
Before we get into the news of the day, we have an announcement: this is the final Meanwhile in D.C.
Special thanks to ARLnow for allowing Rachel Sadon and myself to share D.C. news for a little longer to our loyal DCist readers. And hopefully folks in Arlington have enjoyed learning about what’s happening across the river as well.
Though this column is ending, our writing still lives and it’s better than ever. Be sure to keep up with my latest articles by following me on Twitter @SeeSturdi. And don’t forget to follow Rachel Sadon @Rachel_Sadon and Rachel Kurzius @Curious_Kurz to see what they’re up to. We’re always looking for tips!
Now, here is what’s happening over in the District:
- Fun food events this weekend. [Washingtonian]
- And other things to keep you busy. [Post]
- Organizers plan for 500,000 attendees at ‘March For Our Lives’ gun-control protest. [Post]
- Craving Korean barbecue? Here are your best bets. [Eater]
- Rev. Billy Graham’s body will lie in honor next week in the Capitol rotunda. [NBC]
- United Medical Center board plans to go to court to avoid releasing meeting records. [Post]
- Under Armour Inc. CEO Kevin Plank is selling his Georgetown home for $29.5 million. [WBJ]
- How to train for the ten-mile Cherry Blossom run in April. [Washingtonian]
- There could soon be another panda at the National Zoo. [NBC]
- Cleveland Park mainstay Ardeo+Bardeo will serve its final dinner on Sunday after 20 years in business. [Washingtonian]
- How H Street NE became D.C.’s vegan dining destination. [WCP]
- City reached a $3.5 million settlement with family of unarmed motorcyclist shot dead by police officer. [Post]
- Local food startups are eager to get on Nestle’s radar. [WBJ]
- Photos from D.C. Fashion Week 2018. [WTOP]
- Illustrator Marcella Kriebel’s dream day in D.C. [Post]
- A look inside of a D.C. chocolate factory. [NBC]
- Local schools that already have armed police officers. [NBC]

D.C. restauranteur named humanitarian of the year, grand openings with free food next week, and other news of the day over in the District.
- 2-alarm fire burns house near Logan Circle. [Fox 5]
- James Beard Foundation names Jose Andres Humanitarian of the year. [Eater]
- The chef is also releasing a book about feeding the homeless in Puerto Rico. [Eater]
- It’s National Margarita Day. [Bloomingdale]
- Calls for more transparency in the wake of D.C. schools chancellor resignation. [WTOP]
- Meanwhile, interim chancellor says she plans to finish the school year smoothly. [Post]
- Harm reduction advocates want to make Echostage safer. [WCP]
- Foggy Bottom residents are complaining about Metro trains possibly shaking their homes. [WTOP]
- D.C. school lottery deadline is fast approaching. [Afro]
- Gregory Coffee’s biggest D.C. location is opening next week with free donuts and $1 coffee. [Eater]
- Buredo is also opening on H Street NE next week with free food. [Popville]
- Fido and Kitty’s is closing in Petworth. [Popville]
- Where you can live for $1,600/month in the city. [Curbed]
- Experiential open houses hope to bring in new buyers. [Post]
- MakeOffices opens ninth location in the region. [Curbed]
- D.C. is a top place for women in tech, except when it comes to equal pay. [DC Inno]

D.C. chancellor resigns, boutique gym to open near Capitol Hill, and other news of the day over in the District.
- U.S. Park Police officer shot in Northwest. [WTOP]
- Free coffee for bike commuters in Logan Circle until 9:30 a.m. [Popville]
- Have a drink at these outdoor patios today. [Washingtonian]
- DCPS chancellor resigns after skirting rules. [Post]
- Best free fitness classes this week. [Washingtonian]
- Why doesn’t the mayor have a major challenger? [WCP]
- Hot first date ideas. [Eater]
- Vandals who broke 11 speed cameras in various parts of the city. [Post]
- The fruitiest, funkiest, alcohol-free drinks around. [Eater]
- A moving service modeled after Uber rolls into the city. [WTOP]
- Buzzy boutique gym Orangetheory Fitness to open near Eastern Market. [Washingtonian]
- Startup offers ride-hailing drivers with convenience-store basics for customers. [WBJ]
- New restaurant trend: tree trunk plates. [Eater]
- All of the women-focused co-working spaces coming to the area. [Post]
- Here’s where you can live for $3,100/month. [Curbed]
- One of D.C.’s most intriguing condos is on the market. [Curbed]

