Uh, Oh. Here Come The Tourists!

(Sorry about the length but the NY Times doesn't allow direct linking.)

U Street: The Corridor Is Cool Again
New York Times - April 14, 2006

By ALICIA AULT

SAUNTER down U Street in northwest Washington almost any night and you'll hear the pulsing beat of urban nightlife: the tinny pop of a snare drum, the caustic sneering of an indie rocker, the smooth melodies of a lounge singer, the plaintive picking of a folkie and the driving chunk-a-chunk of hip-hop.

The U Street Corridor, the center of Washington's African-American nightlife for much of the 20th century and the birthplace of Duke Ellington, is vibrant again and the newest and hottest place in town for getting out on weekends after dark. The transformation that began in the late 90's, after three decades of decline and neglect, continues to gather speed, with boarded-up buildings reopened and transformed into galleries, shops, cafes and clubs, and nightlife seekers migrating over from Georgetown and Adams Morgan for a slightly older, less raucous scene where the patrons have a bit more money to spend.

"Adams Morgan is not new anymore," said Melih Buyukbayrak, who sold his interest in a restaurant there last year and is a co-owner of the new Tabaq Bistro in the U Street Corridor. "U Street is new and hip."

On weekend nights and even during the week, throngs from the city and suburbs, along with hip city visitors, crowd the dozens of restaurants, bars and clubs of the corridor, a strip of U Street from 9th Street to 16th Street and blocks nearby.

"When I come to U Street, I'm coming more for a laid-back, jazz kind of thing," said Katarro Rountree, 24, a Georgetown University graduate student dressed preppily and drinking a Corona beer at Busboys and Poets, a bookstore, cafe and performance space that opened in September at 14th and V Streets. The cafe's high-ceilinged, loftlike space would be at home in San Francisco or Seattle, and it draws a multicultural stew of aging liberals, young antiestablishment types and college students. Although he likes hardcore partying in Georgetown, Mr. Rountree said, he prefers U Street for food, music and date nights.

In the heyday of jazz, artists like Dizzy Gillespie, Billie Holiday, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Miles Davis and Shirley Horn, who was born in Washington, made regular stops on U Street. One club where they played, the Crystal Caverns, is now called the Bohemian Caverns and still books jazz acts. Another, the landmark Howard Theater, was closed in 1970 but later bought by the District of Columbia, which is soliciting redevelopment offers.

From the riots after the assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968 until the mid-1990's, many of the three- and four-story brick buildings and glass storefronts along U Street were shuttered and derelict, with the exception of stalwarts like Ben's Chili Bowl, opened in 1958, where people still line up for half-smokes, chili fries and thick shakes. The construction of a Metro stop and the rise of real estate prices in Washington brought new interest in U Street, and in the last five years, condominium high-rises have sprung up and town houses have been renovated. Restaurants, shops and night life have followed.

The transformation has been so profound that Phil Coleman, 43, of Philadelphia, who used to live in Washington, thought in a recent visit that he had gotten out at the wrong Metro stop when he went to meet a friend on U Street. He was astounded, he said, by the crowd and the wealth of things to do.

One of those things is shopping. Need designer shoes? Try Wild Women Wear Red for Frye's spring sandal collection, or Carbon, where you can also pick up a $155 Virgins, Saints & Angels belt with a Jesus-and-Mary diptych buckle. Style-conscious types looking for retro oversize 1970's sunglasses or double-knit pants ($20) can bop into Meeps, which has been on U for 14 years.

A gallery scene is unfolding. NevinKelly holds down the western end of the corridor with the work of local and Polish artists. At the eastern end, Project 4 just held its first show, a war-themed photography exhibit that was shown earlier at the International Center of Photography in New York.

But it is at night that the U Street Corridor really comes alive.

Mary Beth Sullivan, 47, who lives in Arlington, Va., and was having dinner one busy Saturday night in December with friends at Creme, a popular new U Street restaurant, said that in 20 years of living in the Washington area, she hadn't set foot on U Street until a recent visit to see a concert at the Lincoln Theater. The district government bought and refurbished the old theater, reopening it in 1994 to show theater, comedy and dance.

