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A Modest Proposal

...or, A Good Proposal For People Who Like Bad Proposals.  If this looks familiar, it's because I originally published it on April 25, 2005.  But if you haven't read it - it's new to you.  Yes, it's a rerun.

It's that time of year again: tourist season.  DC SOB has some good suggestions as to what tourists should do to avoid being drawn and quartered by angry locals, but I wanted to take it a step further.  Now, I know that DC makes good money from the tourists, and I'm thankful for that, but let's get one thing straight: tourists should be confined to the tourist areas.  Or rather, there should be a protective bubble for the important and easily angered washingtonians (read: me), into which tourists may not pass.  The bubble that I propose is delineated by the purple boundary on the map below:



The southern boundary would be M St., thus allowing the tourists continued and unrestricted use of downtown, the Mall, the monuments, Capitol Hill, etc.  The eastern boundary would be North Capitol, allowing the tourists to visit that shrine thingy and whatever else NE has to offer (???).   The western boundary would be, of course, Connecticut Ave.  Basically, I'm conceding Georgetown here.  I'm not going to fight for it because it would be a losing battle, and it's kind of a lost cause already, what with all the students and their collar erections.  This leaves two controversial issues, however: what about DuPont and Woodley Park. 

Regarding DuPont, I'm willing to make another concession.  Using taxi cab zoning logic, tourists will have continued use of the western side of Conn Ave, and the 19th St. Entrance of the metro station.  Tourists, will be prohibited from crossing Conn Ave to the east side, or using the Q St. entrance of the metro station.  Naturally, there will be a divider drawn in the metro station, Brady Bunch style.

Regarding Woodley, the Wardman poses an obvious problem.  As the largest hotel in the city it's going to continue to attract hordes of tourists to the area.  Personally I think we all be better off if they turned it into condos, as previously suggested.  Anyway, I'm conceding use of the Woodley Park metro station.  This pains me a great deal, as I used to live in the WP and I used that metro station every day.  I would venture to say that no other metro station suffers from tourist syndrome more than Woodley Park.  And, again, tourists would not be able to cross the street, with the exception of the crosswalk at the zoo and ONLY to enter the zoo.  Unfortunately, this means that tourists may still have access to Mr. Chen's.  I don't like sharing Mr. Chen's with them, but I know that it's good for business, thus ensuring that Mr. Chen's will be around for years to come.  So I'm willing to deal with it.  But only until we shut the Wardman down.  When that happens, we shall reclaim the WP.

The northern boundary is rather arbitrary.  I've drawn it roughly along Upshur St., thus allowing the tourists all that Friendship Heights has to offer (read: the Cheesecake Factory).  Unfortunately for Petworth, they are largely excluded from the bubble.  But something tells me that Petworthians don't have to deal with many tourists.

So there it is folks.  It's a preliminary plan, and I know there are going to be flaws so let the comments fly.  I know it will be hard to enforce, so naturally the punishment will be flogging.  Anyway, hopefully this plan will give us some relief from the fanny packs and strollers. 

Posted on Thursday, March 30, 2006 by Registered CommenterRCR | Comments38 Comments | References1 Reference

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  • Response
    The downside of cherry blossom season: invasion of the tourists. Here's a clever plan for dealing with them. [Rock Creek Rambler] No joke: Ben Domenech is, at least in one respect, a very lucky man. His girlfriend could not...

Reader Comments (38)

Mr. Chen's makes the only edible wonton soup in the entire city, and their potstickers kick City Lights' ass.
Mar 31, 2006 at 04:56AM | Unregistered CommenterJordanBaker
Those tourists present a significant security risk. I say that we should expand the security barriers around the Capitol and put them up around the Beltway to keep those pesky tourists out.
Mar 31, 2006 at 09:35AM | Unregistered CommenterNancy Toby
"First. Having lived in other tourists meccas: San Francisco, Chicago. I find the outright hatred of tourists here to be one of the Washington's least redeeming qualities."