School chancellor under fire, teens stage die-in outside of the White House, grande dame of Washington arts and education scene dies, and other news of the day over in the District.
- Local teens lie on ground outside of White House to protest gun violence. [Post]
- Survivors of Florida school shooting announce march on Washington. [NBC]
- D.C. schools chancellor rejects calls for resignation after he sought special treatment for his daughter. [Post]
- Upcoming transit events. [GGW]
- One of D.C.’s oldest bars will soon shutter. [WTOP]
- Cherry Blossom pop-up bar is bigger and better this year. [WCP]
- Milk Bar is opening at The Wharf tomorrow. [Eater]
- D.C. leaders talk tech, diversity, and inclusion. [Post]
- 10 notable projects designed by black architects. [Curbed]
- A chat with the leader of American University’s new anti-racist research and policy center. [WCP]
- Homes once owned by presidents. [Curbed]
- People from across the country pay tribute to Frederick Douglass in Anacostia. [NBC]
- Peggy Cooper Cafritz, who co-founded the Duke Ellington School of the Arts, dies at 70. [Post]
- Back when U Street was known as the “Black Broadway.” [NBC]
- Pepperoni rolls come to Petworth. [Barred in DC]
- One of Metro’s top officials in the track department is leaving the agency. [GGW]
- As of November 2017, the federal government directly employed 364,000 people in the D.C. area. [WTOP]
- People keep parking in a NoMa bikeway, forcing cyclists into traffic. [GGW]

A body-conscious bootcamp, Swings Coffee is back, James Beard award finalists, and other news of the day over in the District.
- Navy Yard’s Blue Jacket Brewery will start selling its beers in cans. [Washingtonian]
- A pervert reemerges in NoMa. [Popville]
- Things to do this weekend. [Washingtonian/Metro Weekly]
- A much-hated project. [WBJ]
- Tickets for Hamilton at the Kennedy Center go on sale later this month. [WTOP]
- Rasika, Timber Pizza, Maydan, and other D.C. James Beard award finalists. [Washingtonian]
- Former chief medical officer says he was fired for exposing problems at United Medical Center. [Post]
- Body Positive Bootcamp offers fitness services in a “radically inclusive space.” [Washingtonian]
- The city sues landlord Sanford Capital… again. [Post]
- Dupont Circle tapas spot Madrid has closed. [Eater]
- Should the city pick up the tab for the DC Tuition Assistance Grant program that the Trump administration axed? [Urban Turf]
- Leaders discuss how to improve D.C. public schools. [AFRO]
- Swings Coffee is back downtown after a two-year hiatus. [WBJ]
- “How are you going to get a grown-ass man to do a claw machine?” [Washingtonian]
- D.C. hasn’t seen so much cold air and so little snow up to this point since the winter of 1985-86. [CWG]

Metro delays, free stuff, best restaurants, and other news of the day over in the District.
- Prepare for Green Line delays tomorrow. [NBC]
- President’s Day freebies. [WTOP]
- 128 affordable apartments proposed for former Sanford Capital complex. [Urban Turf]
- Greater Greater Washington’s 10th anniversary party. [GGW]
- 40+ vinyl vendors will sell records at Penn Social. [Popville]
- Council member proposed bill that would have benefited firm that offered his son a job. [Post]
- Following citywide investigation, DCPS teachers will not be assessed on how many students they pass this year. [Post]
- You can now lease an apartment overlooking Nats stadium. [Curbed]
- Home Depot is hiring 2,000 people in D.C. [NBC]
- Black-owned streaming service gives indie films a home. [DC Inno]
- American University to honor someone who embodies the inspiring spirt of Frederick Douglass. [NBC]
- Coffee roaster Chris Vigilante’s dream day in the city. [Post]
- Reporting illegal construction just got easier. [Curbed]
- Community development leader Oramenta Newsome dies at 62. [Post]
- NoMa market tests out delivery. [Frozen Tropics]
- Thee list. [Washingtonian]
- How D.C.’s former chief technology officer helped turn the city into a tech hub. [DC Inno]

D.C.’s largest construction project ever breaks ground, a Black Panther-themed pop-up bar opens this weekend, a look at stylish lavatories, and other news of the day over in the District.
- Where to snag a super last-minute Valentine’s Day gift. [Urban Scrawl]
- Mayor breaks ground on Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge. [Curbed]
- Get a sneak peak of Hirshhorn’s new lobby tonight. [Popville]
- A car crash rescue. [NBC]
- Summer camps geared toward academics. [Post]
- And others for skills like biking budgeting, sewing. [Post]
- Sign up to volunteer for the Cherry Blossom festival. [Popville]
- The inaugural opening of the Creative Entrepreneur’s Gallery at The Hive 2.0. [East City Art]
- Instagrammable restaurant bathrooms. [Eater]
- You can audition to sing the National Anthem for the Washington Nationals. [WTOP]
- Visit a Black Panther-themed pop-up bar this weekend at a U Street bar. [Eater]
- D.C. has third largest Jewish population in the country. [Post]
- Accidental fines sent to some District residents. [WTOP]
- “Their faces just fall… it happens every single day.” [Post]
- Celebrity murals–mapped. [Curbed]
- Amen to the Line. [Post]

