Developmentally speaking, 2008 was a big year for the District of Columbia. While it was the 
annus horribilus for real estate, it did witness the opening of eagerly anticipated projects like 
CityVista, 
Union Row, and of course, 
Nationals Stadium, to name a few, and saw other big ticket developments like the 
Southwest Waterfront project and 
The Yards stride further toward realization.
Still, many District-solicited projects await the green light to begin construction, in the process of selecting a team or are still up for grabs. Here's a breakdown of those projects and where they stand for 2009.
Available Proposals:
In one of their more unique offers, the 
Office of the Deputy Mayor Planning and Economic Development (ODMPED) is currently seeking a developer to take control of a 13.5-acre concrete manufacturing facility at 
1515 W Street, NE. The site is currently operated by the 
District Department of Transportation, which plans to vacate the facility by August. Any new tenant will be required to submit to a ground lease agreement for a minimum of 10 years. Proposals for the “
Develop and Operate a Concrete Plant Solicitation” are due by 
January 9th.
As previously reported, ODMPED is currently seeking a development team to revitalize two long-abandoned properties at 
400-414 Eastern Avenue and 
6100 Dix Street, NE, in the Deanwood neighborhood. The city government is looking to redevelop the properties into an affordable housing complex with a local retail component. Proposals are due to ODMPED by 
February 16th.
One of the bigger projects currently on deck with the city government is the 
redevelopment of several “excess” schools, closed due to recent budget shortfalls and threadbare facilities. These include 
Backus Middle School, 
Grimke Elementary School, 
Hine Junior High School, the 
Langston School, 
M.M. Washington High School, the historic 1911 school building of 
Randle Highlands Elementary School, 
Rudolph Elementary School, the 
Slater School, the unoccupied portion of 
Slowe Elementary School, 
Stevens Elementary School, and 
Young Elementary School. The sites will not be put to their former use; any plans will be considered, provided they exhibit a “creative vision for development or reuse” and “an understanding of neighborhood context.” A pre-bid conference will be held 
January 9th, proposals for the redevelopment of any or all of the facilities are due by 
February 27th.
ODMPED has also 
“amended and restated” their solicitation of offers for the 
Park Morton public housing project redevelopment that had been previously announced in September of last year. Proposals for that project are now also due by 
February 27th.
Proposals Submitted:
Bidding 
recently closed on three vacant parcels the District intends to re-appropriate as parking lots: 
463 I Street, NW (available for 24 months until construction commences on 
Donohoe’s 
Arts at 5th & I project),
 2 Patterson Street, NE and 
33 K Street, NW (formerly the 
demolished Temple Courts public housing complex).
Proposals were received in September for 
two District-owned parcels at 
Fourth/Sixth and E Streets, SW – one piece of which is intended to house the 
Metropolitan Police Department’s new 
Consolidated Forensic Laboratory.
An announcement is anticipated soon regarding proposals submitted in October for the 
Hill East Waterfront/Reservation 13 project, which is intended to include more than 5 million square feet of mixed-use development and an extension of 
Massachusetts Avenue, SE – the latter of which is already underway. 
As of November, the District had narrowed down the contenders to competing four development teams.

The so-called “
Lincoln Lots” – two 
V Street, NW parcels adjoining Shaw’s historic 
Lincoln Theatre – were also the subject of an RFP that closed this past September. ODMPED was seeking “developers to assist in repositioning real estate associated with the [theatre] to complement and benefit the ongoing operation of the Lincoln.”
Development Partners Selected:
Of the projects solicited by ODMPED over the past year, the majority have already been snatched up by development teams. These include 
Blue Skye Development, in concert with the Mayor’s 
New Communities Initiative, for an abandoned apartment complex at 
4427 Hayes Street, NE; 
Donatelli Development and 
Mosaic Urban Partners for 
two parcels at 
3813-3815 and 3825-3829 Georgia Avenue, NW; Blue Skye Development and the 
Educational Organization for United Latin Americans for the 
abandoned Tewkesbury building at 
6425 14th Street, NW; 
Argos Group for two District-owned Capitol Hill properties at 
525 Ninth Street, NE and 
1341 Maryland Avenue, NE (aka 
Old Engine House 10); 
Donohoe Companies for the 
Arts at 5th & I project in the Mount Vernon Triangle; Donatelli Development and Blue Skye Development for the 
$108 million mixed-use project adjoining the Metro station at 
Minnesota Avenue and Benning Road, NE; the 
William C. Smith & Co., 
Jair Lynch Companies, 
Banneker Ventures LLC and 
CPDC for the $700 million, 1600 unit 
Northwest One New Community that also includes retail, office and medical components; 
Clark Realty for the massive, $2.5 billion redevelopment of Southeast’s 
Poplar Point community; and, lastly, 
Washington Community Development Corporation and Banneker Ventures, LLC for the transformation of Deanwood’s dilapidated 
Strand Theatre into a mixed-use retail and office complex.