Anonymous wrote:There is no reason from a preservation or historic standpoint to preserve Fannie Mae facade. It is generic at best. It doesn't represent the era it was built in and is a poor copy of the era it aped.
Anonymous wrote:"Edgemoor Row" (aka Bethesda Row West)
Anonymous wrote:The Washington Business Journal isn't the arbiter of iconic architecture.
The Washington Post buiilding - home to a lot of local and national history - is also "iconic" according to media reports and its coming down.
"The Washington Post's "iconic" building is coming down. Guess who is moving in Fannie Mae. If someone wants to knock down the Fannie Mae building, they will be permitted. Nothing unique about it. No historical importance.
Anonymous wrote:There is no reason from a preservation or historic standpoint to preserve Fannie Mae facade. It is generic at best. It doesn't represent the era it was built in and is a poor copy of the era it aped.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have my doubts as to whether the Fannie Mae building would be very usable as a school without tearing the whole thing down first.
Which probably won't happen because the building front is likely to be landmarked.
Anonymous wrote:I have my doubts as to whether the Fannie Mae building would be very usable as a school without tearing the whole thing down first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GDS
Huh? It started the campus consolidation trend by buying the Safeway to move its lower school from the Palisades to Tenleytown to join the high school.
No single independent school in the area is big enough (or has the financial resources) to buy Fannie Mae and convert it for school use and add playgrounds and athletic fields. It might be more fitting for a college campus