 86% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 42% 52% 55% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 22% 27% 31% Households Households (HH) 15,441 37,533 164,160 Average HH Size 2.2 2.1 2.0 Owner-occupied 34% 26% 34% Renter-occupied 66% 74% 66% Median HH Value $432,789 $439,441 $417,799 Income Average HH $63,180 $81,208 $96,201 Median HH $41,157 $52,875 $66,349 HH Income $49,999 57% 48% 39% HH Income $50 – 74,999 14% 15% 16% HH Income $75,000+ 28% 37% 46% Median HH Disposable $32,691 $40,027 $49,550 Age Age 20 17% 15% 16% Age 20 – 34 44% 43% 38% Age 35 – 64 33% 34% 35% Age 65+ 7% 8% 12% Median Age (years) 31.3 32.1 33.3 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $26,470 $77,521 $403,488 Computers Accessories $3,306 $9,820 $51,117 Entertainment Rec $44,313 $131,707 $701,533 Pets $6,602 $19,701 $105,691 TV, Radio Sound $18,410 $54,043 $281,810 Food at Home $67,440 $196,664 $1,019,959 Food away from Home $48,627 $143,428 $747,869 Home Improvement Services $25,181 $77,006 $443,335 Household Furnishings $16,831 $50,189 $269,380 Personal Care $5,628 $16,664 $87,125 Vehicle Maint. Repair $12,954 $38,468 $203,194 Avg. Spent per HH $21.2 $25.8 $31.2 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections 3. MRIS (2012), courtesy of Kevin J. Wood, Realtor 4. GreenPint of Growth (2012) Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 12,359 | 16,004 Columbia Heights Walk Score 95 Walker’s Paradise Contact Washington, DC Economic Partnership Chad Shuskey, SVP, Research Visual Communications p| 202.661.8670 e| cshuskey@wdcep.com w| www.wdcep.com
  36. 36. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 15 Hometothe350-acreSaintElizabethsEastandWestCampuses, a new hospital and the District’s Unified Communications Center, Congress Heights will be an epicenter for future business opportunities. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s consolidation on the West Campus is the larg- est federal project since the Pentagon. In Summer 2013, 3,700 U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) employees will start to arrive in their new 1.2 million square-foot headquarters and will be looking for banking, restaurants, coffee shops and entertainment establishments. The 178-acre East Campus will also be redeveloped into a mixed-use community. Initial plans call for 1.5 million square feet of office space, 2,000 residential units, 340,000 square feet of retail space, 400 hotel rooms as well as institutional, civic and education and uses. At the center of the redevelopment efforts will be the District’s first Innovation Hub, which will offer the opportunity for an integrated center of research, education, training, entre- preneurship, technology transfer and commercialization. Ancillary development is also occurring at the Congress Heights Metrorail station. City Partners and Sanford Capital have plans to build a 275,000-square-foot office building with 20,000 square feet of retail space on top of the southern Metrorail entrance. In addition, the Friendship Technology Preparatory Academy is building a new 80,000-square-foot fa- cility at Milwaukee Place and Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue, SE. An early suburb, developed primarily in the 1940s, the neighborhood retains its breathtak- ing vistas of the Capitol Dome and the entire city from its many leafy hilltops. Congress heights/Saint Elizabeths 4,900+ employees at USCG, UCC and St. Elizabeths Hospital $91Kaverage annual salary of USCG employees 65,000 SF Giant—the largest supermarket in DC 5.5Mpotential SF of Saint Elizabeths East redevelopment Image courtesy of Ayers Saint Gross Visualization by Interface Multimedia Image courtesy of DMPED
  37. 37. M M M M PNC BANK AUTO ZONE SOUTH CAPITOL SHOPPING CENTER MARTIN’S FOOD TOWN SUBWAY POPEYES CONGRESS HEIGHTS METRO REDEVELOPMENT NGTON IBRARY H H Fort Stanton Park Oxon Run Parkway SAINT ELIZABETHS WEST CAMPUS SAINT ELIZABETHS EAST CAMPUS JOINT BASE COSTIA-BOLLING GREATER SOUTHEAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL SAINT ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL GIANT FOOD U.S. COAST GUARD HQ GATEWAY PAVILION UNIFIED COMMUNICATIONS CENTER CONGRESS HEIGHTS SCHOOL CONGRESS HEIGHTS CONGRESS HEIGHTS SOUTHERN AVENUE M M ARYLAN D SUM NER RD HO W ARD RD MARTINLUTHERKINGJRAVE M A SOUTHCAPITOLST MARTIN LUTHERKING JRAVE SO UTH ERN AVE ALABAMA AVE W HEELER