DC USA

Shopping mall in D.C., United States
38°55′46″N 77°02′01″W / 38.92934°N 77.03371°W / 38.92934; -77.03371Address3100 14th Street NWOpening dateFebruary 2008OwnerDC USA Operating Co., LLCArchitectBower Lewis Thrower ArchitectsNo. of anchor tenants9Total retail floor area546,000 square feet (50,700 m2)No. of floors3Parking1,000 spacesPublic transit access at Columbia Heights (Washington Metro)
Bus transport Metrobus: 52, 54, 59, 63, 64, H2, H4, H8, S2, S9
Bus transport DC Circulator:
Woodley Park–Adams Morgan–McPherson Square MetroWebsiteshopdcusa.com

DC USA is an 890,000-square-foot (83,000 m2) vertical power center, i.e. a multilevel enclosed urban shopping center anchored by big box stores. It is located in the Columbia Heights neighborhood of Washington, D.C. A Washington City Paper poll named DC USA the "Best Designed Retail Space" of 2009.[1] The development is adjacent to the Columbia Heights station on the Green Line of the Washington Metro. It is also served by eight bus routes and has a 1,000-space parking garage.

The complex is accessible to more than 36,000 residents within a 10-minute walk of the site. A total of 335,000 residents live within a 3-mile (4.8 km) radius.[2] The development has been designed to fit into its urban setting, with the buildings holding the street line to frame the sidewalks and continue the urban scale.

Target, one of the anchors, has expanded its urban store concept to numerous cities across the country.[3] In 2013 it opened a store in a redeveloped historic office building in the heart of Portland, Oregon.[4]

Anchors

Anchors include:[5]

Other tenants include IHOP, Krispy Kreme, Chick-fil-A and Taco Bell Cantina.

Site history

DC USA sits on the site of the old Romanesque Revival style electric streetcar garage of the Capitol Traction Company built in 1892, located at what was then the terminus of a streetcar line. After the line was extended north the building was no longer needed as a car barn and in 1910, investors repurposed it as an entertainment complex, The Arcade. It contained ground floor retail space, an auditorium, dance hall, cinema, small Dutch restaurant, pool, bowling alley, and food market with over 100 vendor stalls. After commercial decline and debt, Kress purchased the building in 1947 and tore it down, eventually building a two-story commercial building that would house a Safeway supermarket and People's Drug store.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Best of D.C." Washington City Paper. Archived from the original on February 9, 2013. Retrieved December 25, 2009.
  2. ^ Washington, DC Economic Partnership (2008). "2008 Neighborhood Profiles - Columbia Heights"
  3. ^ Tomberlin, Michael (April 8, 2012). "2-story Target to open in Homewood in March 2013". The Birmingham News. Retrieved July 13, 2012.
  4. ^ "City Target opens in downtown Portland today" Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine, KPTV, 24 July 2015
  5. ^ "Tenants", DC USA website, accessed July 28, 2022
  6. ^ "The Arcade in Columbia Heights, "Washington's Madison Square Garden"".

Media related to DC USA at Wikimedia Commons