Anonymous wrote:It's a very cool building. Would love to see as much as possible preserved.
Anonymous wrote:If this property is federally owned then it must go thru Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act. Anyone want to pursue it? Go to ACHP.gov and see which staff member has responsibility for th Department of State, and contact them.
Anonymous wrote:The school is offering 'personalized education' for every student. Where else can you get that? The first lesson is, get a permit BEFORE you begin construction. I bet none of the students planning to attend in September will forget that one.
Anonymous wrote:The school is offering 'personalized education' for every student. Where else can you get that? The first lesson is, get a permit BEFORE you begin construction. I bet none of the students planning to attend in September will forget that one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't worry about this stop work, no permit, won't get open thingy everyone is talking about. The FORMER PRESIDENT OF YALE, chancellor of BERKLY, CEO of BOEING OF INDIA and someone who went to EXETER are all over it. Problem...solved.
You are so right.
The EXETER connection can fix it all.
Anonymous wrote:Don't worry about this stop work, no permit, won't get open thingy everyone is talking about. The FORMER PRESIDENT OF YALE, chancellor of BERKLY, CEO of BOEING OF INDIA and someone who went to EXETER are all over it. Problem...solved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They have been using Ayers Saint Gross for architectural and planning services.
DC government has also used this firm for various city planning and school planning work.
So Whittle and his A-team are very well connected. The local ANC and WAPO needs to pay close attention to how this thing moves ahead. And anyone else interested in good governance.
If this is true my guess is they are probably back to work already. Someone high up in the DC government is giving this project a pass by classifying it as some sort of embassy.
An Embassy must also get a building permit and get any zoning relief required under the zoning regulations. The building is owned by a big NY company 601W Company. The Land seems to be federal. I don't quite get it the ownership of the site, but it will not pass as an embassy and if they did it would not help them.
Can someone post a photo of the stop work order?
I drove by and didn’t see anything but it is a huge building. There is no stop work order posted online.
Anonymous wrote:Don't worry about this stop work, no permit, won't get open thingy everyone is talking about. The FORMER PRESIDENT OF YALE, chancellor of BERKLY, CEO of BOEING OF INDIA and someone who went to EXETER are all over it. Problem...solved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They have been using Ayers Saint Gross for architectural and planning services.
DC government has also used this firm for various city planning and school planning work.
So Whittle and his A-team are very well connected. The local ANC and WAPO needs to pay close attention to how this thing moves ahead. And anyone else interested in good governance.
If this is true my guess is they are probably back to work already. Someone high up in the DC government is giving this project a pass by classifying it as some sort of embassy.
An Embassy must also get a building permit and get any zoning relief required under the zoning regulations. The building is owned by a big NY company 601W Company. The Land seems to be federal. I don't quite get it the ownership of the site, but it will not pass as an embassy and if they did it would not help them.
Can someone post a photo of the stop work order?
Anonymous wrote:If there isn't existing landmark protections, they won't have to put anything back. On the other hand, if raze/demolition took place without permits, that is another issue entirely.
Anonymous wrote:If there isn't existing landmark protections, they won't have to put anything back. On the other hand, if raze/demolition took place without permits, that is another issue entirely.