Washington
Federal planners approve preliminary Commanders stadium plan, but have parking questions – WTOP News
Some National Capital Planning Commission members had questions and concerns about the redevelopment project’s two planned parking garages.
(Courtesy Washington Commanders/HKS)
Courtesy Washington Commanders/HKS
(Credit HKS)
Credit HKS
(Courtesy Washington Commanders/HKS)
Courtesy Washington Commanders/HKS
The National Capital Planning Commission voted unanimously Thursday to approve preliminary site and building plans for the new Washington Commanders stadium at the former RFK Stadium site in D.C.
But members raised questions and concerns about the redevelopment project’s two planned parking garages.
“The stadium looks beautiful right now, but as I’ve said previously at NCPC meetings, I have rarely have ever seen a beautiful parking facility,” NCPC Chair William Scharf said. “So I think understanding how that affects the overall project plan and what the stadium will actually look like to people once it’s complete, I think, it’s really important.”
The overall project includes as many as 8,000 parking spaces, with 75% of them in the garages and 25% in surface lots as of the stadium’s opening day.
At 11 stories high, the two garages could be nearly two-thirds as tall as the stadium itself. A map of the site shown at the Thursday meeting indicated the structures could also be as large or larger than the nearby D.C. Armory.
In renderings presented at the meeting, the garages are pictured in a few of the images, but are not the focus. In one image, the garage is transparent to better show off the stadium’s east side. In another stadium view, a garage fades into the background.
Commission staff member Laura Shipman said the parking garages will be developed independently from the stadium and will be separately submitted for commission approval.
One commissioner questioned the garages’ omission from the preliminary stadium site plan, but still voted to approve it.
“Help me understand why we’re not seeing the development of those (garages) with the stadium package,” said Tammy Stidham, an NCPC commissioner and National Park Service lands and planning director. “They don’t have independent utility. They would not be there if you were not building a stadium.”
NCPC staff also recommended that “alternative orientations” and lower garage heights be considered to reduce visual impacts of views to the stadium, from Kingman Park and from other adjacent neighborhoods.
“I appreciate the sincere interest each one of you all have shown in this garage problem, because it is truly a problem and it throws off the scale,” said Kingman Park resident Frazer Walton.
Walton spoke on behalf of the Friends of Kingman Park Civic Association, which he said supports the stadium redevelopment project, but opposes the construction of a parking garage next to the neighborhood for health and traffic reasons.
“The alternative would be that you not build these massive parking garages, multilevel garages, and that we focus on increasing the size of the Stadium-Armory Metro site,” Walton said. “We also suggest that we build a new subway stop at Oklahoma and Benning Road within the next five to seven years.”
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Washington
Police investigate brutally beaten man dumped in alley; family suspects hate crime
A grieving family is asking for help as investigators search for whoever killed a D.C. man and left him in an alley.
Dalonte Jackson, age 35, was brutally beaten in an apartment at The Paradise at Parkside complex. The attack took place on May 24, during Memorial Day weekend.
He was found in an alley off East Capitol Street — a seven minute drive from the apartments on Jay Street in Northeast D.C.
Jackson died five days after the attack. Family members are still hoping for an arrest.
“And then for them to take his body from this area to East Capitol Street and dump him like waste in the garbage?” said Jackson’s grandmother Sharon Jones. “But someone, an angel, appeared there and called 911.”
Relatives believe Jackson was lured to the apartment and never made it home. A disturbing text he sent to a friend before he was killed indicates he knew he was in trouble.
“And he texts them and he basically said, I don’t feel safe, and if something happens, I am with X, Y,” said Jackson’s aunt, Mottdricka Jackson.
After the beating, Jackson was hospitalized and was on life support for several days before he died. His death came just days after celebrating his 35th birthday.
An autopsy determined he died from multiple blunt force injuries.
“His skull was crashed, he was stabbed numerous times, his leg and his arm was broken,” Jones said. “Beat to death.”
Jackson’s family believes he was targeted, and was the victim of a hate crime because he was gay.
D.C. Police, in response to an inquiry from News4, said “There is no evidence to show this was a hate-bias incident.”
The investigation is ongoing. Police are offering $25,000 in reward money for help in solving the case.
“This is horrific to me, the way they killed him. He didn’t deserve that.”
Jackson donated his organs, saving the lives of four people.
Family and friends recently gathered near Jackson’s home at the Mayfair apartment complex to celebrate his life. They’re remembering him as a good person, a good cook, and a barista.
“He was known in Chinatown as “that coffee man,”” Jackson’s aunt said. “He worked for Starbucks and for Petes’, Capital One Arena, and for Starbucks at the Convention Center.”
Washington
Workers begin removing Trump’s name from the Kennedy Center, hours after a court-ordered deadline
Workers began removing President Donald Trump’s name from the facade of the Kennedy Center early Saturday, hours after a court-ordered Friday deadline to remove references to Trump from the building and other aspects of the iconic performing arts venue’s operations.
Scaffolding was erected Friday around a section of the building that includes Trump’s name, but shortly after midnight, the Kennedy Center asked a judge to extend the deadline until noon Eastern Time on Saturday because of thunderstorms that had swept through the Washington area, causing a delay.
In the filing, the Kennedy Center offered assurance that the “removal work is presently ongoing” and would “conclude in the early hours of the morning.”