RD MISSISSIPPI AVE 4THST STANTONRD S UITLAND PKWY MALCOM X AVE CAPITOLST BARN ABY ST CHESAPEAKE ST ATLANTIC ST ATLANTIC ST LIVINGSTONRD VALLEY AVE 3RDST 9TH ST CO N DO N TER 1STST1STST M ISSISSIPPI AVE RESTER ST BURY ST 4THST HO W ARD RD ELVANS RD ELVANSRD POMEROY RD W ADE RD STEVENS RD GAINESVILLE ST AIN G ER PL STANTO N TER BR UCE ST 15THPL 18THST SAVANNAH ST 22NDST SAVANNAHTER SAVANNAH ST 10THPL CONGRESS ST ALLEY SQ 7THST 2NDST NEW CO M B ST 5TH ST 4TH ST BROTHERSPL SAVANNAH S T 6THST HORNERPL 6THST 23RD ST STANTON RD ANACOSTIAFREEWAY ERIE ST M O RRIS RD Congress Heights/ Saint Elizabeths 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 7,685 24,543 170,803 Male 48% 45% 47% Female 52% 55% 53% High School Graduate1 + 80% 76% 84% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 9% 10% 27% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 4% 4% 12% Households Households (HH) 2,939 8,930 72,182 Average HH Size 2.4 2.6 2.3 Owner-occupied 33% 26% 34% Renter-occupied 67% 74% 66% Median HH Value $237,571 $242,031 $239,275 Income Average HH $55,027 $52,906 $70,128 Median HH $36,335 $28,536 $46,901 HH Income $49,999 61% 66% 52% HH Income $50 – 74,999 18% 14% 18% HH Income $75,000+ 21% 20% 30% Median HH Disposable $29,251 $23,666 $36,957 Age Age 20 28% 34% 26% Age 20 – 34 22% 22% 26% Age 35 – 64 41% 35% 38% Age 65+ 10% 9% 10% Median Age (years) 35.6 30.3 33.7 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $4,385 $11,583 $125,422 Computers Accessories $498 $1,329 $15,387 Entertainment Rec $7,454 $19,579 $219,023 Pets $1,140 $2,987 $33,448 TV, Radio Sound $3,116 $8,414 $89,732 Food at Home $11,418 $30,478 $325,667 Food away from Home $8,070 $21,508 $234,305 Home Improvement Services $4,870 $11,757 $138,986 Household Furnishings $2,807 $7,367 $83,389 Personal Care $920 $2,517 $27,673 Vehicle Maint. Repair $2,163 $5,805 $64,240 Avg. Spent per HH $18.2 $16.2 $22.4 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 2,527 | 2,024 Congress Heights Traffic Counts (avg. weekday) 19,700 Alabama Avenue 11,600 Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue Contact Congress Heights Main Streets James Bunn, Chairman p| 202.562.1405 e| jbunn@congressheights.org w| www.congressheights.org
  38. 38. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 16 A neighborhood with small town sensibilities and big city am- bitions, Deanwood is experiencing several neighborhood re- vitalization programs. New housing, retail and office spaces near the Minnesota Avenue Metrorail station are focusing new investment in this corner of the District of Columbia. Today, Nannie Helen Burroughs is becoming a focal point for a variety of new projects. The Nannie Helen at 4800 will deliver a five-story, 70-unit apartment building with 1,790 square feet of retail/restaurant space in fall 2013. In 2012, the $10 million Nannie Helen Burroughs Great Streets Project was completed and features extensive infrastructure improvements, including a reconfigured single lane roadway to allow for traffic calming, landscaped medians, bicycle lanes and new sidewalks and street lighting. In addition, the redevelopment of the Strand Theater is moving forward as Family Dollar has an LOI for the retail space. Nannie Helen Burroughs Avenue is a designated Great Street by the District government and as funds become available existing small businesses and new businesses will have the opportunity to apply for up to $85,000 in reimbursable grants for the purpose of capital expenditures. The newly completed Deanwood Strategic Plan, a Great Streets Initiative, provides an implementation framework for public and private investments along Nannie Helen Burroughs, Minnesota Avenue, Sheriff Road, Division Avenue and Dix Street. The Plan seeks to strengthen Deanwood and encourage new mixed-use and mixed-income development in strategic locations that attracts jobs and creates a safe and pedestrian-friendly environment over a 10-year horizon. Deanwood $10MNannie Helen Burroughs streetscape enhancements 55KSF of additional retail demand $2.4MMarvin Gaye Park renovations completed in 2010
