Bounded by K Street to the south, L Street to the north, Connecticut
Avenue to the east, and 18th Street to the west.
Like
many of its surrounding neighbors to the south and west, Square 163 no longer
has any evidence of its past architectural history based upon the modern office
buildings that line the blocks today.
However, it is slightly unique in that individuals kept building
residences on the block well into the 1890s, and even into the twentieth
century, when surrounding blocks were becoming increasingly commercial in
nature, or built with large apartment buildings. A large swatch of Connecticut Avenue was
owned by the Casino Association in 1887, according to the Hopkins map above,
which had plans that apparently never realized to construct a large
entertainment complex on the site, likely due to the nationwide economic
recession in 1893.
An example of the late
period in which large homes were built, however, is the brick and stone house
for real estate Brainard H. Wardner (1847-1916) and his wife at 1741 K Street
that was built in 1895 at an impressive cost of $25,000. Brainard, right, and his Wardner Construction
Company are responsible for thousands of homes and apartment building that
still exist throughout Washington, DC.

Commercial
buildings did begin to be erected on the Square, however, by 1903, when Tree
built a 77 by 142 foot brick store building at 1000 Connecticut Avenue at a
cost of $27,000, designed by the Poindexter and Pelz architectural firm. The
Wardman Construction Company built two large apartment buildings on the Square
in 1928: 1018 Connecticut Avenue that cost $1.7 million, and 1028 Connecticut
Avenue that cost $1.2 million. Both were
designed by architect Joseph Baumer. The
Square also housed a gas stations at one time built at 1746 L Street in
1952.
![]() |
Looking west on K Street from Connecticut Avenue, NW |
The photograph
above shows K Street looking west from Connecticut Avenue in 1948. Famous author Frances Hodges Burnett authored
Little Lord Fauntleroy in 1886 while
residing in the 1700 block of K Street. The block as it appears today, bottom.
Copyright Paul K. Williams
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