WAMU 88.5 : News

Filed Under:

Arlington Approaches Historic Property Owners

Play associated audio
The Colonial Village Shopping Center, built in the 1930s, is on Arlington County's list of essential historic properties.
Michael Pope
The Colonial Village Shopping Center, built in the 1930s, is on Arlington County's list of essential historic properties.

Colonial Village Shopping Center isn't what most people would consider a historic site. But Arlington County disagrees.

"Arlington's history is so different than a lot of the history that surrounds us in the metropolitan area," says Cynthia Liccese-Torres, the county historic preservation planner.

"What makes Arlington, Arlington, are these types of buildings: the garden apartments, the shopping centers that were designed to originally serve them, as well as some of the early commercial buildings such as what we have in the original downtown of Clarendon," she says.

For years, the county has been building a historic resources inventory to document all the properties that speak to Arlington's 20th century history. The eclectic list includes a post office, a gas station and, yes, the Colonial Village Shopping Center.

"Maybe there's something historic about it, doesn't seem that way," says Christopher Hadley, a manager at Ray's Hell Burger, located in the plaza. "It's just an older shopping center with a small parking lot. It just doesn't seem historic to me."

Arlington County disagrees. In the coming months, the county will be approaching property owners to see if they want to be part of the newly created county historic districts. Unlike federal or state historic designations, the local designation would protect the building from being demolished unless a buyer can't be found to save it.

Edward Berenbaum, a realtor with Century 21 who works on the other end of the Colonial Village Shopping Center, says the building is worth saving, although he predicts most property owners will decline the invitation to create new historic districts.

"That might eliminate somebody for a buyer, and the more potential buyers you have, typically the higher the price because you've got more people bidding against each other."

But historic preservation advocates say more is at stake than money. As development pressures increase, they say, more and more of these buildings may be threatened in the future.

NPR

A Read Down Memory Lane: Lessons From Your Former Self

Writings from childhood — cards, stories and other notes — can hide for decades, like time capsules tucked away in boxes, old bedrooms, attics and journals. Writer Jim Sollisch talks about how old thank you notes from his youth foreshadowed his adult life.
NPR

Inside A Tart Cherry Revival: 'Somebody Needs To Do This!'

The revival is partly based on the humble sour fruit's growing reputation as a superfood. And in Michigan, a scientist is on a quest to introduce a whole new world of hardier, tastier tart cherries by breeding American trees with ancestral varieties from Eastern Europe.
NPR

Srinivasan's Confirmation First For D.C. Circuit In 7 Years

The partisan war over judicial nominees has accelerated in recent years. It took nearly a year to win Senate confirmation for Sri Srinivasan to the important federal appeals court for the District of Columbia, though he had no formal opposition.
NPR

3-D Printer Makes Life-Saving Splint For Baby Boy's Airway

A 3-D printer is being credited with helping to save an Ohio baby's life, after doctors "printed" a tube to support a weak airway that caused him to stop breathing. The innovative procedure has allowed Kaiba Gionfriddo, of Youngstown, Ohio, to stay off a ventilator for more than a year.

Leave a Comment

Help keep the conversation civil. Please refer to our Terms of Use and Code of Conduct before posting your comments.