WeWork has not leased a new D.C. office space in the six months since its high-profile IPO implosion, a hiatus that has hurt an office market already suffering from record-high vacancies.
The production of "Wonder Woman 1984" spent roughly $30 million between Virginia and D.C., of which it received back about $1.6 million through the two jurisdiction's tax incentive programs.
With playwrights and directors redefining how we see and hear work for the stage, theaters are looking for new ways to make their facilities more flexible and accommodating. That is why Studio!-->…
The shuttle idles in front of the Days Inn on a busy stretch of New York Avenue on weekday mornings. Parents board the bus, bleary-eyed children in tow. More passengers are collected from a nearby!-->…
Doubling down on the philosophy that community policing is best achieved with officers from the communities they serve, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser is proposing to double the size of the police!-->…
D.C. officials are seeking to expand the police department’s cadet program for high school graduates, part of an effort to attract homegrown recruits to join a force that the mayor is trying to grow.!-->…
Jaevion Walker, 13, told the middle and high school students arrayed before him about his best friend. They had been typical teens, texting constantly. Then, his friend stopped answering when he!-->…
Every Wednesday during the warmer months, volunteers test the water for bacteria at sites up and down the Anacostia. But what if you want to go paddleboarding on Saturday? The results from three days!-->…
The long-shuttered museum has reopened in a new, 33,000-square-foot space inside the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, just a short walk from the National Mall.
It may be mammoth, but it’s actually a mastodon. With scooped tusks, a firm jaw, and powerful hind legs, the 14,000-year-old skeleton looks like it could walk right out of the Smithsonian American!-->…
Currently, 1 percent of D.C.’s electricity is supplied by solar. Some are already concerned that the city can’t make it all the way to 10 percent solar by 2042.
Mailers sent to at least 5,000 D.C. voters in recent weeks incorrectly stated that the city’s primary election is on the “3rd Tuesday in June,” when in fact it will take place on June 2.