Gasp!…DC!

I’m writing an Architecture paper, comparing the new National Airport to the Buffalo-Niagara Airport.
I took the metro from my Maryland suburb, through DC, over the Potomac River, and right smack in front of National Airport in 25 minutes.
Imagine a time in which after a vaction we land at BNIA, and then hop on the train to downtown.
Imagine a time in which the outer harbor is developed (maybe even a Bills Stadium) and we can take the metro over Lake Erie to get there.
Awesomeness. Sheer awesomeness.
Grain Elevators on a canvas

I’m in DC for a brief break from all that hustle and bustle up in Buffalo ;). Went to the Smithsonian Museum of Art and came across a pleasant surprise…Ralston Crawford’s “Buffalo Grain Elevators”. The vibrant, simple colors to accompany the simple shapes really looks amazing. Here are some of his other works
other works …good stuff.
Caps practice

The Washington Capitals have a new skating facility. It’s right next to the Ballston Station on the orange line and is on the 8th floor of the Ballston Commons.
PS The Sabres should think about using retired number banners that look like the ones in the back of the top picture.
So after the practice I got to meet the biggest enemy in Buffalo…Alex Ovechkin

Hate him all you want, he’s a great guy for a superstar. Never says no to a photo/autograph request and on the ice, plays his heart out every single shift
That said, I enjoyed Briere’s retalliation spear.
And then I got to meet one of the best/most experienced fighters in the NHL, Donald Brashear…

Only in DC can you be the star goalie of your hockey team for 10 years and be able to walk around a shopping mall with your teammate and not be noticed. That’s what happened when Olaf Kolzig walked around the mall after practice. Hell, he even had to start a conversation with someone (me) just to be able to talk. Imagine Ryan Miller or Marty Biron walking around the Galleria…a completely different situation.
After visiting the facility, I was reminded that Capitals fans are the wierdest hockey fans I have ever met. They obsess about players but they can’t even recognize any of them without their uniforms on. Most of them are middle aged ladies (nothing wrong with that but its just…bizarre), families from Europe who have never really liked sports but hockey “looks fun”, and then the other type are people look like the kids who always sat by themselves at the lunch table in High School.
Being a hockey fan around here is almost being an outcast to DC society and today’s crowd was a reminder of that. Hockey is the anti-washingtonian way of being.
I miss my Buffalo and I miss my Sabres fans.
Congressional Village

Big fan of this new place. What used to be here was a terrible strip mall and one of the larger surface lots I’ve ever seen (only one bigger is the plaza right next to it!).

They razed the thing and put a plaza up front with only two rows of parking between the sidewalk and the building, put stores behind it, and beside it (these stores are built up to the sidewalk)

and get this…put residential units on top! You never see that in suburbs!
The place even has a parking garage that blends in really well with the place (in other words, only the big gaping hole and sign saing “retail parking” gives it away that its a parking garage)

So these hundreds of residents don’t even need a car to go shopping. And if they get bored, theres another huge shopping plaza right across the street.
Some sort of smart density movement is occurring and that is awesome. But my god the sprawl down here is insane. Northern Virginia is losing acre after acre of natural land to three-story office complexes and large housing developments and huge strip malls…all apart from each other and with no public transportation in sight.
Maybe Buffalo’s shrinking status is good.
White Flint Metro


Here is the other side of the White Flint metro station near my old stompin’ grounds. The glass cover is a pretty cool new thing they did for the underpass to avoid the dreaded cross of the pike.
The wide brick sidewalks are new too. Behind me is the brand new “Bethesda North Marriott/Conference Center” and on the other side of the picture is a new cobblestone median to make it a little easier for pedestrains on the other side.
No dobut the place is still a hardcore suburb but its cool to see they’re putting thought into the place.
Wanna know what else makes this place a cliche suburb?
That McDonalds in the picture is where anyone who was anyone in all the private and public high schools of the area went to meet up. Yeeeeah I like living in cities, thanks.
Rockville Pike, MD

