National Coalition to Save Our Mall
view  view         

Home  •   Search  •   Newsletter/Archive  •   Contact Us   



DONATE

ABOUT THE COALITION
LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT
   October 30, 2007

HISTORY AND RESOURCES
• Mall Maps
• Illustrated History
• Future of the Mall VIDEO
• 1902 McMillan Commission   Report

NATIONAL MALL THIRD CENTURY INITIATIVE

NATIONAL MALL CONSERVANCY

ANNUAL REPORTS
• 2006 Annual Report (PDF)
• 2005 Annual Report (PDF)

GREAT MOMENTS
PHOTO GALLERY
• Who's in Charge?

THE MALL CHRONICLES
• Media Coverage
• Analysis
• Coalition Testimony
• Letters

THE WWII MEMORIAL
• WWII Memorial Archive

WASHINGTON MONUMENT
• Washington Monument Archive  Updated 8/8/2008

U.S. CAPITOL

THREATS & TREATS
ACT NOW
• What You Can Do
• Contribute

WHO WE ARE
WWII Veterans
PRESSROOM
Detailed Search



July 10, 2008

Dear Coalition Friends:

The front page of today's Washington Post reports on the National Capital Planning Commission's (NCPC) latest ideas, developed in its National Capital Framework Plan, for improving and transforming federal areas around the Mall.   We can't help but be pleased to see that NCPC has picked up on many of the same ideas proposed (3 years ago) at our Coalition-sponsored public forum at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in 2005--including new bridges across Washington Channel, a Metro stop and new canal at East Potomac Park.

THE WASHINGTON POST

A Vision of Washington With Unfettered Views

Plan Would Link Locales, Extend the Mall

By Michael E. Ruane
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 10, 2008; A01

Imagine the drab fortress of the FBI building gone, the freeways and ramps around the Kennedy Center covered by parks and boulevards, and a Metro stop near the Jefferson Memorial.

Picture the middle section of the massive Forrestal building on Independence Avenue removed to open views of the Smithsonian Castle, a canal cut through East Potomac Park, new water taxi service, boardwalks, memorials, pedestrian bridges and leafy vistas.

The "monumental core" of Washington's future is more open and inviting, less fettered and cut up by highways and railroads, and more integrated into an elegant whole under a sweeping vision to be unveiled today by the District's two federal planning and review agencies.

The National Capital Framework Plan is highly critical of much of the 1960s and 1970s-era construction that surrounds the Mall, at turns calling it "hostile," "unwelcoming" and "imposing."

It envisions four transformed sections of downtown Washington as extensions of the Mall, linking such locales as the White House with the riverfront and the Kennedy Center with the Lincoln Memorial.

The plan, which has been two years in the making, is the work of the National Capital Planning Commission and the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts. It is a mix of new and old ideas, some versions of which have been floated before and died for lack of congressional funding.

Many of the suggestions would require enormous sums of money at a time when the national economy is faltering, and they could take decades to accomplish.

But the plan's authors say some of the smaller goals are more affordable, other improvements could be made as current infrastructure wears out, and public opinion could influence Congress.

"There are some . . . big ideas in the plan," said Elizabeth Miller, the planning commission's project manager. "What we've got to realize is it's going to happen over time."

The plan can be viewed at www.9ncpc.9gov. Public comments can be sent to frameworkplan@ncpc.gov until Oct. 10. The plan will be the topic of a public meeting at 5 p.m. July 22 at planning commission headquarters, 401 Ninth St. NW.

"We've seen over the last few years the city is on the brink of a major transformation," said Marcel Acosta, the commission's executive director. "If many of the things are done in this plan, it's going to lead to a major change in how people view this portion of our nation's capital."

It is unclear how much support the plan will have, but the early reaction has been positive.

"We commend the National Planning Commission for its far reaching vision for Washington D.C., and are pleased to have participated in the process," Claudette Donlon, the Kennedy Center's executive vice president, said in an e-mailed statement. "We look forward to the day when their vision can be implemented."

Harriet Tregoning, director of the District's Office of Planning, said, "I think it's a great plan, just a very thoughtful, far-reaching plan. I think the challenge is going to be which one of these pieces ends up moving first."

John E. "Chip" Akridge, chairman of the Trust for the National Mall, said he had not had a chance to study the plan in detail but added, "Generally my interest is more in fixing what's there now." The trust raises private money for maintenance and improvements to the Mall.

The four areas studied for the plan were the Northwest Rectangle, roughly from the Kennedy Center to 17th Street; the downtown Federal Triangle; the Southwest Federal Center, south of the Mall; and East Potomac Park, between the Potomac River and the Washington Channel.

