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The development was designed to include 65,000 feet of retail (including a Fresh Grocer supermarket), 225 apartments (for market residents rather than university students), and a 7-level, 520-car parking garage. [5] [6] The university and city announced the project, and their selections for its developers, in April 2003.
The Kennedy–Warren is a historic eleven-story apartment house in Washington, D.C. It is located at 3131–3133 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. between the Cleveland Park and Woodley Park neighborhoods. The Art Deco building overlooks the National Zoological Park and Klingle Valley Park, which is near the Art Deco Klingle Valley Bridge. The original ...
CityCenterDC, colloquially called CityCenter, is a mixed-use development consisting of two condominium buildings, two rental apartment buildings, two office buildings, a luxury hotel, and public park in downtown Washington, D.C. [1] It encompasses 2,000,000 square feet (190,000 m 2) and covers more than five city blocks. [2]
Median sales price for single-family homes in DC Census Tract 32 (Park View) [46] According to Housing Market (Single-Family Homes) statistics for 2011, 46 homes sold in Park View (census Tract 32). The median sales price for a home was $430,000, below the district average of $527,000. [6]
Population (2022): 99,652 [7] Barney Circle; Buzzard Point; Capitol Hill; Lincoln Park; Judiciary Square; Kingman Park (Part of the neighborhood is also in Ward 7) Mount Vernon Triangle; Near Northeast; NoMa; Shaw; Southwest Waterfront; Sursum Corda; Swampoodle (Neighborhood from the 1850s to the 1910s replaced in large part today by NoMa and ...
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Apartments in the unfinished building, priced from $30,000 to $140,000, began selling in October 1967, an indication of how popular the complex was with District residents. [ 77 ] [ 84 ] The Watergate West topped out on August 16, 1968, at which point the cost of the project had risen to $70 million. [ 85 ]