AT Creme, Ms. Sullivan's party was eating at the bar; at 8 p.m., there was a two-hour wait for the restaurant's upscale version of Southern dishes like shrimp and grits ($16) or pork and beans ($18). A relaxed crowd â?? young and old, black and white, straight and gay â?? basked in understated candlelight reflecting off blond wood and olive-tone walls. Ms. Sullivan had come on the recommendation of the bartender, whom she had known in his previous job at the upscale Marcel's in the nearby West End. What was U Street's allure for her and her friends? In part, Ms. Sullivan said, "We like the diverse crowd."

At Busboys and Poets, named for Langston Hughes, who began his career as a poet while working as a busboy at the Wardman Park Hotel in Washington, the varied crowds come for camaraderie, poetry readings and screenings of films like "Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Prices." Late one night last winter, a young couple lounged on a sofa and not far away, even though it was after 1 a.m., students pored over laptops at long, communal wooden tables. A middle-aged couple, the man in black tie, made their way to a spot in the sofa area near where a young woman in a halter top and her date, an Usher look-alike, were drinking Champagne.

A few doors down 14th Street at Jin on another winter night, a hip crowd of 20- to 40-somethings shimmied and sipped Kristal and Dom Perignon behind the frosted door of the "Asian-Caribbean Soul Lounge." Tiny white stools lined the bar, but most patrons chatted in the lounge area, where tables hugged by retro sofas can be reserved for $250 or $500.

At U-Turn on 11th Street, a spike-haired, tattooed Matt Aikens, 22, had joined the punk and goth crowd that comes regularly to listen to bands with names like Curbside Revenge and Pessimist Parade. He had come in from Alexandria, he explained, for the "community feel" of the club.

And at Polly's Cafe, at 1342 U, a neighborhood crowd ate vegetarian-leaning comfort food in a cozy publike space mostly below street level with exposed brick walls and a working fireplace. Polly's has live music, usually acoustic indie, on Wednesday nights, the owner, Cici Mukhtar, said. She is adapting to the new U Street crowds by supplementing her beer on tap with small-batch bourbons and novelty liquors like the espresso-fueled Van Gogh vodka.

U Street hasn't yielded completely to the new and affluent. Visitors will be accosted for change on busy weekend nights, and they will walk past liquor stores with bulletproof cashier's windows and boarded-up, spray-painted storefronts. But with the old U Street steadily fading, the party scene is what takes the eye.

Well after the dinner hour on a Friday night in March, women in cocktail dresses and stilettos waited at the valet station at Tabaq; one stepped into a Volkswagen Touareg, another into a black BMW sedan. A block away, about a dozen men and women who seemed to be barely more than 18 years old, wearing club attire, laughed and teased each other just beyond the velvet rope at Bar Nun.

The night was far enough advanced for crowds to be thickening at Republic Gardens, a nightclub that survived lean times to enjoy the resurgence and can now command $250, $500, and $1,000 minimums at some tables after 11 p.m. on Saturdays.

Jazz sounds drifted into the street from Bohemian Caverns, Twins Jazz and Duke's City. At DC9 and the Velvet Lounge, which are smoky, scruffy and loud, the music was indie and punk. Two of Washington's most successful spots, Black Cat and the 9:30 Club, drew fans who like a smorgasbord of music: reggae, pop, alt-country, gypsy, R & B, go-go, gospel, punk, folk, Latin.

Jon Dauphiné, 38, a lawyer eating with five friends at Creme on a Friday night in March, said he liked U Street enough to have moved close by three years ago from Georgetown, drawn by the diversity not only at night, but also in the feel of the area day to day. "This is the cutting edge," he said, "of what the city is and can be."

If You Go

The U Street Corridor is accessible from the U Street/Cardozo/African-American War Memorial stop on the green line of the Washington Metro system. It is easily navigated on foot.

