Gallery Place - 最新蜜桃影像 DC Neighborhood Stories from American University Tue, 16 Sep 2025 17:44:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2024/05/cropped-The_Wash_4_Circle-1-32x32.png Gallery Place - 最新蜜桃影像 32 32 Chinatown loses another legacy business as Momiji shuts down /2025/09/16/chinatown-loses-another-legacy-business-as-momiji-shuts-down/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=chinatown-loses-another-legacy-business-as-momiji-shuts-down /2025/09/16/chinatown-loses-another-legacy-business-as-momiji-shuts-down/#respond Tue, 16 Sep 2025 17:44:01 +0000 /?p=20993 Momiji Restaurant will close as redevelopment reshapes the neighborhood.

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Momiji Restaurant will close at the end of the month, after 17 years serving customers in D.C.鈥檚 Chinatown.

The Japanese restaurant it lost its lease to the incoming $75 million Marriott Tribute Chinatown Hotel, part of a redevelopment project led by Eddie Moy, the building鈥檚 longtime owner, and local developer Rift Valley Capital.

鈥淎s we enter another healing phase, we have all the intention of regrouping and finding another way of continuing Momiji in the D.C. community,鈥 the restaurant wrote on an Instagram post.

Momiji鈥檚 closure highlights a broader shift underway in D.C.鈥檚 Chinatown, where longtime businesses are giving way to redevelopment projects and changing demographics. The hotel project, a new luxury apartmenttower and are set to reshape the area.

Some residents and business owners see new investments as a chance to modernize and bring fresh activity to the area, while others worry it accelerates the decline of legacy businesses that once defined the neighborhood鈥檚 character.

Andrew Cohen, a Chinatown resident since 2021, said losing local businesses to bigger corporations can impact the cultural aspect of the community.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a shame to see places closing, but if something is going to close, I hope it can be replaced with something of a similar kind,鈥 Cohen said.

Cohen said he is not familiar with specific plans for the Marriott hotel but added that he is optimistic the company will support the Chinese traditions in the area.

Momiji joins the list of Asian-owned business losses for the neighborhood, following Full Kee Restaurant and Gao Ya Salon, two long-time Asian-owned businesses that vacated their properties in July because of the hotel project.

Moy said the businesses were not forced to leave the building. Instead, he said the owners signed a month-to-month lease with the understanding that redevelopment was possible.

The building owner said the plan is to offer local Asian business owners the option to lease street-level retails and spaces below the hotel.

The hotel project is expected to preserve the seven historic row homes along the H street, where Momiji is located, and will feature 142 boutique rooms, a pan-Asian restaurant and a Chinese market.

鈥淭he hotel would bring more foot traffic to the city and a more vibrant and exciting Chinatown to the public sector and the Asian community,鈥 Moy said.

 

Fewer than 10 legacy businesses.

Momiji鈥檚 closure will leave Chinatown with fewer than 10 small legacy-owned businesses, according to . Shani Shia, an activist with the Save Chinatown Solidarity Network, said the closures are part of a larger trend threatening the neighborhood鈥檚 cultural fabric.

Shia formed the network in response to  D.C.鈥檚 Mayor Muriel Bowser鈥檚  and to 鈥渟upport the preservation of Chinatown鈥檚 working class.鈥

She said the group calls for stronger protections to keep legacy businesses in place, saying that rising rents and redevelopment threaten to erase the neighborhood鈥檚 cultural identity.

鈥淭here needs to be more cooperation, collaboration and shared prioritization of preserving the legacy businesses instead of trying to replace with new stuff,鈥 Shia said.

Bowser created the task force in 2024 to find ways to revitalize the neighborhood. As the initial stage of the task force came to an end in 2025, the group has recommended new steps to revitalize the area with Asian grocery stores, cultural festivals and targeted funding for minority-owned businesses.

Ben Guzman, the director of the Mayor鈥檚 Office on Asian and Pacific Islander Affairs, said Chinatown is a key part of Bowser鈥檚 broader vision for the revitalization of downtown.

鈥淐hange is inevitable, and what’s important is how the city, from our perspective as a city agency, is how the city manages that change,鈥 Guzman said. 鈥淭he coming and going of businesses matters, but it is how we set the table in terms of being a place where businesses can and want to come that helps create the conditions of the culture we want to foster in Chinatown.鈥

Guzman said the role of Chinatown in D.C. has evolved since it was in the 1880s.

At the time, the prohibited the immigration of Chinese laborers into the United States. The act pushed Chinese immigrants to create a place where they could integrate with others during a time when the law was against them.

Over the years, the Chinese and broader Asian communities spread to other areas, redefining Chinatown鈥檚 role as a cultural hub. In 1990, 60% of residents in Chinatown were Asian. In 2020, that number dropped to about 20%.