The plan emphasizes the idea of connecting the four sections to the Mall and to each other, and eliminating barriers.

It suggests, for example, decking over the odd "spaghetti bowl" highways, such as the Potomac Freeway, which is east of the Kennedy Center and cuts off the arts complex from the city.

The plan criticizes much of the area's post-World War II highway and building construction: "Urban renewal, hailed as cutting edge by many at the time, reflected Modernist design principles that have proven to undermine vibrant urban life."

It points in particular to the vast bleak government office structures such as the FBI building, built on Pennsylvania Avenue in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and the Energy Department's James V. Forrestal building, at 10th Street and Independence Avenue SW.

The FBI building's "unornamented International Style architecture exacerbates a fortress-like presence," the plan says. "If in the long term the FBI is able to better fulfill its mission . . . elsewhere in the District, redevelopment of the site would significantly contribute to the rejuvenation of Pennsylvania Avenue."

Of the Forrestal building, which spans 10th Street at Independence, the plan notes that it is part of the 40-year-old Southwest federal complex, which is "dominated by superblock buildings and lacks street life, retail activity and green space."

The plan suggests removing the section of the Forrestal building straddling the street to reestablish a north-south connection between the Mall and the waterfront.

"One of the things that we're . . . trying to do is improve these very important federal areas around the Mall in a way that takes some of the vibrancy of the city, and capture that into these quadrants," said Acosta, of the planning commission. "These areas today are 9-to-5 places."

Thomas Luebke, secretary of the arts commission, said each of the four sectors has elements of beauty, culture or art: "It's just a question of connecting the dots."

In the Northwest Rectangle, the plan suggests building staircases to the riverfront from the Kennedy Center's west terrace.

In the Federal Triangle area, which the plan describes as "a monotonous public realm," the document suggests a "federal walk" that would direct visitors on a tour of the sculpture and architecture. The triangle contains one of the largest collections of 20th-century sculpture in the country, the plan says.

In the Southwest rectangle, the plan imagines 10th Street as a broad, tree-lined promenade linking the Mall and water, with a new museum and other buildings at the southern overlook and a grand staircase down to the Washington Channel waterfront.

In East Potomac Park, the plan calls for a Metro stop near the Jefferson Memorial, where the Yellow Line passes, a canal to improve boat navigation from the channel to the river, and a series of bridges and a boardwalk to improve access from the city to the park.

"When you think about the nation's capital, you think of the Mall," said Miller, of the planning commission. "We want people . . . when they think of the capital of the United States of America to think of the city."

Back to the top




Mall Updates

2008
• Aug. 14: Examiner & Wash Times: MLK Memorial
• Aug. 2: Permits on the mall?
• Aug. 1: Suggestions for Reflecting Pool
• July 31: Examiner: Mall Sprawl and Norton
• July 29: Examiner: Capitol Reflecting Pool
• July 18: Newsweek: Mall Overhaul
• July 13: Post: Editorial
• July 10: Post: NCPC
• July 8: NPS & NCPC update
• July 7: Rethinking Washington's Monumental Core
• July 4: WMAL-AM & WDCW TV: Feldman
• July 4: Dallas Morning News: Mall
• July 2: CBS News: Gone to Seed reaction
• June 27: CBS News: Feldman
• June 20: Post: Toles' toon
• June 18: Post: Trust for Mall
• June 16: Smithsonian Program
• June 5: National Mall Conservancy
• May 29: NPS meeting on levee system
• May 26: Post: Editorial on National Mall
• May 21: Post: Hearing on the National Mall
• May 19: Hearing on The Future of the National Mall
• May 15: Hearing on The Future of the National Mall
• May 8: Walking Tour: I Have A Dream
• May 6: Post & LA Times: Smithsonian
• May 1: Post: Fisher column
• Apr. 29: Atherton Memorial Lecture
• Apr. 25: WalkingTown, DC
• Apr. 11: WalkingTown, DC
• Apr. 9: Cleveland Park Citizens meeting
• Apr. 7: Cherry Blossoms
• Mar. 27: Guide to Mall Rec
• Mar. 11: Fox 5: Feldman
• Mar. 10: Post: Fisher column
• Feb. 29: Mall items of note
• Feb. 28: Raw Fisher Radio: Feldman
• Feb. 25: NCMAC meeting
• Feb. 18: President's Day links
• Feb. 12: NBM hosts Judith Dupre
• Feb. 10: Kojo Nnamdi Show: Feldman
• Feb. 8: Bloomberg: critic Russell
• Feb. 6: Post: NCPC
• Feb. 4: Post Magazine: Lincoln Memorial
• Jan. 27: Where Magazine: Editorial
• Jan. 25: Tom Sherwood comments
• Jan. 24: Post; FEMA maps
• Jan. 21: Mall management plan