Hotels within walking distance include Hotel Helix, a boutique property at 1430 Rhode Island Avenue, NW, 202-462-9001; doubles from $140; and Hotel Rouge, 1315 16th Street NW; 202-232-8000; rates $150 to $200. The Bed and Breakfast on U Street, 877-893-3233, www.bedandbreakfastdc.com, in a home at 17th and U Street NW, has a queen room with a private bath for $165 a night on April and May weekends.
When did Polly's go "vegetarian-leaning"?

Originally posted by Jaguar:
And at Polly's Cafe, at 1342 U, a neighborhood crowd ate vegetarian-leaning comfort food….
Yeah, I wondered about that myself.

The entire article makes it sound like U St. is the place the rich go slumming with their American Express cards.

Guess it's time for those of us who don't have a cool grand to spend on an average night out to find some place else.
We are, indeed, quickly running out of places where we can go cheaply. Case in point: Chinatown.
I tell ya, U Street hasn't been much more than a place for the rich to go slumming for several years now. It's been a long time since the days when you would emerge from Club Asylum (formerly on U Street) and have to run down the street to get away from the crack whores…
had dinner at Creme last night and it was fantastic … I ordered the pork and beans and was expecting some kind of shady pulled pork and black beans type or dish … it turned out to be a caveman-sized pork leg (i could have beat someone to death with it, had i been so inclined) swimming in a really tasty lima bean broth … for $17, i thought it was a damn good deal

and Tabaq isn't any different than any other nice bar in the area … last night it was pretty dead around midnight or so, easy to get a table and drink in the view … drink prices were the same, if not cheaper, than any other nice place

so it's not like you have to drop a bunch of $$, jag … articles like this make these places sound like some kind of mythical oracle of hip-itude where people light cigarettes with hundred dollar bills and arrive in ferraris, but they're just normal restaurants and bars
Originally posted by HoyaSaxa03:
had dinner at Creme last night and it was fantastic …
Best roasted chicken I've ever had. And not particularly expensive. Hope it's not any more difficult to get a table.

As an aside, Phil Coleman and Jon Dauphine, each quoted in the article, are both friends of mine. Phil, in fact, was on his way to meet me at Sala Thai for dinner the evening he's talking about. Pretty fun!
Originally posted by Doomter Doc:
It's been a long time since the days when you would emerge from Club Asylum (formerly on U Street) and have to run down the street to get away from the crack whores…
Um, damn?
Don't you get it that for some people, $17 for an entree IS a lot of money?

I'm not speaking for myself, but for some people, it is.


Originally posted by HoyaSaxa03:
had dinner at Creme last night and it was fantastic … I ordered the pork and beans and was expecting some kind of shady pulled pork and black beans type or dish … it turned out to be a caveman-sized pork leg (i could have beat someone to death with it, had i been so inclined) swimming in a really tasty lima bean broth … for $17, i thought it was a damn good deal

and Tabaq isn't any different than any other nice bar in the area … last night it was pretty dead around midnight or so, easy to get a table and drink in the view … drink prices were the same, if not cheaper, than any other nice place

so it's not like you have to drop a bunch of $$, jag … articles like this make these places sound like some kind of mythical oracle of hip-itude where people light cigarettes with hundred dollar bills and arrive in ferraris, but they're just normal restaurants and bars
Originally posted by Charlie Nakajima, Fired by Mascis:
Don't you get it that for some people, $17 for an entree IS a lot of money?