Guzman, who has lived around the area for almost 30 years, noted multiple factors that are leading to changes, including the effects of COVID-19 and the growth of other neighborhoods such as The Wharf and Union Market. Both districts underwent rapid redevelopment in the past decade, attracting more businesses and visitors. The Wharf and Union Market serve as examples, Guzman said. 鈥淏ut we’re not just trying to attract businesses to Chinatown. We’re trying to maintain a cultural legacy.鈥

Evelyn Moy, senior president of the Moy Family Association, agreed. She said Chinatown has long been a cultural touchstone for Chinese Americans in D.C., rooted in the history of exclusion and migrations.

Evelyn Moy said advocates won鈥檛 succeed in keeping major developments from happening. However, she sympathizes with advocates who want to preserve the culture in the neighborhood and said she encourages them to keep the cultural legacy alive.

鈥淭he city could have done more, but the city can鈥檛 save everybody,鈥 Evelyn Moy said. 鈥淵ou have to adapt and change. You have to take the good and the bad, and there has to be a balance.鈥

The Moy Family Association is not involved in the Marriott Tribune Hotel project led by Eddie Moy and Rift Valley. Eddie Moy is the co-president of the association. However, the hotel is part of a personal project for him.

Although the Gallery Place/Chinatown Task Force completed its initial phase in 2025, Bowser appointed two community advocates to move into a second phase of revitalization. Winston Lord, a D.C. native, and Tim Ma, a local chef, will work as liaisons between the Chinatown community and the city.

Their appointment comes as city leaders seek to guide Chinatown鈥檚 transformation while maintaining its cultural identity.

鈥淲e will bring Chinatown back as a vibrant cultural destination that鈥檚 rooted in heritage and designed to bring people together.鈥 Lord wrote in an .

 

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DC holiday market gives small businesses a chance to operate downtown /2021/11/30/dc-holiday-market-gives-small-businesses-a-chance-to-operate-downtown/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=dc-holiday-market-gives-small-businesses-a-chance-to-operate-downtown /2021/11/30/dc-holiday-market-gives-small-businesses-a-chance-to-operate-downtown/#respond Tue, 30 Nov 2021 17:26:17 +0000 /?p=12273 Organizers hope the market will help small businesses engage with the downtown environment, a market that is typically out of their reach.

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Small businesses are returning to the downtown area for the 17th annual . This festive market offers an opportunity for vendors to gain exposure in the downtown neighborhood that they otherwise don鈥檛 access.听

鈥淲e always look to represent and incubate small businesses that need a leg up,鈥 Mike Berman, organizer of the Downtown Holiday Market, said.

The market is located on F Street NW between 7th and 9th streets in front of the National Portrait Gallery, taking over the block with shimmering lights and holiday tunes. Since opening this year, the market has been bustling with visitors anxious to see the market and shop locally. When Vice President Kamala Harris visited to celebrate Small Business Saturday, she these businesses are 鈥part of the civic and social fabric of the community.鈥

There will be more than 70 vendors present at the market, selling goods like D.C. artwork, glass-blown ornaments and other handcrafted goods. It鈥檚 open every day until 8 p.m., which allows visitors who work during the day the ability to peruse the market after.听

On opening day, organizers for the Downtown Holiday Market led a sing-along of carols like Rudolph the Rednosed Reindeer and Jingle Bell Rock. Keely Bastow/最新蜜桃影像

This market is an opportunity for businesses to create a presence in the downtown neighborhood without investing in a rental space. With high rents and low tourism numbers since the pandemic, small businesses aren鈥檛 racing to get into downtown storefronts.

鈥淭here is not a single small business that I deal with that could contemplate the rents that are charged for downtown storefront retail locations,鈥 Berman said.听

Jon Wye, a vendor at the Downtown Holiday Market who sells belts and other leather goods, said in 18 years of operation, he hasn鈥檛 even considered opening a brick-and-mortar store downtown.

鈥淚 would have to have a greater selection of items and a much bigger brand鈥 that would just be a lot more stress in my life,鈥 he explained.

The transient nature of the DMV also helps vendors expand their consumer base at the market. Wye said regional customers who come to the market and then move away have 鈥渢aken [his] brand with them.鈥澨

Customers shopping at The Neighborgoods stand at the holiday market. Keely Bastow/最新蜜桃影像

Jodi Kostelnik owns and operates The Neighborgoods, a small gift shop, from her basement. Before the pandemic she had a storefront in Shaw but had to shut it down. Now, she is looking again for a place to rent, but says she has little hope for a place in downtown D.C. Though costs are top of mind as she is considering where to rent, she said that low foot traffic in the downtown also discourages her.

