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At 12:30 a.m. last night, an 80 foot section of the old Woodrow Wilson Bridge on the Alexandria side was ceremonially blown up by contest winner Daniel Ruefly and his daughter. If readers are anything like BeyondDC, you a) like seeing things blow up, and b) like it even more when it’s a freeway.

Check out the Post for the full story and video.

The old bridge blown up.
The old bridge blown up.

Average Rating: 4.4 out of 5 based on 170 user reviews.

August 29th, 2006 | Permalink
Tags: transportation



As regulars probably noticed, BeyondDC was having troubles for a couple of weeks. Our host upgraded us to a new server, but during the process we lost a few weeks worth of content and the site reverted to mid-July form. New entries on the home page and in the newsfeed became impossible, though our forum remained active.

With help from the nice people at Powweb we’ve finally got the thing fixed. Unfortunately, posts made in the forum during the downtime have been lost, as have the membership files of anyone who registered during that period.

We’re sorry for the inconvenience this has caused, but seem to be through it now.

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 259 user reviews.

August 25th, 2006 | Permalink
Tags: site




Norfolk’s Granby Tower proposal

Contrary to some claims, the universe does not end at the outer edge of I-495. Although we at BeyondDC are not entirely sure how far out it goes, we have heard of distant lands called Maryland and Virginia. We have even heard that these lands are home to their own cities, complete with buildings and everything. Forum users bmorescottamanda and vdogg prove it, with running updates about skyscraper development in Baltimore and Norfolk / Virginia Beach, respectively. If you’re not a forum regular there’s no better time to check it out. One apology, though: Spam attacks have us manually accepting new registrations, based on whether an email address looks legitimate or not. We know it’s a pain, but it seems to be our only option. We do promise never to spam or otherwise misuse the addresses of anyone who registers.

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 264 user reviews.

August 5th, 2006 | Permalink
Tags: development



Hear hear, Falls Church News-Press! Your scathing editorial on NIMBYism is spot on, and though aimed directly at the Northern Virginian species, the themes apply equally from Chevy Chase to San Francisco.

Here’s a snippet:

There is nothing virtuous or honorable in NIMBYism. It is based strictly on self-interest which is generally viewed as the opposite of altruism and other virtues we like to bestow upon our children… When high minded arguments are cooked up to justify NIMBY aims, it smacks of the disingenuous, even more crass than self-interest.

Average Rating: 5 out of 5 based on 249 user reviews.

August 4th, 2006 | Permalink
Tags: people




New bench seating in a Metro railcar
(photo: WMATA)

WMATA and Virginia officials are steaming ahead with schemes to improve and expand Metrorail. The headline news is unquestionably that Virginia officials favor a Tysons Corner subway instead of elevated tracks, and may delay the project to get a better deal. Officials recognize their decisions will influence the urbanism of an activity center that’s bigger than most metropolitan downtowns for decades, if not centuries to come, and that it’s worth relatively modest cost and time increases if it means a superior product. Congressional doomsayers see things differently. They fear fuzzy math from the federal accountants who determine transportation grants will make the tunnel proposal appear to have a lower efficiency rating, even though state and local sources have agreed to fund the tunnel themselves. A tunnel paid for by Virginia would result in a project that from the federal perspective moves more people but costs the same. For the federal government to balk at this point would represent the worst in bureaucratic absurdity, and confirm that major changes are needed to the federal funding process. For their part, Virginia officials are confident that one way or another, they’ll get the project built.

Less sexy, but no less important, is word that WMATA will begin running a new design of railcar, with fewer seats but more efficient standing room – a design likely to be implemented on at least some of the cars in the agency’s $277 million purchase of new rolling stock . Finally, as BeyondDC noted in the newsfeed yesterday, WMATA is beginning to wrap up its portal cover program with new canopies in Crystal City and Clarendon.

Average Rating: 4.9 out of 5 based on 195 user reviews.

August 1st, 2006 | Permalink
Tags: government, transportation



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