Histories of Privatization: Examining Culture, Legal Conflict, and Economic Transformation at Adams Morgan Plaza in Washington, DC

Authors

  • Ishaan Barrett Columbia University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.60690/cwtq4z68

Keywords:

Washington, DC, Housing, Historic Preservation

Abstract

Public spaces are disappearing at alarming rates as cities face mounting housing, economic, and social issues. Adams Morgan Plaza in Washington, DC is no different. Over the past several years, the Plaza has experienced numerous changes that have radically altered the neighborhood. It sparked community outrage and an ensuing lawsuit that wounds way, slowly, through the DC courts. This study uses census data and primary source documents to understand why Adams Morgan Plaza was privatized and how these changes are challenged. The results shed new light on how legal battles and economic pressures shaped the development of a central neighborhood landmark. It’s history as a theatre and communal epicenter are obscured by its liminality. The Plaza today contradicts Adams Morgan’s legacy of diversity and artistic culture, but also finds itself on a new path: to create affordable housing. These findings provide insights into an ongoing history of change, cultural expression, and community within a vibrant neighborhood of the nation’s capital.

Author Biography

  • Ishaan Barrett, Columbia University

    Ishaan Barrett is a student and research scholar at Columbia University. Previously, he was a Research Fellow at the Eric H. Holder Initiative for Civil and Political Rights and Summer Fellow at the Institute for Religion, Culture, and Public Life housed in the Religion Department. While most of his research concerns the Washington, D.C. area and the dynamics of urban change therein, his other areas of interest include the ethnography of urbanization in India and socially conscious architecture. He has previously written for the Harvard Urban Review, Urban Magazine at Columbia GSAPP, and the Columbia Daily Spectator and is the current Editor-in-Chief of the Barnard-Columbia Urban Review.

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Published

2025-06-03

Issue

Section

Humanities and Social Sciences