I'm not speaking for myself, but for some people, it is.
no Rhett, I don't get it at all, please explain further … you mean to say that some people can't afford a measly seventeen dollars for a dinner entree??!!!

who are these people, and from what planet have they been sent … in my extremely limited life experience, consisting of suckling from the teat of my upper-middle-class parents and never really working a day in my life, i've never come across such individuals, and i therefore refuse to believe that they exist

i've also been told that entree prices in the mid-teens are fairly comparable to your average suburban chain restaurant such as Outback Steakhouse or TGI Fridays … surely everyone in this great land can afford such common fare?

i'm especially oblivious to any issues considering this term "gentrification" i've heard bandied about and how the traditional residents of the U street neighborhood are finding it hard to afford to live in the area.

please, please enlighten me.
Couldn't agree more with Hoya..as a Ust resident I for one am happy its being developed..its easy for outsiders to want the area to stay shitastic (for their indie credit).. but as a resident I can't care for that…and Creme is wonderfull..that pork shank Hoya mentioned is delicious and very fairly priced for its quality…don't people pay more for dry ribs at Chili's?…anyways…who cares, if you can't afford it stay out and find a new place…stop being such whiny bitches all the time…jeez…
A U-Street resident of many, many years, I'm sure. :)

Now if only I could somehow keep the prices of housing in Springfield on the rise to keep out those greasy Mexican illegals who seem to keep showing up everywhere.

Originally posted by Fico:
Couldn't agree more with Hoya..as a Ust resident I for one am happy its being developed..its easy for outsiders to want the area to stay shitastic (for their indie credit).. but as a resident I can't care for that…and Creme is wonderfull..that pork shank Hoya mentioned is delicious and very fairly priced for its quality…don't people pay more for dry ribs at Chili's?…anyways…who cares, if you can't afford it stay out and find a new place…stop being such whiny bitches all the time…jeez…
Why would anyone who lives in New York bother coming down here to hang out?
Originally posted by Charlie Nakajima, Fired by Mascis:
A U-Street resident of many, many years, I'm sure. :)

Originally posted by Fico:
Couldn't agree more with Hoya..as a Ust resident I for one am happy its being developed..its easy for outsiders to want the area to stay shitastic (for their indie credit).. but as a resident I can't care for that…and Creme is wonderfull..that pork shank Hoya mentioned is delicious and very fairly priced for its quality…don't people pay more for dry ribs at Chili's?…anyways…who cares, if you can't afford it stay out and find a new place…stop being such whiny bitches all the time…jeez…
You are right Rhett. I have not been a resident of Ust for more than a year. But the other 2 neighbors in my building have been living in the are for 5+years, and my roommate's girlfriend has been living in the are for years as well..and the neighborhood has improved vastly and they all welcome it with open arms. So if my view is moot for my short stint at U, I think theirs is still valid. And I think few would argue a walk down Ust is far more pleasurable/safe now than 5-7 years back…
I'm just giving you shit, Fico. In general, I'm in agreement with you.

Originally posted by Fico:
Originally posted by Charlie Nakajima, Fired by Mascis:
A U-Street resident of many, many years, I'm sure. :)

Originally posted by Fico:
Couldn't agree more with Hoya..as a Ust resident I for one am happy its being developed..its easy for outsiders to want the area to stay shitastic (for their indie credit).. but as a resident I can't care for that…and Creme is wonderfull..that pork shank Hoya mentioned is delicious and very fairly priced for its quality…don't people pay more for dry ribs at Chili's?…anyways…who cares, if you can't afford it stay out and find a new place…stop being such whiny bitches all the time…jeez…
You are right Rhett. I have not been a resident of Ust for more than a year. But the other 2 neighbors in my building have been living in the are for 5+years, and my roommate's girlfriend has been living in the are for years as well..and the neighborhood has improved vastly and they all welcome it with open arms. So if my view is moot for my short stint at U, I think theirs is still valid. And I think few would argue a walk down Ust is far more pleasurable/safe now than 5-7 years back…
Originally posted by HoyaSaxa03:
i've also been told that entree prices in the mid-teens are fairly comparable to your average suburban chain restaurant such as Outback Steakhouse or TGI Fridays …
I was going to say the exact same thing. When a "Triple Jack Combo" at TGIF is $18 and spaghetti is $13, , you can't say that a $17 entree is beyond the pale and earns the designation as "expensive." Granted, it's 'expensive' for some, but so is $4 for a happy meal. We're talking 'relative' here, and when many restaurants around DC have ventured up into the mid-20s and higher for entrees, I don't think you can say U Street has become insanely unaffordable. Especially for you, Rhett, whom I'm assuming would eschew all those fancy $8 and $10 drinks (which you can get just about anywhere, by the way).
Originally posted by Fico:
Originally posted by Charlie Nakajima, Fired by Mascis:
A U-Street resident of many, many years, I'm sure. :)