A major road in Rockville, MD (20min from DC and 3min from my parents’ home) has seen a serious change in its skyline since I first lived there in 1995 and only since 2004 have the high rises really started to pop up on the street.
Montgomery County (warmly referred to by me and my associates as “MOCO”) has made it a goal to humanize the car-only design of the Pike. New brick sidewalks, and now a heavy encouragment of high rises being built up to the street with 1st floor retail…closer to the metro the better.
These three are new to the skyline. The intersection behind it is brutal for a pedestrian…usually a 10min wait and then a 5 second window to cross before turning cars honk you out of the way.
The tower furthest to the left has six retail outlets on the 1st floor and has rather large brick sidewalks.
Its’ going to take a lot more to get this part of town to look like the very urbanized neighbor, Bethesda but its never too late to start and it looks like they finally have.
Two things of note..
1. These condo towers look much better than the proposed one for Waterfront Village and thats sad.
2. Next post will be about a pretty cool suburban living area. Very human, with a lot of urbanist thought put into it (with much suburban compromise too but still good).
It’s interesting that a city can take lessons in design from a suburb 400 miles away that never even had any though put into it until three years ago.
Easton, MD

I went to the small town of Easton, Maryland today. It was founded in 1710 and its downtown is perfectly in tact. Great use of preservation and their new builds blend in with the old ones. This particular street, “Washington St” made me think of Ellicott Street in downtown Buffalo including what Rocco Termini is doing with his Ellicott Commons as well as the historic/infamous Genesee Block.
Apartments and offices on the top floors, banks, stores, and restaurants on the bottom. Real nice flow of traffic, good landscaping.
Hope this is Ellicott St. in Downtown Buffalo next year
My favorite building
DC architecture sucks. Sorry. The old federal architecture has heavy fachist tones. The 1950’s era brought in a lot of lifeless, slightly-soviet (ironic) buildings, and now everyone in the private sector builds the same exact cliche glass/metal structures that have the exact same height as the building next to it.
There is one building that sticks out though…





The World Bank Headquarters on Pennsylvania Ave. It’s designed by KPF out of NYC which also designed the Buffalo-Niagara airport and the soon-to-be-built [crosses fingers] Federal Courthouse on Niagara Square.
Out of town…still bloggin’ though.
I’m in the DC area for a few weeks now until the next semester starts, so I’ve been enjoying the economic prosperity and lack of in-depth Sabres coverage for a bit.
It’s funny how you live somewhere for 10 years and you never really pay attention to the way things are, you just kind of go with the flow and live it. After remembering how to live in Buffalo, DC sure seems like a different creature to me.
Basically, when I come accross something of interest I’ll put it up here so instead of “All Things Buffalo” this will be like “Some things DC-Area”…catchy ain’t it?
Buffalonians > Washingtonians

As I’ve said before, I lived in Suburban Maryland/DC for 10 years and I have my opinions about that place for sure. Came across an article on SabreFans.com that sums up Washingtonians perfectly. And it’s one of the major reason I came back here.
“Washington D.C. is a bit different. This is a town full of docile people whose indifference needs to be doused with a few well-thrown beers, as was the case on Saturday night. Nobody in D.C. is going to threaten you, but they do come off as whiny metrosexuals, and that might be more reason as why a few beer showers commenced. The thing with D.C. is, it has no regional identity. Nobody besides conservative columnist Pat Buchanan was ever born in the D.C. region. It’s transplant heaven…or hell. Outside of the Redskins, nobody can truly identify with any local team in Washington. That is why you see 50% of the arena filled with Sabres fans when the team comes to town. That and it’s such a woeful hockey market. If you’re looking for good hockey discussion, you may as well head to Raleigh or Atlanta. Hell, at least those cities have legitimate excuses as somewhat recent arrivals on the NHL scene. Washington D.C. has had a team since 1974, if they are aware of that. Washingtoners, Washingtonians, whatever they are, don’t have to put in much of an effort to Balkanize at all… Also, these are some of the most unfriendly, spoiled, silver spoon types that you will encounter.”
Buffalonians, you have no idea how special you guys are. I missed the passion, the obnoxious behavior, the abnormal amount of pride, the amazing ability to take a joke no matter how personal. That’s one of the reasons I’m back here. To be real with real people. Don’t ever change (Or become a Washingtonian)




