NFT Washington DC Near Northeast

Near Northeast
This area is still scruffy in parts, but Ledroit Park and Bloomingdale are at the edge of the gentrification craze pushing east from Shaw, and historic homes are being restored block by block. The huge swath of railroad tracks slicing through does little for unification or aesthetics, however.


         
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This Neighborhood Featured in...
I'm With The DJ

By Jade Floyd
If the eclectic mix of musicmakers Jade Floyd brazenly chronicles in this stirring set of interviews aren't spinning, they're not living. Read their words, hear their music and appreciate the creativity of DC's newest/coolest/hottest disc jockeys. Huzzah.

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On Our Radar:

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Posted By:  Hunter Gorinson
Photo:  Hunter Gorinson

Big Bear Cafe
The Big Bear Café is a place full of contradictions. It's always brimming with white folk in a 99% black neighborhood. The food they serve is simple and easily prepared, yet the staff is so perpetually high that it's not uncommon for an iced coffee to take twenty minutes. The clientele seems to pride itself on being a bunch of pretty little individuals, yet they all use the same MacBook and go "Hey, this is from Daydream Nation" when it inevitably gets put on the boombox... again. All of this points to the kind of coffeehouse that'd be better off in Berkley or Harvard Square, not a block off North Capitol Street. Here's to hoping it doesn't all go horribly wrong sooner or later. In the meantime, they make a pretty good hummus panini (shrugs).



Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Posted By:  Graham Fortier
Photo:  Graham Fortier

LeDroit Park
LeDroit Park is a neighborhood in Northwest, DC, boxed off between W Street, Florida Avenue, Rhode Island Avenue and 2nd Street. It was first developed back in the 1870s, and consists predominantly of beautiful row houses complete with bay windows and turrets. So what makes this neighborhood so bad-ass? Well, the silly white folk who built it for themselves should have distanced it a little farther from Howard University, as black students eventually tore down the fences—literally—and created an integrated DC neighborhood. By the 1940s, LeDroit Park was home to some of the most prominent African-American elite of the time, including Duke Ellington (420 Elm Street), Edward Brooke (1938 3rd Street), and even the Rev. Jesse Jackson (Corner of 4th and T streets). I’ve actually ran into Jesse Jackson twice at the corner market, which is kinda cool, since celebrity sightings in DC are few and far between if you’re not counting politicians and pundits.



Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Posted By:  Megan Parry
Photo:  Megan Parry

After much scouting around the internet looking for new and exciting places to show the fam on their annual tourist trek to visit me in DC, I decided to take them to see a waste management facility in North East for some real DC culture. No, I don’t hate my family, and no, I don’t have a fascination for other people’s crap. I took them there because during its first life, the building was actually the Washington Coliseum (otherwise known as Uline Arena), where the Beatles played their first live US concert (yes, seriously) and where the photograph of Bob Dylan on the cover of Bob Dylan’s Greatest Hits was taken. It’s an iconic, historical DC landmark (currently listed as one of the most endangered historic places in DC by the Historic Preservation Review Board) that sadly not many people remember or even know exist—but is totally worth a quick visit just to say you’ve been there! So, if you’ve got some jaded, perpetually bored friends or family members who scoff at another visit to the Smithsonian coming to see you this summer, tell them you’re taking them to see a waste management facility.




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See Near Northeast...
Restaurants (1)
Nightlife (5)
Shopping (7)
Landmarks (4)



Other Near Northeast Restaurants

San Antonio Bar and Grill
New Tex-Mex spot for Brookland.

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Other Near Northeast Nightlife

Fur Nightclub
You like sweaty 18-year-old girls?
Lux Lounge
Too cool for school.

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Other Near Northeast Shopping

Anna's Linen
Nicely priced linens and curtains
Brass Knob Back Door Warehouse, Inc
Authentic, turn-of-the-century fixtures. Try not to giggle over the name.
Giant Food
Washington DC's first supermarket.
Home Depot
You know, Home Depot.
Windows Café & Market
Ethiopian/IKEA furnished café with sit-down sandwiches and bottled wine.

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Other Near Northeast Landmarks

Crispus Attucks Park
Neighborly public space in the heart of Bloomingdale.
Florida Avenue Market
Forget Eastern Market's frou-frou frills; head northeast.
LeDroit Park
Race relations/green space.
Washington Coliseum
DC's performance venue.

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