Washingtonians have spent much of the last fifteen years witnessing a construction boom happen in real time. How will these buildings look to us a generation from now? We consulted with design experts and came up with a few candidates for the most memorable buildings of recent vintage, as well as the ones we’d rather forget.
1: Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Headquarters It was never going to be inviting, but the ATF building at New York and Florida avenues, with its massive concrete crescent, is downright bunker-like. Unless access to it improves (doubtful), the complex will always feel forbidding.
Photograph by Susan Walsh/AP Images.
2 & 3: Nationals Park and Washington Convention Center Both of these strucures are serviceable, but convention centers and stadiums are designed around the latest technologies and ways to steer patrons to beer stands and merch. They usually have a short shelf life. Chances are both of these buildings will be renovated or replaced.
Nationals Park. Photograph by Library of Congress.
Washington Convention Center. Photograph by Flickr user benoit6.
4: The Exchange at Wheaton Station This ungainly behemoth occupies a full square block. The supermarket is useful—too bad its low ceilings and poor lighting make it a depressing place to shop. And with a whopping 486 apartments, the Exchange dwarfs its low-rise neighbors, its red Safeway logo visible for miles.
Photograph by Jeff Elkins.
5: US Capitol Visitor Center It undoubtedly performs key services, all within the reassuring embrace of post-9/11 security. But does it have to feel so much like a Marriott? Overweening in places, its statues stick out awkwardly from the humdrum architecture. One exception: the two skylights with a great view of the Capitol dome.
Photograph by Visions of America/Alamy.
This article appears in our April 2015 issue of Washingtonian.
These 5 Recent Washington Buildings Are Structures We’ll Regret
Bunker-like exteriors. Poor interior design. It's hard to believe these buildings were built in the past 15 years.
Washingtonians have spent much of the last fifteen years witnessing a construction boom happen in real time. How will these buildings look to us a generation from now? We consulted with design experts and came up with a few candidates for the most memorable buildings of recent vintage, as well as the ones we’d rather forget.
It was never going to be inviting, but the ATF building at New York and Florida avenues, with its massive concrete crescent, is downright bunker-like. Unless access to it improves (doubtful), the complex will always feel forbidding.
2 & 3: Nationals Park and Washington Convention Center
Both of these strucures are serviceable, but convention centers and stadiums are designed around the latest technologies and ways to steer patrons to beer stands and merch. They usually have a short shelf life. Chances are both of these buildings will be renovated or replaced.
4: The Exchange at Wheaton Station
This ungainly behemoth occupies a full square block. The supermarket is useful—too bad its low ceilings and poor lighting make it a depressing place to shop. And with a whopping 486 apartments, the Exchange dwarfs its low-rise neighbors, its red Safeway logo visible for miles.
It undoubtedly performs key services, all within the reassuring embrace of post-9/11 security. But does it have to feel so much like a Marriott? Overweening in places, its statues stick out awkwardly from the humdrum architecture. One exception: the two skylights with a great view of the Capitol dome.
This article appears in our April 2015 issue of Washingtonian.
Related
Viral DC-Area Food Truck Flavor Hive Has It in the Bag
Slugging Makes a Comeback for DC Area Commuters
The Smithsonian’s Surprisingly Dangerous Early Days
An Unusual DC Novel Turns Out to Have an Interesting Explanation
More from News & Politics
Trump’s DC Prosecutor, a Former J6 Defense Lawyer, Holds Meeting to Address Crime on Capitol Hill
“Absolute Despair”: An NIH Worker on Job and Budget Cuts, RFK Jr., and Trump’s First 100 Days
Tesla’s Also Sick of DOGE, Alexandria Wants to Censor a Student Newspaper, and We Highlight Some Excellent Soul Food
Amazon Avoids President’s Wrath Over Tariff Price Hikes, DC Budget Fix May Be Doomed, and Trump Would Like to Be Pope
“Pointed Cruelty”: A Former USAID Worker on Cuts, Life After Layoffs, and Trump’s First 100 Days
Is Ed Martin’s Denunciation of a J6 Rioter Sincere? A Reporter Who Covers Him Is Skeptical.
DC Takes Maryland and Virginia Drivers to Court
Both of Washington’s Cardinals Will Vote at the Conclave
Most Popular
10 Outdoor Attractions Worth Checking Out When Visiting Washington, DC
Slugging Makes a Comeback for DC Area Commuters
The Best DC Museums on the Mall and Beyond
28 Things to Do in the DC Area This Week and Weekend
Please Stop Joking That JD Vance Killed the Pope