My dad recently gave me some of his slides from a 1965 visit to DC. He traveled with some colleagues from NYC’s Lower Manhattan Project to check out the new SW waterfront developments by prominent architects like Hary Reese, Charles Goodman, and Cloethiel Woodard-Smith.

Urban renewal of SW DC in the 1950s-70s was and is controversial. The massive project displaced over 20,000 people- mostly African American and Jewish residents- and demolished upwards of 90% of the existing working-class community. It resulted in a mixed legacy for the built environment of the neighborhood and the creation of a new demographic for DC’s Ward 6. One of those legacies was the construction shown in these photos, most of which still stands.

As that area has recently – and still is- undergoing another wave of redevelopment as part of The Wharf District and the current administration’s aggressive selling of federal properties, I thought it’d be interesting to peak back as modernist Washington emerged.