A mural celebrating life on H Street,as the Atlas theater says, from 1905 to 2009. From a local real estate site and Wiki: “The H Street Corridor was built in 1849, providing a home for the workforce that was building much of the city infrastructure we know today, including Union Station. It soon became a thriving commercial district when streetcars were introduced in the 1870s. [H Street NE went into decline after World War II, and businesses in the corridor were severely damaged during the 1968 riots. This part of the street did not start to recover until the 21st century.] Thanks to a resurgence of investment in the early 2000s, the neighborhood’s evolution continues today as developers push new retail and condominiums further eastward.”
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The Capitol Hill Restoration Society is offering a new walking tour, this time featuring murals around the Hill, about which they say:
“Capitol Hill is home to many dazzling (some, quite literally) works of art, painted on the exteriors of homes and businesses. Some murals are well known to the community – but we’ve included them because we love them and the Mural Tour wouldn’t be complete without them. Others may be familiar only to their immediate neighbors. Several of them have been on view for decades but many are more recent, including those that are part of the DC Statehood Murals project. A couple are on the sidewalk. One is not actually a mural at all but it’s art on the exterior of a structure, so no reason not to give it the attention it deserves. … Art is always best appreciated in person; particularly true in this case where the scale and placement of the work made photography a challenge.”
Best to view in "Original" because other versions resized by Pbase are decidedly
unsharp.
Alley off 8th Street SE, posted earlier: