

area, there is a video version of the tour available on the museum’s website. What happened first in Southwest then proliferated to communities in the United States in the following decades, said Michael Epstein of Walking Cinema, a partner of the walking tour.įor those outside the D.C. As the neighborhood experiences a current economic boom and struggles to keep its affordable community intact, ‘Before the Bulldozers’ offers lessons from the not-so-distant past,” said the museum, which is part of the Smithsonian Institution. “Today’s Southwest neighborhood is unrecognizable to former residents. This led to the displacement of more than 20,000 African Americans. In the process, the government razed schools, houses and churches to “create space for development by claiming eminent domain.” targeted for “urban renewal” in 1950, an Anacostia Community Museum news release said. Southwest was one of the first and largest neighborhoods in the U.S. and beyond,” Anacostia Community Museum Director Melanie Adams said in a statement. “By moving through the Southwest neighborhood, seeing how the area changed and learning at whose cost those changes came to be, audiences better understand the role housing inequity plays out in everyday life - in D.C. Three characters act as your guide as you meander the Southwest streets, with lessons and resources along the way.

#The walking papers tour free
The free app uses your location, augmented reality and audio to “examine larger issues of housing inequality through the lens of Southwest.”įor the best experience, start the tour at the Waterfront Metro Station and bring headphones. Exposed,” and you can take the tour using an app. It’s called “Before the Bulldozers: Historic Southwest D.C. destination, it was home to a tight-knit, multigenerational African American community.Ī walking tour through historic Southwest aims to tell the story of the people who lived there and the “turbulent redevelopment” that changed the landscape of the neighborhood. Wander into Southwest and you’ll see world-famous museums, the favorite local fish market, the new soccer stadium and the marinas.īut before it became a D.C. Business & Finance Click to expand menu.
