Skip to main content

A walk in a park can bring you a reminder of part of Arlington’s history — if you stop and look

[connatix_element_embed script_id=735b9a9358344fadabf48ab634fe9614 player_id=7bc491b4-922b-4e8d-b1b1-150648e80442 video_id=86b5d492-b57f-45e1-8f06-9e0fa1b633fb align=right]

Throughout February, WTOP is celebrating Black History Month. Join us on air and online as we bring you the stories, people and places that make up our diverse community.

With its gardens and art installations, Arlington’s Met Park, in Pentagon City, has been open for almost two years now. But one prominent feature still holds a surprise for many visitors.

What looks like a brick tower that might have been something old the park was built around, is actually an art installation itself, reminding visitors of the history of the land on which the park sits.

That area, next to Amazon HQ2, used to be an African American community known as Queen City. But it disappeared in the 1940s, when the land was taken for the construction of roads leading up to the Pentagon and residents were forced to move.

When it opened, artist Nekisha Durrett said it was in researching the stories of those displaced residents that she came up with the idea for “Queen City.” That’s the name of the tower and the 903 teardrop-shaped sculptures that are inside.

They hang from the interior walls of the circular structure, drawing your eyes up to a skylight at the top. Each vessel is crafted by Black ceramists, including some from the D.C. area, and is meant to represent a person who was displaced.

The 903 teardrop-shaped sculptures that are inside the tower represent a person who was displaced from Queen City. (WTOP/Sandy Kozel)

As part of WTOP’s commemoration of Black History Month, WTOP recently reported on the history of that long-lost community in East Arlington, and how the Black Heritage Museum of Arlington is helping keep the memory of the Queen City community alive.

The “Queen City” art installation came about as part of Amazon’s development of its second headquarters and the area known as Met Park.

New hardware store for all those new National Landing residents

With more than a dozen new apartment buildings up or under construction in Crystal City and the broader National Landing area, many housing Amazon HQ2 employees, an Arlington, Virginia, hardware store owner saw opportunity. Twins Ace Hardware will open a store on the ground floor of one of those buildings. Jeff Smith owns Twins Ace and runs the location on Clarendon Boulevard in Arlington’s Courthouse neighborhood. He has signed a lease for more than 8,000 square feet for a store on the ground level of The Zoe, JBG Smith’s recently delivered 19-story apartment building with 420 units on S. Bell Street in Crystal City.
Read Next Story