Editor鈥檚 Note: This article is part of a on D.C.鈥檚 new Southwest Waterfront development, The Wharf.
WASHINGTON 鈥 In the last decade, D.C. has seen an explosion of development. Downtown and in neighborhoods inching east, cranes seem to be a permanent fixture in the city鈥檚 skyline.
But nothing has been as big of a project as . The massive development encompasses聽a mile of shoreline, 24 acres of land and 50 acres of water.
When the first phase opens next month, the new neighborhood will be home to three hotels, more than 20 bars and restaurants, multiple music venues, retail shops, office and residential space, a 309-slip marina, plus several parks and piers.
Then, there鈥檚 Phase 2, which will bring an additional 1.15 million square feet of mixed-use development across a half-mile of waterfront.聽
Although all of the activity will no doubt benefit residents and the local economy, development doesn鈥檛 always bode well for the environment 鈥 including the city鈥檚 rivers.
According to the , urban development can increase runoff, erosion and sedimentation, and cause the levels of nitrogen and phosphorus in a body of water to rise.
Hedrick Belin, CEO of the聽, said a polluted river isn鈥檛 just bad news for aquatic life; it鈥檚 bad for everyone.
鈥淥ne of the reasons (a clean river) is really important is that for most residents in the D.C. metro area, when you turn on your tap at work or at your house, you鈥檙e drinking Potomac River water,鈥 he said.
Dirty waterways also prevent people from recreating 鈥 kayaking, paddling and swimming 鈥 on the river.
Can clean development produce cleaner water?
Each year, the Potomac Conservancy tracks the health of the Potomac River, and Belin said the organization has recently seen improvement. In 2016, it gave the river an overall grade of a B-, up from a C in 2013 and a D in 2011.
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen pollution levels decreasing, we鈥檝e seen fish populations increasing, and that鈥檚 a real positive sign,鈥 he said.
Belin gives some credit to an increase in sustainable development, or what he calls 鈥渞iver-friendly development.鈥

More developers are incorporating architectural features that mimic mother nature, such as green roofs and other porous surfaces, to help capture rainwater where it falls, preventing runoff.
Some buildings install holding tanks that collect even greater amounts of rainwater and treat it 鈥 鈥渞ather than just have it get pumped, untreated, into our local creeks and streams,鈥 Belin explained.
Green roofs and holding tanks are two features that Monty Hoffman, CEO and founder of PN Hoffman, the leading development firm behind The Wharf, has instituted along the Southwest Waterfront. The project also boasts 14 acres of public parks with more than 300 new trees.
鈥淧ound-for-pound, trees are nature鈥檚 Brita filters, so they鈥檙e outstanding when it comes to capturing the rainwater and absorbing the pollution before it flows into our rivers and streams,鈥 Belin said.
A floating wetland system and LEED Gold-designed buildings, many of which have solar panels and energy-efficient lighting, are also features of the development鈥檚 sustainability efforts.
鈥淲e鈥檙e the mother of green over here,鈥 Hoffman said.

According to Belin, consumer demand, economic incentives and stricter government regulations have fueled the trend of sustainable development in the District. The U.S. Green Building Council that D.C. has more LEED-certified projects per capita than any other state.
鈥淚 think this development 鈥 and actually, it鈥檚 a redevelopment 鈥 is really important because it shows others what is possible,鈥 Belin said about The Wharf.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to be careful and do it in the right way. Certainly, if (development) is not done in the right way, it can have very detrimental effects to creeks and streams and, ultimately, the Potomac and then down on into the Chesapeake Bay. But again, based on what we鈥檙e seeing 鈥 the work that鈥檚 being put in is making a difference.鈥
Increased activity leads to increased awareness
Before Hoffman鈥檚 redevelopment of The Wharf, the Southwest Waterfront shoreline sat, for the most part, unused for decades, despite its proximity to the National Mall.
鈥淥n the water, here, where we developed, was really large, flat, plain parking lots and clubs that were left here. That was sort of a tired, old-school use for the water,鈥 Hoffman said.
鈥淎nd meanwhile, while other cities were refurbishing their waterfronts, changing manufacturing to residential or merchandising, this city didn鈥檛 do that. And so, we鈥檙e catching up, frankly, to what other cities have already started doing.鈥
Hoffman is expecting the The Wharf to attract about 15 million visitors each year, and he sees that as 15 million opportunities to show off the Potomac and raise awareness about the importance of keeping it clean.
鈥淭he Potomac River is our greatest natural resource, and I think when people see it and they get on it and they鈥檙e part of it, aware of it, then the conscious level of cleaning it up and doing other things in our environment goes way up,鈥 he said.
Belin added, 鈥淚t鈥檚 getting people to re-embrace, or in some cases get introduced, to their local river. And we in the D.C. metro area have been a little slow to embrace that.鈥
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