Chicago isn't really a "tourist mecca," and if memory serves re: SF, as long as you stay away from the cable cars and the waterfront, you can at least get thru a work week without encountering tourists. Whereas DC tourists think they're going to Disney World and not a real working city and proceed to fuck up our commutes, crowd sidewalks in large groups, and go to nice restaurants in shorts and FBI t-shirts and fanny packs, thinking they're at the France pavilion at Epcot Center.
Mar 31, 2006 at 09:47AM | Unregistered CommenterMatt
You can't go all the way to Upshur on this one. No one in DC even goes to Cleveland Park, let alone tourists. The problem is that there is no through street between the Zoo and the center of CP> however, few people like to cross the bridge, so I would say to draw the line there. Otherwise, it'd really be putting down a great little non-touristy DC neighborhood.
Mar 31, 2006 at 10:11AM | Unregistered CommenterCPark
DC residents don't just hate tourists.

We also strongly dislike MD and Virgina commuters who don't share the tax burden (like every other major city in this country), clog our roads and drive all-crazy-like.

Tourists from Iowas need not be singled out. At least they get out of the way when you honk at them.

Mar 31, 2006 at 10:13AM | Unregistered CommenterDC Rez
love the idea, and i'm more than willing to give up georgetown - take it, it's yours.
Mar 31, 2006 at 10:23AM | Unregistered CommenterJay
Also picked up in Firday's express log.
Mar 31, 2006 at 12:46PM | Unregistered CommenterPhD2B
There are a number of bumper stickers here in flagstaff that say "Have you been rude to a tourist today?" I find it funny. I think tourists rock. They're very tender and succulent.
Mar 31, 2006 at 02:10PM | Unregistered Commenterbooyah
May I stop my car outside the border and take pictures/video of what is inside the border?
Mar 31, 2006 at 02:43PM | Unregistered CommenterPhil
Are there any guided tours to the inside of the tourist-free border?
Mar 31, 2006 at 02:43PM | Unregistered CommenterPhil
Matt - totes. Also, in April and May we get a delegation of students from nearly every high school in the country, which I doubt happens to SF and Chicago. Have you ever been in the pentagon city mall in May? Holy moses. It's like a puberty party.

Phill - um, no and no. Trust me, it's for your own safety.
Mar 31, 2006 at 02:58PM | Registered CommenterRCR
I too hate sharing the nation's capital with the nation.
Apr 1, 2006 at 01:38PM | Unregistered CommenterReya Mellicker
This reminds me, Phil should write about the field trip we all took to Washington back in 7th grade. It was nutty I tell ya.
Apr 1, 2006 at 01:52PM | Unregistered CommenterBon
Ok- I'll share Woodley Park Metro with tourists and survival gear-sporting suburbanites bracing themselves for a day at the zoo so long as they stand on the right and refrain from photographing the escalator. Can we at least establish a "no fumbling" turnstile reserved for people who actually know how to use it?
Apr 1, 2006 at 10:35PM | Unregistered CommenterSYB
share nothing! let em go look at the site of the new Nationals Stadium and then swiftly kick them outta here!

I'll be posting some of my own "tourist"y pictures from the Cherry Blossoms later today. just an fyi for ya...but i suggest going down and taking some of your own too.

We'll compare notes ;)

enjoy the day :)
Apr 2, 2006 at 01:41PM | Unregistered Commenterb
"Also, in April and May we get a delegation of students from nearly every high school in the country, which I doubt happens to SF and Chicago."

Yeah, there's no Close-Up equivalent in either city. At least with those there's plenty of hot jailbait.
Apr 2, 2006 at 05:22PM | Unregistered CommenterMatt
"If one does not live in DC, yet it is the closest city and has been visited countless times, when does one stop being a tourist?"

NEVER. Go back to Centreville.
Apr 10, 2006 at 12:37PM | Unregistered CommenterRon Jon Johnson
As someone who has lived and worked in the DC area his entire life, I, too, have a large amount of distaste for tourons (tourist + moron = touron) and applaud your attempt to create a no touron zone (NTZ) within the District. THAT SAID, there are technically a few flaws in your plan.

1. Quite obviously you have already conceded the National Zoo, despite it being entirely within the NTZ so I won’t ding you on that.
2. If you have conceded the entire western side of Connecticut Avenue, that will obviously include the Q Street entrance to the Dupont Metro as well as the Marriott Wardman Park and the entrance to the Woodley Park Metro, all of which are on the western side of Connecticut.
3. There are a number of major tourist hotels that exist within the NTZ including the infamous Washington Hilton and Towers and the Washington Plaza Hotel (the two biggies I can think of). They need exemptions as do other hotels that rely on tourists for their bread and butter.

Just a few details to think about.
Apr 12, 2006 at 04:08PM | Unregistered Commenteranonymous

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