2007
• Dec. 28: Public meetings
• Nov. 28: Vietnam Center review
• Nov. 16: Trust for the Mall
• Nov. 12: USA Today: Vietnam Center
• Nov. 5: AP: Arts & Industries Building
• Nov. 1: Help meet the grant
• Oct. 31: St. Elizabeths Hospital
• Oct. 29: Help meet the grant
• Oct. 22: NCMAC meeting
• Oct. 19: Post; Vietnam Center
• Oct. 18: Wash Times; Mall expansion
• Oct. 17: Vietnam Center approval
• Oct. 15: NPS Ranger lecture
• Oct. 12: Wash Times; Vietnam Center
• Sept. 25: Walking tours
• Sept. 17: NPS Announces Mall EIS
• Sept. 6: Lecture: Designing the Capital
• Aug. 2: New Mall Recreation Guide
• June 25: Post: "shortsighted planning"
• June 19: Post: Jefferson Memorial
• June 6: DCPL Most Endangered Places
• June 12: Senator Craig Thomas passing
• May 30: Post: Historical Society defunding
• May 26: Memorial Day coverage
• Apr. 29: Post: The Awakening
• Apr. 17: Coverage of April 11 Symposium
• Apr. 16: Post and Wash Times coverage
• Apr. 13: WalkingTown, DC
• Apr. 4: NCPC symposium
• Mar. 22: NPS Listening Session
• Mar. 8: NCPC extends comments
• Mar. 7: Atherton Memorial Lecture
• Mar. 5: NW Current piece
• Mar. 2: NCPC flood draft
• Feb. 17: National Mall Plan meetings
• Feb. 15: America's Favorite Architecture
• Feb. 13: History Lecture postponed
• Feb. 6: San Fran Chron: Letters
• Feb. 2: NMAAHC comments
• Jan. 19: National Mall Plan comments
• Jan. 15: Overbeck History Lecture
• Jan. 12: Feldman on CBS Sunday Morning
• Jan. 3: NCPC public meeting
• Jan. 2: NMAAHC meeting

2006
• Dec. 28: Comments deadlines
• Dec. 22: Donate to help
• Dec. 7: Wash Times and Post coverage
• Dec. 6: Post: Editorial
• Nov. 21: NPS Environmental Assessment
• Nov. 16: Future of the Mall Symposium
• Nov. 7: Post: Fisher
• Nov. 6: SM welcomes NPS Symposium
• Nov. 4: Feldman on NPR
• Oct. 31: Peter Penczer lecture
• Oct. 19: Help meet the grant
• Oct. 12: LA Times; Whalen Obit
• Sept. 27: Slate; Visitor Center
• Sept. 26: Smithsonian Associates Program
• Sept. 25: Wash Times; Eisenhower memorial
• Sept. 18: Post; Eisenhower memorial
• Sept. 12: Contact Congress
• Sept. 9: LA Times: Christopher Knight
• Sept. 5: Open Park on Mall
• Sept. 4: Post: Roger K. Lewis
• Aug. 14: NYT; Editorial
• Aug. 9: WETA's "The Intersection"
• Aug. 7: Post/Examiner on Visitor Center
• July 20: NCPC Framework Plan
• July 17: LA Times: Tyler Green
• July 11: July Study Tour
• July 6: Washingtonian: Arthur Cotton Moore
• June 13: Dallas Morning News coverage
• June 3: Atherton tribute
• June 1: Post; Mall expansion
• May 31: Comment on the EA
• May 29: WWI Memorial
• May 27: Wash Times; Dietsch piece
• May 19: Roll Call; Visitor Center
• May 18: NCPC & Norton expansion
• May 12: Visitor Center mandate
• May 9: Post; Smithsonian endangered
• May 8: 2005 Annual Report
• Apr. 11: Immigrants rally coverage
• Apr. 1: Project for Public Spaces
• Mar. 31: Post; Dvorak on Wall
• Mar. 30: Cherry Blossoms
• Mar. 10: Hawkins at NBM
• Mar. 9: Visitor Center on Mall
• Feb. 6: NYT; Clemetson piece
• Jan. 31: NYT, Post, WTimes, Examiner
• Jan. 13: Mall map progress
• Jan. 9: NBM invite
• Jan. 7: GW Speakers Series invite

