A Monumental View, A Constitutional Lesson

Floor-to-ceiling windows give Erica Knievel and Mike Songer plenty of light and a feeling of larger space in their ninth-floor unit.
Floor-to-ceiling windows give Erica Knievel and Mike Songer plenty of light and a feeling of larger space in their ninth-floor unit. (Photos By Susan Straight For The Washington Post)

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
By Susan Straight
Special to the Washington Post
Saturday, December 22, 2007

The Newseum is scheduled to open in the first quarter of 2008 at its Pennsylvania Avenue NW location, but its neighbor, the Newseum Residences, got a head start this summer.

The 135 apartments with luxury finishes have views of the Capitol and the Mall. Rents start at $1,720 for a 440-square-foot studio and top out at $6,500 for a two-bedroom, two-bath unit. Like the Newseum, the Residences are owned by the Freedom Forum. The apartments were developed by CarrAmerica Urban Development, which was bought last spring by Tishman Speyer, before the completion of the project.

Residents do not have to go far for food, transportation, arts and entertainment. A new Wolfgang Puck restaurant, the Source, is next door.

The First Amendment theme of the Newseum extends to the selection of daily newspapers available to residents in the common area and the tabloid-size new-resident packet.

"We were looking for something that would be a real adventure near the monuments and where my husband could walk to work," said resident Judith Haughey, a Chicago native. "Our main objective was to enjoy the whole area." With a Metro stop just a block away and the thriving Penn Quarter neighborhood just outside their door, she said, she and her husband, Joe, found what they were looking for.

Proximity to Reagan National Airport was also important to the Haugheys. They, like some other residents, maintain a home in another city and use the apartment as a District address. "It's 15 minutes, tops, to Reagan" Judith Haughey said.

The closest Metro stop, Archives-Navy Memorial-Penn Quarter, received the last third of its name just three years ago, as the neighborhood emerged from years of dinginess. The revitalization features such high-end restaurants as Cafe Atlantico, Poste and Bistro d'Oc. The Lansburgh Theatre is a few blocks away, as are numerous galleries and boutiques, a large bookstore, and a farmers market. Numerous clubs and upscale bars are within an easy walk for those craving night life.

Notable neighbors -- also within walking distance -- include Verizon Center, the FBI Building, the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery, Chinatown and the Navy Memorial.

Erma Striner moved to Penn Quarter in 1991, and her friends called her an urban pioneer. "The neighborhood has changed a lot," she said. "I love the whole culture of the area; the neighborhood has burgeoned. It's a wonderful place to live for a whole lot of reasons."

One of those is the design of the building itself. "Sleek," "modern," "sophisticated" and "friendly" are words residents use to describe it.

The building's horizontal lines, floor-to-ceiling windows and gleaming exterior stand out among the neoclassical styles found up and down Pennsylvania Avenue. The Newseum itself, still under construction, is what most people notice first on Pennsylvania Avenue next door to the modern Canadian Embassy and close to the East Building of the National Gallery of Art. The Newseum Residences sit adjacent to the Newseum, just around the corner on the Sixth Street side, across the street from the Capital Grille.

"I was watching it as it was constructed and was taken with the beauty of the architecture and how it fit next to the Canadian Embassy," Striner said. "This is a jewel on the avenue."


CONTINUED     1        >


© 2007 The Washington Post Company