Looking down on what was the Tracks nightclub at 1st and M SE. At right are the outdoor volleyball courts. It was demolished around 1999 to build the 80 M Street office building.
The Southeast Federal Center, showing buildings that are still standing as well as ones that were demolished around 1999-2000, including the two low-slung brick buildings right along M Street next to the old white NGA building, a brick annex to the
red building at 3rd and Tingey behind what is now the
US DOT HQ, and the large Building 159, nestled between the DC Water main pumping station and what is now the
Foundry Lofts. Building 167, now the
Boilermaker Shops, is visible at left center, and interestingly shows that the loading dock that has been added on the western end of the building at 3rd Street is an echo of a portion of the building that was there before.
The Half and M intersection, showing at left the newish entrance to the Navy Yard Metro station, before
55 M Street was built on top of it in 2007. At right is the
WMATA Southeastern Bus Garage, which was vacated when Nationals Park opened one block to the south, then demolished in 2009.
The
Capper/Carrollsburg public housing project, between K and M and 2nd and 7th. Most of these buildings were demolished between 2003 and 2007. At bottom you can see the school bus lots that eventually became
Canal Park.
At center is New Jersey Avenue, running from K Street at left to M at right. The buildings between K and L, where
Capitol Hill Tower now stands, were demolished between 2001 and 2003, as were the car repair shops at New Jersey and M, clearing that block for the 1100 New Jersey Avenue office building. At bottom along 1st Street are many buildings that existed until 2006-2011, including the Market Deli.
A ground-level image of the abandoned building at New Jersey and L, obscured by trees at the center of the above 1990s photo, taken in September 2000. (
See what this corner looks like now.) (JD photo)
A ground-level image of the AAMCO station at New Jersey and M, taken in September 2000, on bad film, unfortunately. (JD photo)
A ground-level image of the block's New Jersey Avenue frontage in September 2000, looking southeast toward M Street. (JD photo)
These four color images, provided to JDLand in early 2013 by a reader who was given the prints, show M Street SE during the time of the Navy Yard Metro construction station, probably in 1990 or early 1991.
Looking westward on M Street SE just east of 1st Street, in a photo clearly taken from was then the Defense Mapping Agency building. Starting at far left, you can see the
Normandie Liquors store still in operation, with the
WMATA Southeastern Bus Garage one block to the rear at Half Street. Moving to the right, lining the north side of M, is the empty parking lot at
20 M, the
Sunoco station demolished in 2006, the Tracks night club in the long white building at
80 M (the volleyball courts are in the fenced-in area at rear), and the
On Luck Cafeteria, demolished in 2007. If you look at the
enlarged version, you'll also be able to see the J.E. Hurley Machine and Boiler Works building, before it was painted black and turned into Nation (and then was demolished to become
1015 Half Street). (donated photo, not by JD)
Turning the other way from the same DMA vantage point to look northeastward across M Street. Directly below is the construction of the east entrance of the Navy Yard Metro station, at
New Jersey and M, and you can also see that M Street itself was merely a bunch of wooden boards (presumably from cut-and-cover construction). Directly to the north of the work site you can see beneath the trees the first of a series of rowhouses that used to stand there (scroll down to the first black and white photo on this page to see them in 1992). Across New Jersey are the
AAMCO garage and rowhouses that
stood until demolished by 2003 to make way for
1100 New Jersey Avenue. Then you have the infamous school buses on the
Canal Park site, and then the many buildings making up
Capper/Carrollsburg. And, to the right in the distance are the Ellen Wilson buildings just north of the freeway at 6th Street that were demolished in the mid-1990s as well as the high-rise Capper building
demolished in 2004 at the site of what's now
Capper Seniors #1. (
Enlarged version here.) (donated photo, not by JD)
A peek into the construction of the Navy Yard Metro station. (donated photo, not by JD)
New Jersey Avenue SE at M street, showing mainly the western side of the block. At bottom center is the very tidy and new eastern entrance to the Navy Yard Metro station, which opened the previous year. At least seven townhouses, already boarded up, stand between the station plaza at St. Matthew's Church, at upper right. These townhouses were demolished some time before 2003. (
See what it looks like now from ground level.) The buildings along the left side of the photo were demolished in 2006 to make way for both the
Onyx apartment building and the
100 M Street office building.
A portion of what was then the
Southeast Federal Center, as seen from the west. The large white building behind the ornate WASA main pumping station is Building 159, which was demolished in the 1999-2000 timeframe despite the desire of historic preservationists to save it. It stood on what is now the footprint of the
Yards Park, and is obscuring the view of the
Pattern Joiner Shop (Building 160) and the Lumber Storage Shed, both of which are still standing today. Most buildings in the forefront are part of WASA's operations and
are still in use today, though this view would now be obscured by
Nationals Park.
