What's Hot: Barnes and Noble Returns To Georgetown Next Week | How An Unmarried Couple Buys A Home Together
The DC Neighborhoods At Risk of Flooding As Early As Next Year
✉️ Want to forward this article? Click here.
This week's release of drafted amendments to the Comprehensive Plan identify several new priorities for DC, including the need to study flood risks in certain swaths of the city. And there is one area that requires immediate attention.
"The area around the Watts Branch, a tributary to the Anacostia River, is currently at risk of flooding, and is projected to be at increased risk as early as 2020," a newly-added section to the Far Northeast/Far Southeast Area Element reads. "The Watts Branch watershed encompasses multiple neighborhoods including Deanwood, Eastland Gardens, Kenilworth, Northeast Boundary, Mayfair, Parkside, and River Terrace. There is also a significant risk to dozens of public and community-serving facilities as well as affordable and public housing units."
Several of the above neighborhoods are the site of in-progress mixed income redevelopments, and the watershed of the Watts Branch also reaches Joint Base Anacostia Bolling and an electrical substation, as well as the Blue Plains Wastewater Treatment Plant. While DC Water is constructing a seawall to protect Blue Plains beyond 500-year flood standards, it is unclear what is being done to protect endangered residential neighborhoods.
story continues below
loading...story continues above
The Watts Branch watershed was identified as a resilience planning priority area in the 2016 Climate Ready DC report. The Environmental Protection Agency and jurisdictions traversed by the Watts Branch have studied flood risks there in recent years, as has the federal-local interagency group DC Silver Jackets; the Comp Plan states that Silver Jackets is currently testing mitigation strategies.
The Comp Plan seems to identify the sewage overrun mitigation from the ongoing DC Clean Rivers Project and efforts to shore up five Anacostia tributaries, including Watts Branch, as part of the solution to address flood risks. A new Implementation Element section also encourages more "neighborhood-scale and site-specific solutions" within neighborhoods which lie in the watershed.
If neighborhoods along the Watts Branch are indeed at increased risk of flooding within the next few months — potentially before the Comp Plan amendments are voted into law — how will residents there be affected?
See other articles related to: anacostia river, anacostia riverfront, comp plan, comprehensive plan, dc comprehensive plan, far northeast, far southeast, flood risk, flooding, flooding in dc, floodplain, northeast, resiliency, ward 7, watts branch
This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/are-some-east-of-the-river-neighborhoods-at-higher-risk-of-flooding-next-ye/16034.
Most Popular... This Week • Last 30 Days • Ever
Estate taxes, also known as inheritance taxes or death duties, are taxes imposed on t... read »
In this article, UrbanTurf will explore the considerations and steps involved in buyi... read »
The most expensive home to sell in the DC region in years closed on Halloween for an ... read »
Paradigm Development Company has plans in the works to build a 12-story, 110-unit con... read »
The map and text amendment applications that were filed with the Commission last Octo... read »
- What Are Estate Taxes and How Do They Work?
- How An Unmarried Couple Buys a Home Together
- The Cliffs in McLean Sells For $25.5 Million, Highest Home Sale In DC Area In Years
- 110-Unit Condo Project Planned in Alexandria Coming Into Focus
- The Zones That Could Lead To More Development in Chevy Chase Set To Go Before Zoning Commission
DC Real Estate Guides
Short guides to navigating the DC-area real estate market
We've collected all our helpful guides for buying, selling and renting in and around Washington, DC in one place. Start browsing below!
First-Timer Primers
Intro guides for first-time home buyers
Unique Spaces
Awesome and unusual real estate from across the DC Metro