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K Street NE briefly reappears further east in the Carver neighborhood, extending from Bladensburg Road for six blocks to Maryland Avenue NE. The westernmost (Georgetown) segment of K street NW was known as Water Street prior to the Georgetown street renaming of 1895.
The Bayou was a music venue and nightclub located in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. [1] [2] The club occupied an old building at 3135 K Street, NW, in Georgetown, under the Whitehurst Freeway for forty-six years.
The building is located at 2900 K Street N.W. in the Georgetown neighborhood. [1] Apart from the embassies, the building, which is owned by the Swedish state through its National Property Board, also houses representatives of Swedish commerce. Facilities includes a secretariat, exhibition space, 19 corporate office suites, and a high-tech ...
Washington Harbour is a Class-A [7] mixed-use development located at 3000 and 3050 K Street, N.W., in Washington, D.C., in the United States.The southern edge of the development borders the Potomac River on the Georgetown waterfront.
Oak Hill Cemetery Chapel, designed by James Renwick Jr. in 1850, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Old Stone House, built 1765, is the oldest building structure still standing in Washington, D.C. Georgetown, depicted in 1862, shows the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal and Aqueduct Bridge (on right) and an unfinished Capitol dome in the distant ...
The K Street Bridge is a complex of bridges over Rock Creek and the Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway in Washington, D.C. The lower level of the bridge carries the surface street K Street , while the upper level carries the Whitehurst Freeway ( U.S. Route 29 ) which terminates and merges into K Street immediately east of the bridge.
The boundaries were defined by the Potomac River and 24th Street, running north to H Street, east on H Street to 22nd Street to the city boundary (Boundary Road, today called Florida Avenue). [2] In June 1867, at lot was purchased on 23rd Street near Washington Circle, and Emlen T. Littell was selected to design the new church to be built. [3]
In the years following the war, Sewall relocated his family to Georgetown and managed another significant inn known as the Fountain Inn (also known as Suter's Tavern) on Fishing Lane (near the corner of today’s 31st and K Streets), where President Washington negotiated with local land owners to create the new Federal City.