First Street SE at M Street. Another image of the Tracks nightclub, seen on the left side of First Street; it operated from 1984 to 1999. That block is now home to the 80 M Street office building (
see what it looks like now from ground level). Across the street, at the corner at lower right, is the On Luck carryout, demolished along with its neighbors in 2006 to make way for the 100 M Street office building (
see what it looks like now from ground level).
This photo, looking west from above 11th Street SE, is notable mainly for showing the four high-rise Capper buildings along Seventh Street and Virginia Avenue that were demolished in 2000 and that I never photographed. (The fifth, at upper right, was
demolished in 2004.) You can see how K Street, at mid-left, still ran through from Fifth to Seventh; it was blocked off sometime before 2003. That large block is now home to both a
Marine barracks and the
new Capper Seniors building completed in 2006. At left is the
old Capper Seniors building, demolished in late 2007. Most of the buildings in the foreground are unchanged from what is seen here.
Square 740, the block bounded by New Jersey, L (foreground), Second, and K. The building on the north edge of the block was a
DC public schools warehouse, and was demolished sometime between 2000 and 2003. The townhouses, already boarded up in this image, were mostly demolished by 2000. This block is now home to the Courtyard by Marriott hotel and Capitol Hill Tower co-op building. (
See what this block looks like now; also,
a slightly different angle to the one above, taken the same day.)
Square 742, bounded by New Jersey, M, Second, and L streets SE. The block was home mainly to auto garages and a few rowhouses in disrepair. The block is now home to the 1100 New Jersey Avenue ("Federal Gateway") office building, completed in 2004. The building is home to Five Guys, Subway, CVS, and Chevy Chase Bank. (
See what this corner looks like now.)
Square 738, bounded by New Jersey, K, First, and I streets SE. The building at the north end of the block was at this point either still the notorious Chapter III nightclub, or about to become the Mirage; by 2003 it was the
Nexus Gold Club. The townhouses at center were
mostly boarded up by 2003.
A similar view to the one above, from March 2006. Sometime before 2000 the auto garage at lower left was built. (JD photo)
And the same angle, from March 2010. The entire block except for the garage was demolished in 2007 to make way for the
909 New Jersey apartment building. (JD photo)
A heavily cropped image show the blocks around First (at right), Half, I (top), and L (bottom). At the absolute far lower left is a smidgen of the building at 1015 Half Street, which appears to still be operating as the Hurley Boiler company, though the building would be auctioned off later in 1992. It then beceme the Capitol Ballroom in 1995, then Nation in 1995, operating until it was closed in 2007 to make way for
a new office building. The other buildings appear mostly unchanged from what I began photographing in 2003, except for the smokestack rising from the building at left center
at the corner of Half and I, which was home to a towing company when it was demolished in 2008. At lower left/center you can see the entrances to the nightclubs that in 1992-ish were Lost & Found and the Zone; before long they would become
Wet (1999) and Edge (1993). The entire block was demolished in 2006 to make way for
Velocity. At the extreme bottom right is the
Market Deli, which was demolished in 2011.
Squares 737 and 739, between New Jersey Avenue and Second Street, just south of the Southeast Freeway. The trash transfer station on the south end is being demolished in 2012; to its north stood a Washington Star/Post warehouse. The white building was much more ornate and interesting than it appears here, and I'm mainly including it because I weep every time I see it and remember that I didn't photograph it before it was demolished in 2000. The two blocks will eventually be redeveloped, with the northern half becoming
a 1.1 million square foot residential project and the trash transfer site becoming a mixed-income apartment building.
The Washington Gas and Steuart Oil sites on the east end of M Street, bounded by the SE Freeway ramps to Pennsylvania Avenue and the 11th Street Bridges. By 2003 the open field at top center was home to
Maritime Plaza buildings I and II; the triangular lot seen here with huge tanks may someday be an
800,000-square-foot mixed use development.