Quirky hotel amenities, things to do, and other news of the day over in the District.
- Barack and Michelle Obama’s official portraits. [Huffington Post]
- A flowery D.C. dream job. [BYT]
- Lots of things to do this week. [Post/Popville/Washingtonian]
- Trump cuts longtime grant funding that helps D.C. students attend more than 300 U.S. colleges. [Post]
- Tattoo artists protest mandate for multiple bathrooms at parlors. [Post]
- Killer condiments at hot new restaurant. [Eater]
- A push for self-driving technology. [Urban Turf]
- From aspiring actor to cake decorator. [Post]
- Quirky hotel amenities. [Curbed]
- Five women who are dominating Washington’s restaurant scene. [Washingtonian]
- Love ‘n Faith cafe in Columbia Heights needs a buyer. [Popville]
- Proposed bill would give restitution to homeowners affected by shoddy renovations next door. [Urban Turf]
- The “coolest possible thing” you could do on Valentine’s Day. [BYT]
- The history behind the names of some D.C. businesses. [Washingtonian]

Home of “Father of Black History” is open for tours this month, guide to winter and spring in D.C., and other news of the day over in the District.
- How some Washingtonians enjoyed yesterday’s remarkably warm weather. [Post]
- Huge changes are remaking D.C.’s theater scene. [Washingtonian]
- Righteous Cheese shop will open a new concept at Union Market. [Frozen Tropics]
- Doreen Gentzler is still mourning Jim Vance. [Washingtonian]
- Wycleaf Jean helps celebrate D.C. teachers. [Post]
- Dr. Carter G. Woodson’s home in Shaw is open for tours this month. [WTOP]
- Locals only guide to winter in D.C. [BYT]
- Local reporters raise money for the Special Olympics by taking a frigid polar plunge. [NBC]
- Suspect arrested in death of woman found in burning car. [NBC]
- 8 historic homes once owned by black icons. [Curbed]
- D.C. tech now has some of the fastest growing salaries. [DC Inno]
- Mahogany Books is the first bookstore to open east of the Anacostia River in more than 20 years. [NBC]
- Where rents are lowering. [Curbed]
- Spring and arts entertainment guide. [WCP]

Valentine’s Day card making, deal grabbing, and underwear running, plus an inclusive yoga studio, eaglet happenings, and other news of the day over in the District.
- Police say man intentionally threw himself under the bus near the National Mall. [NBC]
- Snowy owls on the National Mall. [WTOP]
- A third Gregory’s Coffee location opens. [Popville]
- Make some Valentine’s Day cards at the National Postal Museum. [Popville]
- Cupid’s Undie Run is this weekend. [Washingtonian]
- Black entrepreneur takes on D.C.’s white-washed hot yoga space. [AFRO]
- Capitol One Arena is getting a $40 million facelift. [Post]
- You can pop bon bons by day and sip rare chocolate-infused bourbons by night at the Watergate’s outdoor pop-up. [Eater]
- Eaglet watch update. [WTOP]
- Local athletes inspire DCPS girls. [AFRO]
- D.C. attorney general talks about policing in black America. [AFRO]
- Lawmakers can’t decide how to implement carbon tax. [WCP]
- Petworth, a decade later. [Urban Turf]
- Bar specials for singles around Valentine’s Day. [Post]
- On the hunt for Mardi Gras deals? [Eater]
- The death of funeral homes. [Washingtonian]

The education of Ward 8 Councilmember Trayon White, DCPS enrollment dips, and other news of the day over in the District.
- Hirshhorn Museum will have an outdoor projection and some extended nights this month. [NBC]
- Got questions for the director of employment services? [GWW]
- John Legend is backing startups from three former inmates from D.C. [WBJ]
- How Michael Reginbogin turned “a dark empty shell” into a marvelous Penn Quarter restaurant. [Eater]
- Calabash is expanding to Brookland. [Eater]
- Updates on proposed Union Station-to-Georgetown streetcar line. [Current]
- Why this writer isn’t voting for Mayor Bowser again. [Capitol Hill Corner]
- A review of local fixed course menus. [BYT]
- Man dies after being trapped under a commuter bus near the National Mall. [WTOP]
- Celebrate black soldiers in WWI at the Library of Congress. [AFRO]
- New global private school to launch in D.C. next year. [Post]
- Public school enrollment declines, breaking six years of consecutive growth. [Post]
- “He’s the heart and soul of Ward 8.” [WCP]
- A look at Chef Spike Gjerde’s hotly anticipated restaurant. [Washingtonian]
- In the midst of this local news wreckage, PoPville keeps popping’. [WCP]