citypaper: archives

Siteseeing
The citywide obsession with watching other people work

Cover Story

You can’t take your eyes off the crusher. Its sliding neck can stretch into the very innards of an abandoned building. At the end of its neck, it has a metal face with a metal nose—more like a prehistoric beak. It has jaws. And its teeth are eating away at the empty and exposed second-floor shell of 65 K St. NE, the former ticket-adjudication center.

Feeding time began before 9 a.m. The second floor is just a series of concrete slabs. No match for the crusher. The machine seems to toy with it, jutting past the tangled exposed rebar that hangs in the air, helpless as dead tree branches. It then rubs its nose in the slab, spraying everything with dust. Finally, it opens wide and chomps hard into the flooring and the walls.

The action stops Robert Williams, 52, at the building’s old driveway. He stands there for a while, staring straight at the crusher. He finally moves away, heading down toward North Capitol Street. “It was something to look at,” he says. “Just something curious.”

Leaning over a wall along 1st Street NE, a man stands for a good while, gazing up at the thing and the showers of concrete. “When I look at this, I think of 9/11,” he says. “See how that fell?” Another chunk of concrete chalks the earth.

Standing next to the man is Marvin Frye, 43. He pulled up a while ago to catch the crusher. He’s dressed in work clothes. He says he’s on his way to Capitol Heights for a construction job of his own. But he had to stop. When asked why, he just looks up at the jaws. “It stopped me—you know what I’m sayin’,” he says.... Continued

Issue of Apr. 7 - 13, 2006

News and Features

  • Siteseeing
    The citywide obsession with watching other people work
    Cover Story
  • Stone Cold
    Kids pelt cyclists with rocks, bricks, blocks, and more.
    The City
  • CVS
    1700 Columbia Road NW
    The City
  • Capital Kehilla
    Chinatown
    The City
  • Meth Penalty
    The Mail
  • Failure to Lunch
    The Mail
  • Hands Off
    The Mail
  • Corrections
    Correction

Columns

Eats

  • The Kitchen Gods
    If chefs could mess with nature, they’d make square veggies and chickens with four breasts.
    Young & Hungry

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  • Heart of Noise
    After more than two decades in the anti-pop, metal-on-metal, Beatles-destroying audio-art underground, Jeff Surak wants to make one thing clear: Music should connect people.
    Arts
  • Nuclear Moms
    Artifacts
  • Dischord House
    Artifacts
  • National Tragedy
    Books
  • Culture Vultures
    What does it take to get an arts grant from the D.C. government?
    Culture Vultures
  • Auto Focus
    Art Review
  • Rhein and Reason
    Opera

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