Originally posted by Fico:
Couldn't agree more with Hoya..as a Ust resident I for one am happy its being developed..its easy for outsiders to want the area to stay shitastic (for their indie credit).. but as a resident I can't care for that…and Creme is wonderfull..that pork shank Hoya mentioned is delicious and very fairly priced for its quality…don't people pay more for dry ribs at Chili's?…anyways…who cares, if you can't afford it stay out and find a new place…stop being such whiny bitches all the time…jeez…
You are right Rhett. I have not been a resident of Ust for more than a year. But the other 2 neighbors in my building have been living in the are for 5+years, and my roommate's girlfriend has been living in the are for years as well..and the neighborhood has improved vastly and they all welcome it with open arms. So if my view is moot for my short stint at U, I think theirs is still valid. And I think few would argue a walk down Ust is far more pleasurable/safe now than 5-7 years back…
I'm sorry, but living in the U St area for just a year is nothing to really make your point valid but welcome to the neighborhood. Glad you waited until it was cool, hip and safer.

The area is definitely safer than it was 7-8 years ago when I moved down to it. That didn't mean I wouldn't feel safe walking around at 2am by myself. I feel the same now as I did back then. Hell back in 98, I wouldn't have even thought to park my car on the block I live now when I'd come down to BOUND @ Bar Nun.

I know quite a few people that have lived on my block since the 80s and they're not all to happy with some of the changes that have happened. Most of the people that are moving in, aren't very friendly or neighborly. Stuffy yuppies just wanting to live in the "hip" area and push all the businesses that have been around for 10+ years out for a trendy hot spot to go in.

Sure bring your expensive cars down to the city and then bitch about it when your window was smashed because you left something visible in your car. I see it happen every weekend. :)

Btw…I have seen plenty of Ferraris around the 13th and U St area so they are coming around. Wouldn't have seen them there even 3 years ago parked even in the paid lot that use to be on U St before the Ellington took that land.

MindCage
Mindless Faith
Deep6 Productions
$17 for a hunk of burning meat is nothing to spend much time thinking about. you can either afford it or you can't. if you can't, i'd suggest you get a schwarma at 18th & U at the sudanese joint for $5. the more troubling part of the article, at least for me, is that people would pay $250 - 1000 for a table at republik gardens (or anywhere else for that matter). since it is "tax day," i'll just say that i'm enough of a pinko commie to state that the top marginal rates for taxes should return to the confiscatory levels before the reagan "tax cuts" (middle class people saw less of their paychecks after reagan than before due to the increase in FICA taxes) if people have thousands to blow on "a table" for a nite out on U Street. iyiyi.

vive la bush tax cuts.
Originally posted by Jaguar:
Sorry about the length
Rhett has to say this to his disappointed wife every night.
I don't know, I've been a productive working "professional" member of society for some years now, and I still cringe a little at paying 17-20 bucks for an entree. Am I that far out of the mainstream here? Maybe it's just that I usually only eat at thai/indian/ethiopian joints that rarely charge above 12 bucks for anything - and I consider that a good night out! Huge plate of dumplings in chinatown for 4.95? Even better.

I don't think you have to be living in poverty to be like, 17 bucks, what? If that's what they charge at Friday's these days, just one more reason not to eat there. The 10 dollar drinks freak me out too…why drink those when you can have beer? Guess I'm still a middle-class-bordering-on-white-trash girl at heart.

Now, spending 25 plus fees on a concert ticket is par for the course, but we're talking about music there…priorities, people!