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DC theater company finds new home under Southwest apartment building

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Around the same time the group Theater Alliance learned it had been forced out of its performance space in Anacostia,

The group, producing artistic director Shanara Gabrielle said, started looking for both short-term and long-term spaces. Their mission, she said, is 鈥渃ontinuing to make art in this town,鈥 and not doing that wasn鈥檛 an option.

So, they turned their focus to a 9,000-square-foot retail space in the bottom of Southwest D.C. apartment complex, The Westerly. The space near the Waterfront Metro station is next to a preschool and near a supermarket. And unlike at the Anacostia Playhouse, the theater didn鈥檛 come with the space.

But the group used the vacant room to build one. The ceilings are high, there are cement floors and cinder-block walls, and there鈥檚 a large area that doesn鈥檛 have any columns.

There鈥檚 a popcorn machine and concession stand, and behind a tall, black curtain, there鈥檚 a stage and seats. They鈥檒l have the flexibility to rearrange as needed.

It鈥檚 where Theater Alliance is planning to host all of its shows of the 2024-25 season, Gabrielle said. Programming is scheduled through May.

鈥淲e were in Anacostia, we were in a true black box theater. So we had sort of all of that. If you walked in, you would say, 鈥極h, this is a theater,鈥欌 Gabrielle said. 鈥淚f you walk in here, you don’t necessarily say, 鈥極h, this is a theater.鈥 You say, 鈥極h, people have made a theater here.鈥欌

Earlier this year, Theater Alliance learned the Anacostia Playhouse, its previous performance space, hadn鈥檛 paid rent to the property owner for months. However, Theater Alliance continued paying its monthly rent,

The issues, which the group said it learned from an eviction notice posted on the theater’s door in February, prompted it to seek alternative options.

In April, Bowser announced the pop-up permit program, as part of a push to find use for empty spaces.

鈥淚t’s kind of plug and play,鈥 said Brian Hanlon, director of D.C.鈥檚 Department of Buildings. 鈥淵ou’ve got space that’s almost ready for a tenant, people can just go in and essentially start using it as is.鈥

Assuming the interested person or group has the proper documents, the agency can issue a permit in about two weeks or less. They鈥檙e able to temporarily use the empty space without having to participate in the traditional permitting process.

Because Theater Alliance has shows into 2025, Hanlon said, 鈥淭hey’re bringing in people, frankly, that are new to the area. They’re bringing in people from the suburbs. These are people that are spending dollars in the city. Activity begets activity, and that’s a public safety issue, it’s an economic development issue, and it’s a quality-of-life issue.鈥

It鈥檒l mark the first time that a theater company will use such a space for performances, Hanlon said.

The developers are 鈥渆xcited to have an arts and culture space in this building that is mixed-use residential, young people at the preschool next door, diner on the corner. The arts are the piece that makes it a whole community,鈥 Gabrielle said.

Theater Alliance producing artistic director Shanara Gabrielle (left) and Brian Hanlon, director of D.C.鈥檚 Department of Buildings pose outside the theater’s new location. (海角精品黑料/Scott Gelman)
A table selling merchandise for Theater Alliance is also in the Anacostia apartment complex. (海角精品黑料/Scott Gelman)
Theater Alliance used the vacant room to build a theater. The ceilings are high, there are cement floors and cinder-block walls, and there鈥檚 a large area that doesn鈥檛 have any columns. (海角精品黑料/Scott Gelman)
Behind a tall, black curtain, there鈥檚 a stage and seats. They鈥檒l have the flexibility to rearrange as needed. (海角精品黑料/Scott Gelman)
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Scott Gelman

Scott Gelman is a digital editor and writer for 海角精品黑料. A South Florida native, Scott graduated from the University of Maryland in 2019. During his time in College Park, he worked for The Diamondback, the school鈥檚 student newspaper.

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