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D.C. Buildings Linked To Armenian Genocide Museum To Be Razed

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  • D.C. Buildings Linked To Armenian Genocide Museum To Be Razed

    D.C. BUILDINGS LINKED TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM TO BE RAZED

    Washington Business Journal
    April 19 2013

    Michael NeibauerStaff Reporter- Washington Business Journal

    The owner of three vacant commercial buildings in the heart of downtown
    D.C., all tied inexorably to the sputtering Armenian Genocide Museum
    project, has applied to knock them down.

    What's better, a 5,700-square-foot vacant lot or three vacant
    buildings? Pick your poison.

    The Cafesjian Family Foundation of Minneapolis has submitted a
    request to raze 1338, 1340 and 1342 G St. NW, all of which back up
    to the historic but vacant National Bank of Washington building at
    14th and G, which it also owns.

    Representatives of the foundation, recorded as the owner of the
    properties in July 2011, did not return calls for comment. All three
    buildings were briefly classified by the District in 2012 as blighted,
    until the foundation successfully appealed.

    The properties to be razed are worth a combined $8.2 million, according
    to D.C. assessors, but the value is entirely in the land.

    I'm not aware of any proposals to build anew.

    The bank building has long been planned as the future home of the
    Armenian Genocide Museum, a memorial to 1.5 million Armenians killed
    in the final days of the Ottoman Empire. The G Street properties,
    too, were to be part of the project.

    But the foundation and the nonprofit Armenian Genocide Museum and
    Memorial are tied up in prolonged litigation (another appeal was filed
    March 25 in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
    Circuit) over a relationship and donation gone bad, a lawsuit a
    federal judge once described as "very bitter and very unforunate."

    Here's the gist.

    The bank building was acquired by the Armenian Assembly of America
    early in 2000 for $7.25 million, using funds provided by multiple
    donors, most notably $4 million from the Cafesjian Family Foundation,
    according to court documents.

    Gerard Cafesjian, a wealthy former publisher and Armenian
    philanthropist, separately purchased the G Street properties the same
    year for about $5.5 million, with the idea of turning them into a
    contemporary art museum to complement the genocide museum. But the
    art museum was built in the Armenian capital of Yerevan instead,
    and Cafesjian conditionally agreed to donate the G Street buildings
    to the Assembly for an expansion of the genocide museum.

    The grant agreement between Cafesjian and the Armenian Genocide Museum
    nonprofit, an arm of the Armenian Assembly, set Dec. 31, 2010, as
    the point at which the properties would be returned if they weren't
    developed. And that's exactly what happened.

    Between 2002 and 2007, when the first of many lawsuits was filed, the
    relationships between the various parties soured, badly. Fundraising
    efforts for the estimated $100 million museum project stalled,
    as did attempts to hire an architect or develop a business plan,
    according to a 190-page federal court ruling issued Jan. 26, 2011.

    "The Court sincerely hopes that after years of fighting legal battles,
    the parties can put aside their differences and accomplish the
    laudable goal of creating an Armenian Genocide museum and memorial,"
    U.S. District Court Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly wrote in her
    exhaustive opinion.

    It's certainly not looking that way.

    The 50,000-square-foot museum complex is in limbo, and based on a brief
    conversation I had with a museum representative, I'm less confident
    than ever that a museum will open in the bank building on 14th Street,
    two blocks from the White House.

    The raze, as I understand it, has little to do with the museum. More
    likely, it is related to the District's attempted "blight"
    classification, which would come with with a property tax rate six
    times the standard commercial rate. Get rid of the building, get rid
    of the tax bill.

    The permit applications are under review by the Department of Consumer
    and Regulatory Affairs. Workers were inside 1340 G on Friday clearing
    it of asbestos in preparation for the demolition.

    Michael Neibauer covers economic development, chambers of commerce,
    transportation and politics

    http://www.bizjournals.com/washington/breaking_ground/2013/04/dc-buildings-linked-to-armenian.html?page=all



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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