Andrew Giambrone, Slate

Andrew Giambrone

Slate

New York, NY, United States

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Recent:
  • Unknown
Past:
  • Slate
  • Curbed
  • City Paper
  • The Atlantic

Past articles by Andrew:

As the Nation Braces for a Wave of Evictions, Some Bronx Tenants Fight Back

Amid fears of eviction and not being able to pay for food, a group of Bronx tenants saw only one option: to go on rent strike. → Read More

Lyft integrates D.C. bike lanes into its app

The company offers scooters in the city and owns the operator of Capital Bikeshare → Read More

Three in four D.C. residents say the city’s affordable housing is unfairly distributed

That’s according to an official survey the city conducted over the summer. → Read More

More outsiders are searching for rentals in the D.C. area, report finds

Most of the searchers are in the vicinity of New York City, according to HotPads. → Read More

D.C. Streetcar could be expanded two miles eastward, across the Anacostia River

The city will launch the design process for the project this month. → Read More

Historic Georgetown C&O Canal locks near completion of repairs

A ribbon cutting with local and federal officials is planned for September 12. → Read More

D.C.’s public housing will be overhauled under new 20-year plan

Officials say the properties need at least $2.2 billion in deferred maintenance. → Read More

Activists, including youth, plan major D.C. climate protests this month

The protests are timed to take place around the U.N. Climate Action Summit. → Read More

Should you move to Washington, D.C.?

Tips for moving to D.C., whether you’re thinking of Northwest, Northeast, Southwest, or Southeast. → Read More

Apartment construction is cooling in the D.C. metro area, study says

But it appears to be up in Arlington, where Amazon is putting its new headquarters. → Read More

City to share housing and development survey results at September 21 meeting

Urban planning officials are aiming to produce 36,000 new units by 2025. → Read More

What having a roommate saves you in D.C. rent

More than $8,600 a year, according to a recent study → Read More

Should Rock Creek Park have ‘National’ in its name?

New legislation by D.C.’s congressional delegate would make the addition → Read More

Under half of households east of the Anacostia River have high-speed internet at home: study

Data compiled by the Urban Institute show a digital divide persists in D.C. → Read More

Confederate statue near Judiciary Square should be removed, D.C. delegate says

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton proposes a congressional bill to relocate the statue → Read More

Ribbon cutting for Brookland homeless shelter to take place in August

The project survived a lawsuit by neighbors earlier this month → Read More

Survey: Where should D.C. build more affordable housing?

Half of the city’s income-restricted units are found east of the Anacostia River → Read More

D.C. parking spots will be turned into temporary mini parks in September

City planners are accepting pitches for pop-up designs → Read More

Video: Watch the National Building Museum’s ‘Lawn’ exhibit come to life

“Lawn,” the National Building Museum’s interactive summer exhibit, has been open since July 4. But now you can see how the 30,000-square-foot display—including a scaffolding tower that offers a unique perspective of the museum’s Great Hall—was built, thanks to a recent time-lapse video from EarthCam, which set up a camera there during construction. The video shows visitors enjoying the… → Read More

D.C. permits electric scooters from company co-founded by former Olympic athlete

Bolt Mobility may deploy up to 600 electric scooters in the District → Read More