  39. 39. M M M M FEWAY S STRAND THEATER WENDY’S 7-11 A-1 GROCERY MCDONALD’S MENICK’S MARKET DEANWOOD COMMUNITY CENTER H. D. WOODSON HIGH SCHOOL FUTURE CAPITOL GATEWAY MARKETPLACE KELLY MIDDLE SCHOOL NANNIE HELEN AT 4800 KENILWORTH ELEMENTARY W A SH IN G TO N D .C .BO RD ER O F TH E D ISTRIC T O F C O LU M BIA295 Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens Fort Mahan Park Fort Chaplin Park BENNING RD MINNESOTA AVE DEANWOOD CAPITOL HTS M M ARYLAN D RYLAN D OL ST BENNING RD SHERIFF RD CENTRAL A V E NANNIE HELEN BURROUGHS AVE EASTERN AVE DIVISIONAVE 58THST C ST T 42NDST GAULT PL HAYES ST JAY ST JUST ST 52NDST 49THST 49THST BROOKS ST 47THST FOOTE ST BLAINE ST BLAINE ST KENILW ORTH AVE ANACOSTIAAVE DOUGLAS ST LANE PL MEADE ST M IN N ESO TA AVE 44THST LEE ST MEADE ST 50THST 55THST AMES ST EADS ST 53RDST 51STST 54THST 49THST 50THST C ST D ST B ST E ST D ST F ST YORK AVE BENNINGRD MEAST CAPITOL ST Deanwood 0.5 mile radius Great Street Main Street BID Area Retail/Restaurant Arts/Tourism Education Government Population 0-0.5 mi 0-1 mi 0-3 mi Population 7,649 28,387 177,327 Male 47% 45% 47% Female 53% 55% 53% High School Graduate1 + 73% 78% 80% Bachelor’s Degree1 + 13% 13% 19% Graduate/Prof. Degree1 2% 4% 8% Households Households (HH) 2,916 11,067 68,851 Average HH Size 2.5 2.5 2.5 Owner-occupied 43% 36% 46% Renter-occupied 57% 64% 54% Median HH Value $226,052 $227,173 $212,675 Income Average HH $47,686 $49,920 $61,922 Median HH $35,231 $36,188 $43,720 HH Income $49,999 67% 64% 55% HH Income $50 – 74,999 18% 18% 19% HH Income $75,000+ 16% 18% 26% Median HH Disposable $27,918 $28,880 $35,504 Age Age 20 28% 30% 27% Age 20 – 34 18% 20% 22% Age 35 – 64 41% 38% 40% Age 65+ 13% 12% 12% Median Age (years) 37.9 34.4 36.1 Consumer Expenditures ($ thousands)2 Apparel Services $4,015 $15,359 $107,169 Computers Accessories $443 $1,741 $12,922 Entertainment Rec $6,708 $26,100 $190,389 Pets $1,022 $3,997 $29,509 TV, Radio Sound $2,833 $10,993 $76,794 Food at Home $10,378 $40,033 $280,449 Food away from Home $7,312 $28,342 $200,502 Home Improvement Services $4,470 $16,984 $131,311 Household Furnishings $2,542 $9,861 $72,505 Personal Care $824 $3,259 $23,596 Vehicle Maint. Repair $1,945 $7,631 $55,478 Avg. Spent per HH $16.6 $17.2 $20.2 Source: ESRI, 2012 Estimates Projections 1. American Community Survey 2005 – 2009 2. ESRI, 2011 Estimates Projections Metrorail Exits (avg. weekday | avg. weekend) 1,643 | 1,317 Deanwood 3,189 | 2,618 Minnesota Avenue Traffic Counts (avg. weekday) 10,500–12,800 Nannie Helen Burroughs Avenue 3,900 Sheriff Road Contact Deanwood Heights Main Streets, Inc. Deborah Jones, Executive Director p| 202.621.2288 e| info@dhmainstreets.org w| www.dhmainstreets.org DEANWOOD grows local businesses FREE Marketing Business Services contact: info@dhmainstreets.org
  40. 40. /50Washington, DC Economic Partnership DC Neighborhood Profiles 2013 Located between the White House and the Capitol, Down- town offers a remarkable urban experience for workers, resi- dents and visitors. The area is the commercial, cultural, din- ing and entertainment center of the region and competes on a national level in all these economic sectors. Over the next five years, Downtown’s shopping district will grow to position Downtown retail as a dynamic destination shopping district, growing from 630,000 to 730,000 square feet in fall 2013 and 1.0 million square feet by the end of 2017. Furthermore, over the next 10 years, the residential population is projected to increase by 20,000 to 30,000 within 15 blocks of Downtown. In the fall of 2013, Phase I of the $1 billion, 2.3 million-square-foot CityCenterDC project will open, bringing a total of 185,000 square feet of retail to the center of Downtown. The retail is projected to contain 100,000 square feet of shoppers goods and 85,000 square feet of restaurants and food retail. This exciting seven acre mixed-use project will also offer 520,000 square feet of trophy office space (anchored by Covington Burling, LLP), 458 apartments, 216 condominiums and 2,040 parking spaces (750 dedicated for retail parking). The explosion of 50 new destination restaurants in Downtown over the past 10 years include numerous openings from the city’s and nation’s top chefs such as Jose Andres, Mike Isabella and Michel Richard. This increase illustrates the consumer demand that is available to high quality Downtown retailers and restaurants. 17 Downtown DC 181Kemployees within Downtown 26Kpopulation within Downtown adjacent to Downtown 4.6Kmultifamily units under construction within 1.5 miles of Downtown 9.5Mannual visitors to Downtown’s attractions Artist’s rendering by Neoscape

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