Going for a Record
The record snow that accumulated this weekend brought us out to snowball fights and sledding in Meridian Hill Park. With few stores open and few roads passable, Saturday was a true holiday in the old-fashioned sense.
Howard University Hospital’s groundskeeper was out in heartbeat clearing the hospital’s sidewalks while contractors cleared the hospital’s parking lot. Pretty impressive!
Neighbors dug their cars out of snow and the usually busy Florida Avenue carried more pedestrians then automobiles. The District government sent numerous plows along U Street and Florida Avenue, largely neglecting (understandably) the quiet streets of LeDroit Park.
You didn’t need a 4×4 to get around this weather. These two girls found that a daddy-powered sled was the most convenient form of transportation.
In Dupont Circle, hundreds of people gathered for a snowball fight. We caught the end of it:
Is a white Hummer camouflaged when it’s in the snow? These snowballers were able to spot and pelt it.
This Suburban sped away as soon as the light turned green.
For cars in LeDroit Park, Fourth and Fifth Streets are passable, but the east-west streets are better left to the four-wheel-drives.
More snow is expected Tuesday night and during the day on Wednesday. Were Pres. William McKinley still alive today, he would not only argue the merits of a gold standard with Rep. Ron Paul, but would also scoff at this relative “dusting”. Though we’ve recorded 45 inches so far this winter, the winter of 1898-99, during McKinley’s administration, set the city’s record, dumping a total of 54.4 inches on the capital!
If you’re tired of the snow, be glad you don’t live in Québec City, which suffers 124 inches of snow each winter… on average!
Snowpocalypse 2: Electric Boogaloo
Exactly nine months from now the maternity wards will be full, but if you’re looking for other fun today without consequences later, you might consider sledding and lobbing snowballs at your fellow citizens.
The steps at Meridian Hill Park make for excellent sledding (pictured above). The park will also host a snowball fight at 2 pm. Alternatively, there is a snowball fight scheduled for 2 pm at Dupont Circle. Please leave your city-issued guns at home.
Snowpocalypse, Part Deux
The National Weather Service is predicting a snow storm to cover Washington from Friday morning through Saturday evening. The storm is expected to leave 12 – 20 inches of snow.
So far we’ve been impressed with the dedication of Howard University Hospital’s groundskeepers, who are out there within an hour of the first flake to clear the sidewalks.
Here’s a novel idea we found online for a pedal-powered snow plow. If someone is willing to build it, we’re willing to drive it down every sidewalk in LeDroit Park.
Finding Found Art

Ghetto Picasso's calling card.
…And CRASH!!! Sharesten, alone in The Christinsanity Chair, tilts over. The band plays on. Jo joins her. And the two balance The Christinsanity Chair. Friends fo’evah.
Wednesday morning we discovered that LeDroit Park had been “art bombed” with several found-art sculptures. The Brooklyn-based artist Ghetto Picasso adorned several sidewalks with his whimsical works. Each sculpture was tagged with a playing card with a few lines of prose and the artist’s web address. The artist describes himself thusly:
Theorizing the green movement as a last minute prayer before the Apocalypse, Ghetto Picasso symbolically interprets mankind’s edification efforts with the use of junk, salvage and reclaimed materials.
As detailed in his blog, Ghetto Picasso currently has an installation at Tryst in Adams Morgan.

Found at the LeDroit Park gate.

Found in the front garden at T and Sixth Streets NW

Attached to a fence at T and Wiltberger Streets NW
Bars, Bikes, and Buildings
Highlights from Thursday’s monthly meeting of ANC1B: New restaurants and lounges are on their way to U Street. Office construction in the District may be hurting, but neo-Victorian townhouses will replace an old parking lot on Vermont Avenue. Fifteenth Street’s protected bike lane will finally enter Ward 1.
Bar Fights
Several commissioners bickered over the process of approving liquor licenses— in this case a procedural dispute— but the commission relented and took no further action on Cuckoo Marans and the U Street Music Hall, both of which we wrote about earlier. The ANC typically protests all new licenses officially as a means to goad applicants to reach voluntary agreements with the ANC. These voluntary agreements tend to be less permissive than the District’s standing liquor laws.
In new business, a new liquor license applicant presented his plans for Café Society, which he billed as an affordable and upscale (oxymoron?) steakhouse that will feature steaks (of course) and local produce. The 139-seat steakhouse will occupy the ground floor and upper floors (and a roof terrace) of the newly renovated building on the northeast corner of Fourteenth and U Streets. Cuckoo Marans will occupy the basement of the same building.
Against the Grain
DDOT sought and received the ANC’s support for extending the Fifteenth Street southbound contraflow bike lane from U Street northward to the foot of Meridian Hill at W Street. Fifteenth Street is one-way northbound from Massachusetts Avenue on the edge of downtown all the way up to Columbia Heights. Though one resident complained of renegade cyclists disobeying traffic laws, the ANC voted to support the lane anyway. Commissioner Brianne Nadeau (ANC1B05 – Meridan Hill) expressed her desire to see the lane extended all the way up Meridian Hill to Euclid Street, but DDOT is not seeking that extension just yet, though they seem to be studying it, if informally.
When DDOT began installing the contraflow lane in November, Councilmember Jim Graham (D – Ward 1) flipped out at DDOT’s alleged inadequate notification of his constituents. In response DDOT built the lane along Fifteenth Street in Ward 2, but stopped at Ward 1’s boundary at U Street. A chastened DDOT now has the ANC’s approval.
Home Again
A local developer and his architect presented plans to build three townhouses (two units each) on the south side of the parking lot at T Street and Vermont Avenue. The architect displayed several handsome elevation drawings, all in a Victorian style, that match the rich neighboring architecture. Each of the three townhouses will feature alley-accessible garages. The developer will also replace the existing concrete sidewalk with brick, our favorite paving material. The north side of the parking lot will also be redeveloped as part of a separate project.
Winter Wonderland
The record snowfall ended around 1 am on Sunday morning, leaving one to two feet of accumulated snow across the region. We spent much of the day out around town. With many stores closed and little to do, we found fellow Washingtonians friendly and relaxed.
At Meridian Hill Park, about 40 people showed up to sled down snow-packed steps.
Most were just spectators, though.
Christmas is here,
bringing good cheer,
to young and old,
meek and the bold,
Just a few blocks away at Fourteenth and U Streets, futureMAGINING, the folks responsible for the pillow fight a few months back, hosted a whimsical snowball fight, which wasn’t without its own tempest.
And the Postal Service held to its motto.
Metro halted all bus service and at 1 pm train service was limited to underground stations. The District government claims to have plowed every street at least once, but we encountered many streets (especially the narrow ones) that don’t appear to have been touched. Main roads, such as Fourteenth Street, received their needed treatment.
We took the Green Line downtown and found the streets, including Pennsylvania Avenue, deserted.
Some took the opportunity to play football on the Mall.
The Senate was still in session, though it’s a surprise that any Senators could find their way to the Capitol.
We spotted birds huddling for heat on top of a warm Metro vent next to Seventh Street on the Mall:
We helped build a snow Java the Hut.
The Smithsonians were closed, as were the National Gallery of Art and the Sculpture Garden.
Farragut Square was deserted.
‘Twas the week before Christmas, when all through the White House
Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse
God rest ye merry gentlemen.
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