The holiday market attracts people from all over the DMV, not just D.C. residents. Small businesses get a high level of exposure from this market, since for many of them it鈥檚 their only reason to come downtown.听

Sonda Allen, owner of jewelry business Turtle鈥檚 Webb, says this holiday market is the only thing that brings her into the area. She says downtown D.C. is much more friendly to larger, multinational businesses.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all Starbucks and Louis Vuitton, it鈥檚 not feasible for small businesses.鈥澨

These larger companies dominate the city center of D.C., with multiple blocks scattered with luxury fashion companies and little presence of smaller ones. Allen says the businesses that operate in the holiday market focus on the art rather than profits.

She said she doesn鈥檛 have a storefront and doesn鈥檛 want one, 鈥淚鈥檓 not interested in being a machine, I don鈥檛 want the pressure of needing something on the shelves every day.鈥

Allen also says that this market, with its focus on small businesses and artists, offers visitors a break from the professional culture of the city. Wye echoed this, saying the political and business presence in the city makes people lean more traditional in their tendencies. With all the 鈥渃onservative dress and conservative attitudes鈥 in the city, Wye celebrates the market for 鈥渋nject[ing] some color into the city鈥 to allow people to embrace 鈥渁 kind of artistic side.鈥

Over 70 stalls are set up outside of the National Portrait Gallery for the Downtown Holiday Market. Keely Bastow/最新蜜桃影像

Vendors and organizers expect sales to be high this year, but not as high as 2020. Last year set a record for many sellers, which Berman attributes to all the other stores and markets in D.C. being closed in 2020.听

鈥淔olks flocked to us鈥 Now, there鈥檚 a lot more open鈥 tourism isn鈥檛 back鈥 office workers definitely aren鈥檛 back yet鈥 but we鈥檙e hoping to pick up where we left off in 2019,鈥 Berman said.

 

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In a town of pantsuits and power ties, local brand Hanifa redefines fashion in DC /2021/11/18/in-a-town-of-pantsuits-and-power-ties-local-brand-hanifa-redefines-fashion-in-dc/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=in-a-town-of-pantsuits-and-power-ties-local-brand-hanifa-redefines-fashion-in-dc /2021/11/18/in-a-town-of-pantsuits-and-power-ties-local-brand-hanifa-redefines-fashion-in-dc/#comments Thu, 18 Nov 2021 16:30:14 +0000 /?p=12157 In a fashion world dominated by New York, Paris and London, the District might be a long afterthought. But DMV-based designers and merchandisers say the city鈥檚 fashion scene is on its way to becoming a dominant force.

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A glossy blue vinyl trench coat.听

A high-slit mid-length denim skirt.

And a slinky peach gown with bell sleeves.听

These were among the 35 contemporary, ready-to-wear looks DMV-based designer Anifa Mvuemba debuted at the 鈥淗anifa Dream鈥 fashion show Tuesday night.

More than 600 people wrapped in boldly colored garb attended the soiree, held at the National Portrait Gallery.

In her opening monologue, Mvuemba paid homage to Washington, saying that 鈥渉ome is the place where we feel the most comfort and love.鈥

Her home, she said, is filled with memories of her youth and dreams of her future.

The 10-year-old brand has a dedicated following across the country and even around the world. But, show attendees resoundingly agreed that debuting the collection in the District was important for the city鈥檚 fashion scene 鈥 proving that the talent in D.C. is just as special as it is in New York.

鈥淚 love seeing people rep their home city, so I think it鈥檚 great to have people come to you here,鈥 said Devine Blacksher, 28, who traveled from New York to see the show. 鈥淚 think more people need to go home and do their s鈥. I stand for it.鈥

Two dozen models of varying curves sashayed down the runway in patent trousers, leather coats and shirt dresses that captured what some attendees called the 鈥減erfect silhouette.鈥

Backstage, Mvuemba said she thinks it is important to share this moment with the city.

鈥淧eople just need to give D.C. a chance,鈥 she said. 鈥淕ive us a shot and we鈥檒l show you guys what we鈥檙e made of.鈥

Mvuemba said she made it a point to hire as many local creatives for the show as possible, though it was difficult. 鈥淚 like challenges,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd look 鈥 it worked out.鈥

Roughly 80% of the models who walked in the show are from the area, along with many of the other team members 鈥 like the DJ, members of the orchestra, photographers, videographers and makeup or hair artists.

The crowd was also packed with Washingtonians, many of whom were friends and fans of Mvuemba, as well as some editors and retailers from New York. Audience members showed off their own Hanifa originals: jewel-toned silk suits, ribbed-knit dresses and second-skin boots.

Fashion in the District has typically hinged more on practicality and office-appropriateness than on mix-matching colors or taking risks.