2005
• Dec. 20: Post; Correction
• Dec. 16: Wash Times; Letter
• Dec. 12: Post; Editorial
• Dec. 9: Post; Dvorak piece
• Dec. 6: Post; Atherton passing
• Nov. 28: Dallas Morning News coverage
• Nov. 28: Post; Cooper letter
• Nov. 22: Free Map mailing
• Nov. 10: Examiner; DeWitt piece
• Nov. 8: Interactive maps online/Post piece
• Oct. 20: Corcoran presentation
• Oct. 5: Future of Mall video online
• Sept. 22: Architectural Record piece
• Aug. 31: Mall tour sold out
• Aug. 29: Smithsonian Mall tour
• Aug. 22: Weekly Standard available
• Aug. 10: Weekly Standard piece
• Aug. 7: Post; Metro piece
• July 22: Post; Editorial
• June 16: Free Mall Map/Guide
• May 13: Smithsonian WiFi
• May 9: Kojo Nnamdi Show
• Apr. 13: Fax to Senate
• Apr. 12: Coalition Senate Testimony
• Apr. 11: Post; Feldman Letter
• Mar. 23: Mall oversight hearing
• Mar. 21: Post; Hiatt Op-Ed
• Mar. 4: Mall PowerPoint at NCPC
• Feb. 18: Mall PowerPoint at CFA
• Feb. 16: CFA public session
• Feb. 14: Contact Congress
• Jan. 26: Bloomberg; Ferguson column
• Jan. 13: Post; Letters/NBC 4
• Jan. 10: Post; Hiatt column
• Jan. 9: Post; Letter
• Jan. 5: Post; Letters
• Jan. 4: Post; Editorial
• Jan. 2: Post; Hsu piece

2004
• Dec. 30: Post; Oberlander letter
• Dec. 26: Year end greetings
• Dec. 9: AP; Hartman piece
• Dec. 7: NW Current piece
• Nov. 29: Post; Lee/Hsu pieces
• Nov. 22: National Mall invite
• Oct. 15: USA Today; Dietsch piece
• Oct. 2: Post; Moore/Cooper letters
• Sept. 21: WWII Mem; Knight/Mill's book
• Sept. 15: Post; Trescott piece
• Sept. 9: Post; Milloy column
• Aug. 14: Passonneau book
• Aug. 11: Workshop reports
• July 3: Judy on ABC
• June 30: NBM Mill's talk info
• June 28: NBM Mill's talk
• June 24: WWII Mem; Knight
• June 22: City Museum Lecture
• June 21: WWII Mem; Wise
• June 18: WWII Mem; Ivey
• June 14: WWII Mem; Gopnik
• May 10: Wash Times; column
• May 7: Workshop II
• May 4: Post; Fisher WWII Mem.
• Apr. 6: Wash Times' Hudson
• Apr. 1: Post; Hsu on fence
• Mar. 27: Post; front page
• Mar. 19: Workshop prep
• Mar. 2: Mall Conservancy news
• Feb. 19: Judge Collyer decision
• Feb. 15: Post; Berard letter
• Feb. 3: Meetings/WWII Mem. stories
• Jan. 27: Post; Reel piece
• Jan. 15: Post; Reel piece
• Jan. 13: Mall Conservancy forum
• Jan. 12: 2004 Scholars Program

2003
• Jan. 7
• Jan. 9
• Jan. 10
• Jan. 20
• Jan. 30
• Feb. 3
• Feb. 25
• Mar. 10
• Mar. 17
• Apr. 4
• Apr. 20
• May 2
• June 6
• June 16
• June 23
• July 2
• July 20a
• July 20b
• Aug. 28
• Sept. 4
• Sept. 5
• Sept. 14
• Sept. 23
• Sept. 28a
• Sept. 28b
• Oct. 2
• Oct. 5
• Oct. 6
• Oct. 14
• Oct. 17
• Oct. 19
• Oct. 22
• Oct. 23
• Oct. 27
• Nov. 8
• Nov. 10
• Nov. 13
• Nov. 14
• Nov. 20
• Nov. 21
• Dec. 6
• Dec. 28

2002
• July 1
• July 4
• July 19
• July 23
• July 24-a
• July 24-b
• July 30
• Aug. 2
• Aug. 10
• Sept. 11
• Sept. 20
• Oct. 17
• Nov. 11
• Nov. 26
• Dec. 6


Copyright © 2008 National Coalition to Save Our Mall Inc. All Rights Reserved