Downtown D.C. mainstay The Bottom Line and Shaw’s Tavern on Florida Avenue NW have applied for sports betting licenses, according to D.C.’s Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration.
It was one of the quietest hours of the day inside Holiday Market, and the gunfire, when it began, was clearly audible. Somewhere outside was the high-pitched report of a rapidly emptying handgun. The shots were not loud. But when Semere!-->…
D.C. residents and nonprofits have saved roughly $1.5 million on their water bills in the past year thanks to a hardship program created following a News4 I-Team investigation, but D.C. leaders budgeted many more millions of dollars that!-->…
I’m a frequent bus and Metro rider here in the District. I regularly draw companion subway and bus riders, and I gain much from my drawing. As a figurative artist of more than 20 years, I can vouch that my work in transit strengthens my!-->…
After a slew of high-profile holiday openings, 2020 begins with a pair of compelling new films, one a tropical melodrama and the other a 3D documentary about one of the dance world’s most challenging artists. Also on screen is an!-->…
It will take about four months to fix a major artery in downtown D.C. that engineers said may not support the weight of vehicles and cause them to fall straight into a Metro vent shaft.
Gypsy Sally’s, a Georgetown music venue known for booking jam bands and up-and-coming local singers, will shut down this weekend. The building’s owners plan to turn the space into condominiums.
More than 160 people lost their lives to violent crime in D.C. this past year, as city officials struggle to address the rising homicide count for the second year in a row.
Anti-tobacco advocates on Thursday urged the D.C. Council to add menthol cigarettes to its list of banned items as lawmakers consider prohibiting all flavored vaping products in the nation’s capital.
The District’s attorney general said Thursday that two employers will pay almost $500,000 in penalties to their workers and the city after investigations into wage theft.
While many of us were at home relaxing family or contemplating the impending arrival of the new year, Washington novelist Mary Kay Zuravleff was spending a few quiet moments at a gravestone in Georgetown’s historic Oak Hill Cemetery.
Cleveland Park steakhouse Medium Rare has closed its Capitol Hill outpost on Eighth Street Southeast, but Barracks Row’s loss may be Nationals fans’ gain.
D.C.'s office market experienced a slow 2019 that became even worse toward the end of the year as one of the main demand drivers — coworking providers — hit the pause button.