A few hours later, workers began covering the scaffolding with tarps before they eventually started taking down Trump’s name. They packed up and left the site around 3:30 a.m., though the tarps remained, leaving it impossible to determine if all the letters had been removed.
Dozens of people spent hours Friday on the plaza in front of the Kennedy Center taking pictures and cheering occasionally as they broke into chants of “take it down.” Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, an ex-officio board member who sued to have Trump’s name removed from the building, was spotted at one point on the plaza.
Earlier Friday afternoon, a judge rejected a request to pause the court-ordered deadline. The institution appealed that ruling, an effort that was also rebuffed Friday evening.
After ignoring the Kennedy Center for much of his first term, Trump has wielded tremendous influence over the venue during his return to office. Just a month into his second term, he ousted the center’s previous leadership and replaced it with a board of trustees that named him chairman. Trump’s name was quickly added to the building.
In his ruling that only Congress could make changes to the Kennedy Center’s name, U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper also blocked the administration from closing the cultural and arts venue for major renovations that had been planned to start in July and last for two years.
The Kennedy Center’s leadership argued in its appeal Friday that the renovation was badly needed and accused the lower court, in terms that seemed similar to Trump’s speech patterns, of interfering in the effort.
“The District Court is not allowing us to close in order to properly fix up and repair the Building, including potentially life threatening structural damage like beams and parking garage ceilings that are rusted, and in serious danger of falling onto people below,” according to the appeal. “Indeed, total collapse!”
Even as the Kennedy Center has fought efforts to remove Trump’s name from the building, it has taken steps to comply with Cooper’s initial ruling.
A June 4 memo to staff from the Kennedy Center’s Office of General Counsel said email signatures, letterhead and other documents must reflect the name as “The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts” or “Kennedy Center.”
The Kennedy Center’s website has dropped Trump’s name. And an earlier email sent to members offering ticket packages for the June 28 Mark Twain Award for American Humor ceremony came from the Kennedy Center without including Trump’s name.
___
Associated Press journalists Anna Johnson, Mark Sherman and Emily Wang in Washington and Bill Barrow in Atlanta contributed to this report.
Washington
Pride Protected: LGBTQ Groups Thwart Cop Security Cordon Plan For Washington Square Park – Streetsblog New York City
The NYPD has pulled back from a proposed security plan that would have created a single checkpoint to enter Washington Square Park after the upcoming Pride parade — one of the few times in recent weeks that the police department has decided not to rein in a gathering in public space.
Local activists and members of the LGBTQIA+ community got the news towards the end of a press conference on Friday morning that had been called to draw attention to the NYPD proposal, which had circulated among Pride organizers and the Sixth Precinct.
Organizers of various Pride events gathered to say they don’t want more barriers on the annual celebration — especially those put up by the police, whose aggression towards lesbians and gays birthed the event itself.
“Pride was started by a rejection of the NYPD’s attempts to control our community,” said Jay Walker, the co-founder of the Queer Liberation March and the president of Gays Against Guns NYC. “That is why Pride exists, but continually, the NYPD tries to hamper our Pride celebration.”
Word had begun to spread in May, when the Sixth Precinct shared the plan that the NYPD would tightly control access to the park after Pride on June 28. According to emails obtained by Streetsblog, precinct officials had told organizers that the closure plan would be similar to the policing strategy on April 20, when cops set up a single entrance to the park and checked everyone’s bag.
LGBTQIA+ groups, plus David Siffert, a candidate for the state Assembly, objected.
“We need to make clear that this park is a public park,” said Siffert, at Friday’s press conference.
For weeks, the NYPD kept organizers in limbo, but at the end of the press conference, Walker finally received a text from his contact at the NYPD that Washington Square Park will be open, as usual, on June 28.
“There is currently no formal plan” to enact restrictions at the park, an NYPD spokesperson confirmed in an email to Streetsblog.
The confusion over Pride mirrors what has been going on in the city this summer, as the NYPD has heightened its presence in public space. Knicks fans trying to celebrate the team’s post-season run were blocked from entering the area surrounding Madison Square Garden by police barricades for the last two championship games. And the NYPD objected to many World Cup watch parties that the Department of Transportation had planned to set up this summer, though the Mamdani administration later created a spate of events at other venues likely chosen to minimize the alleged need for cops.
And World Cup attendees and city residents alike have been told to expect an increased police presence in the city while the matches are happening in New Jersey. Queer New Yorkers worry that the NYPD could impede on their gathering, too.
“Locking down this park is locking out the queer community, locking us out of a place of celebration, protest, and community,” said Lorelei Crean, a young activists for LGBTQIA+ rights.
New York City’s Pride Parade started after the Stonewall Riots of 1969, when the NYPD raided the Stonewall Inn, a mob-owned bar that was the epicenter of the queer community. The first Pride Parade was held the next year, and has continued annually ever since. Last year, the parade hosted 75,000 people.
The parade itself doesn’t travel through Washington Square Park, but the park is usually a meeting space for celebrants before, during and after — not only a reflection on the community’s struggles, but also its history of resistance to the police.
“To have to come here and advocate to not have this public space shut down on the historic day is completely outrageous,” said Kei Williams, the executive director for the LGBTQIA+ rights group, the New Pride Agenda.
Williams pointed out the irony that cops would be policing the gay and trans community when, in fact, members of those groups are the ones who are so often targeted with violence.
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