Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools, even charters, are by right uses in residential zones. Pretty much every zone. Other than relief for parking requirements through BZA I don’t think it’s gonna be that big of a hurdle to clear honestly.
There is no guarantee that whatever is left of Kingsbury's board will agree to sell to a school. If they don't own the building outright it could wind up in a bank's hands.
You mean another school? Not quite following this comment. Aren’t they currently set to sell to Lamb if the courts allow?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools, even charters, are by right uses in residential zones. Pretty much every zone. Other than relief for parking requirements through BZA I don’t think it’s gonna be that big of a hurdle to clear honestly.
There is no guarantee that whatever is left of Kingsbury's board will agree to sell to a school. If they don't own the building outright it could wind up in a bank's hands.
You mean another school? Not quite following this comment. Aren’t they currently set to sell to Lamb if the courts allow?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools, even charters, are by right uses in residential zones. Pretty much every zone. Other than relief for parking requirements through BZA I don’t think it’s gonna be that big of a hurdle to clear honestly.
There is no guarantee that whatever is left of Kingsbury's board will agree to sell to a school. If they don't own the building outright it could wind up in a bank's hands.
Anonymous wrote:Schools, even charters, are by right uses in residential zones. Pretty much every zone. Other than relief for parking requirements through BZA I don’t think it’s gonna be that big of a hurdle to clear honestly.
Anonymous wrote:The neighbors will successfully block LAMB and then Kingsbury will be sold to developers who will cover each square inch of the property with condos. The condos will be huge and ugly and there will be no green space and parking in the area will be terrible. And the neighbors will wish, only after it's too late, that they had let LAMB in.
Anonymous wrote:The neighbors will successfully block LAMB and then Kingsbury will be sold to developers who will cover each square inch of the property with condos. The condos will be huge and ugly and there will be no green space and parking in the area will be terrible. And the neighbors will wish, only after it's too late, that they had let LAMB in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The city will not decline if LAMB does not move into the Kingsbury building.
Honestly given the demographics of Ward 4 I think it should be returned to its original mission and made into a home for low-income seniors.
I would be fully in favor of this solution but that’s not even on the table.
It could be.
Kingsbury is going to sell to whomever it gets the most money from - it has to, in order to finance a move and continue operations.
If not LAMB, then any entity that fits the ZONING, could buy it.
Anonymous wrote:Well, Kingsbury can lower the sale price to LAMB because clearly it’s not worth as much with difficult zoning issues. If LAMB is paying less then they should be able to work out the mortgage with a lower enrollment cap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is LAMB still moving to the Kingsbury Campus?
The sale and move are tied up as a group of neighbors are working to block it.
Kingsbury announced in the last month that it will have to close at the end of this school year due to funding issues. They were counting on the sale to buy them time to relocate but the delay made it untenable. Gotta wonder if they had been smart, in retrospect, to sell to the highest bidder rather than try to find a school to buy it.
Anyway it would be great if some LAMB families would try to help them out of this mess.
https://www.gofundme.com/save-the-oldest-special-needs-school-in-dc?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=fb_dn_cpgnsharemore_r&fbclid=IwAR2lKQYr4WKouciT1vd_nXl7pzKfL_cQoGgv9kVmw39a4pgjxxOTvGFdj3M
Why don’t they sell to someone else? This is ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is LAMB still moving to the Kingsbury Campus?
The sale and move are tied up as a group of neighbors are working to block it.
Kingsbury announced in the last month that it will have to close at the end of this school year due to funding issues. They were counting on the sale to buy them time to relocate but the delay made it untenable. Gotta wonder if they had been smart, in retrospect, to sell to the highest bidder rather than try to find a school to buy it.
Anyway it would be great if some LAMB families would try to help them out of this mess.
https://www.gofundme.com/save-the-oldest-special-needs-school-in-dc?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=fb_dn_cpgnsharemore_r&fbclid=IwAR2lKQYr4WKouciT1vd_nXl7pzKfL_cQoGgv9kVmw39a4pgjxxOTvGFdj3M
Anonymous wrote:Is LAMB still moving to the Kingsbury Campus?