鈥淲hen you talk to somebody, they鈥檒l say 鈥極h, fashion and style doesn鈥檛 exist in D.C.鈥 But, that鈥檚 not true,鈥 said Christine Brooks-Cropper, president of the , a non-profit supporting the fashion business community in the area. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a very private industry that was underground.鈥

Given the city鈥檚 reputation for hosting high end balls and galas, like the White House Correspondents Dinner, where attendees wear high-class couture, Brooks-Cropper said she doesn鈥檛 understand why more people don鈥檛 recognize the nation’s capital as a fashion city.

鈥淵eah, it鈥檚 a government city. But our style sense is no less than anywhere else,鈥 she said.

Dawn Miller, 46, is a self-declared fashion enthusiast who said she owns just about every Hanifa piece that will fit her body. She said when she thinks about D.C., she doesn鈥檛 instantly think fashion. But, Miller said, 鈥淗anifa鈥檚 show is giving me a whole different outlook on fashion in D.C.鈥

In 2008, Brooks-Cropper helped establish the , legislation that 鈥嬧媋dvises the mayor, the D.C. Council and the public on the views and needs of the fashion and beauty communities in the District. She said the legislation allowed the local industry to have access to grants, marketing initiatives and other resources they never had before because 鈥渁t the end of the day, those entities didn鈥檛 know that they existed.鈥

Before Mvuemba鈥檚 first show last night, she broke the internet a year ago with a 3D runway show, gaining the attention of celebrities like Gabrielle Union, Lizzo and Kylie Jenner, who have since worn her designs known for emphasizing and embracing femininity.

On Monday night, the designer was honored as the .

But Mvuemba said it wasn鈥檛 always easy. She said she held every job in the industry from sewing, styling and taking photographs to taking out the trash.

鈥淚f you perfect your craft 鈥 your passion and work will take you where you need to go,鈥 Mvuemba advised other creatives in the DMV area.

Last May, the 31-year-old won $50,000 after being recognized as a Fashion Designers of America/ Vogue Fashion Fund Finalist. That money, Mvuemba said, helped her to fund the show, and helped her secure the National Portrait Gallery as it鈥檚 venue.

鈥淭he minute I walked in the space I knew I had to have it,鈥 Mvuemba said. 鈥淭his feels so grand and I feel like we can celebrate our evolution here and bring out a beautiful crowd.鈥

DC鈥檚 designers take fashion by storm

Fashion has long thrived in the District鈥檚 neighborhoods 鈥 specifically street or urban wear. Despite there being no shortage of talent in Washington, local designers or other creatives said they were still not being recognized.

鈥淓ach neighborhood of D.C. has its own fashion center, its own fashion scene, its own culture of its neighborhood,鈥 Brooks-Cropper said. 鈥淭hat translates to the people and that translates to the style and it translates to the dress.鈥

Guests posed against a Hanifa backdrop following the runway show late Tuesday night in the atrium of the National Portrait Gallery. (Vanessa Montalbano / 最新蜜桃影像)

Plus, numerous universities in the DMV area 鈥 like Howard and Marymount 鈥 host degrees associated with fashion design, merchandising and entrepreneurship. So, Brooks-Cropper said, the talent has existed in the city for decades. 鈥淲hy push all these creative people away to New York or someplace else?鈥

, 50, is a fashion influencer, stylist and content creator in D.C. She said she thinks D.C. is elevating to become one of the major fashion cities.

鈥淎 lot has started in the urban communities where fashion originated and was often duplicated,鈥 Delaney said. 鈥淏ut, being here today with Hanifa shows that Black designers have a platform and are standing tall on it.鈥

Mvuemba鈥檚 high profile fashion show, she said, was long overdue.

Around the time that Brooks-Cropper was writing up the 2008 legislation, she emphasized that fashion can be used for economic development. Today, she said the city鈥檚 fashion district in downtown鈥檚 , featuring household name designers like Gucci, Tiffany and Carolina Herrera in addition to local luxury or streetwear brands, is a testament to that.

Ean Williams, executive director of , said the fashion community in D.C. is burgeoning. 鈥淭here are far more fashion businesses in D.C. than five to 10 years ago,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are a few significant players, but there is room at the table for all.鈥

Brooks-Cropper said her main goal is to connect artists to the resources and the opportunities that they need. Now, with the infrastructure in place, she said 鈥渢he industry will be able to thrive successfully for a very, very long time.鈥

Doncel Brown is another fashion designer in D.C. carving out space for himself in the industry.

He said living in the District allowed him to 鈥渟ee so many different parts of the world in one place鈥 ultimately influencing his brand, . 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I would have got that same experience had I not been in D.C.,鈥 he said.

 

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Brown said he hopes the District can build a brand that is unique to D.C., so that people have to come to the city exclusively to experience it.

Delaney agreed. 鈥淎 lot of the fashion stylists, designers, as well as influencers that create impeccable content and work, deserve their due,鈥 she said.

鈥淚t’s our time here in D.C.鈥


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