Axios D.C.

March 24, 2026
Happy Tuesday.
π€οΈ Today's weather: Mostly sunny. High 52, low 38.
π Situational awareness: Cherry blossoms are almost at peak bloom β they reached the "Puffy White" stage yesterday.
π Happy birthday to our member Alexa Posny!
π What should Axios D.C. do more of β or less of? Tell us in this short survey.
Today's newsletter is 994 words β a 3.5-minute read.
1 big thing: Streetcars for sale
The DC Streetcar will make its final run on March 31 β closing the book on a transit saga that's riled the city for more than a decade.
Why it matters: What was pitched as the start of a citywide streetcar revival ends in a fire sale β and a case study in how big transit bets can go sideways.
π Driving the news: The city tells Axios that it plans to auction the streetcars β a similar fate to the Circulator buses, which met their end last year.
- Power to the overhead wires will be cut (removal timeline is TBD).
- Metro's D20 bus will take over service along the corridor.
- Officials are eyeing future options β including electric buses β that could potentially reuse existing infrastructure.
Between the lines: The cost of shutting down the lone line, largely along H Street NE, is still unclear. The line cost about $10 million a year to operate β and was scrapped a year early amid budget cuts.
- So yes, it's an anticlimactic end for the little streetcar that couldn't.
π§ Flashback: The system was only built out along about 2 miles and eight stops between Union Station and the RFK campus.
- But the big vision for it back in the 2010s was a citywide network that would connect neighborhoods all the way from Anacostia to Georgetown.
- It was billed as a revival of a once-cherished system β streetcars defined D.C. in the late 1800s and early 1900s, cruising along more than 200 miles of track.

Friction point: Years of delays and cost overruns eroded public trust before the streetcar even debuted β and once the line opened, it never lived up to its promise.
- Low ridership (less than 2,600 people daily) lagged behind nearby buses.
- No fully dedicated lanes meant streetcars often crawled behind traffic and double-parked cars.
- Expansion plans fizzled as skepticism grew.
The big picture: The streetcar's end comes at a pivotal moment for H Street, as the corridor grapples with business closures and stalled redevelopment.
- Last week, Safeway announced it's closing at Hechinger Mall, an 8.5-acre site long slated for redevelopment.
- The city has tapped planners to study how to revive the strip.
Yes, but: H Street remains one of D.C.'s most vibrant historic neighborhoods β with a strong restaurant and bar scene and more projects in the pipeline, like a sprawling indoor-outdoor urban mall.
The intrigue: Want to say goodbye? Gallery O on H is hosting a streetcar farewell party Sunday with live music, drinks and β fittingly β "questionable eulogies."
2. π² Cyclists vs. NPS 1-0
The Washington Area Bicyclists Association filed a lawsuit yesterday to stop the removal of the 15th Street bike lane.
Driving the news: The lawsuit challenges NPS' right to get rid of the National Mall portion of the lane.
- WABA argues that scrapping the lane would make the road less safe and that NPS didn't consult the National Capital Planning Commission, which oversees land around the Mall.
State of play: It was supposed to be dismantled starting yesterday, but WABA executive director Elizabeth Kiker says NPS has delayed action until March 30.
- NPS didn't return an email seeking confirmation.
3. Around the Beltway: Federal agent shot in SE D.C.
π¨ A U.S. Park Police officer driving an unmarked Tesla was shot while working in the Marshall Heights neighborhood of Southeast D.C. around 7:30pm last night. The officer is expected to recover. (WashPost)
π A group of architects and historic preservationists is asking a judge to indefinitely halt President Trump's Kennedy Center renovation. The Trump-aligned KenCen board just voted to approve a two-year closure beginning in July. (CNN)
π Dozens of Voice of America employees are expected to return to their D.C. office this week after a judge said the agency was wrongfully cut last year. (WTOP)
π§ Crews are repaving segments of the GW Parkway through mid-June, so expect some delays starting on the portion between Spout Run Parkway and I-395. (WUSA9)
4. ποΈ March Madness tix
It's not too late to get March Madness tickets at Capital One Arena β but they're wildly pricey.
- Nosebleeds start at $525+ for Friday night, while better seats go for thousands of dollars β and some hit five figures.
State of play: Cap One hosts back-to-back NCAA men's east regional Sweet 16 games on Friday, followed by the Elite 8 matchup on Sunday.
- No. 1 Duke plays No. 5 St. John's at 7:10pm, followed by No. 3 Michigan State vs. No. 2 UConn at 9:45pm.
- The winners play Sunday, time TBD.
5. Maryland's coming for Philly's cheesesteak crown
Philadelphia invented the cheesesteak. But Maryland β especially Baltimore β is making a case for the crown.
Why it matters: It's National Cheesesteak Day. What better time to challenge the narrative?
The big picture: Philly's cheesesteak legacy runs deep β and long (world-record long, per our Axios Philly colleagues). No debate there.
Yes, but: Philly is resting on its whiz-loaded laurels while Maryland's scrappier sandwich scene is evolving.
- Think Catonsville-born food truck 5th and Steaks β viral, destination-worthy (cue epic lines) and not touristy like some spots catering to the Liberty Bell crowd.
Speaking of: Geno's just opened a Baltimore outpost β only its second outside Philly. Expansion orβ¦ acknowledgment?
Whiz in: Philly is bound by tradition. When that means spray cheese, Maryland is fine spicing it up like Old Bay. Take:
- Cheesesteak & Co. (Elkridge): viral cheesesteak egg rolls and these meaty boyz
- MaGerk's (Baltimore): salami, crispy onions, no apologies
- Soko Butcher (Takoma Park): house-made whiz, quality ribeye, crowned a local cheesesteak king
The intrigue: Even Cooper Cheese β the cult-favorite "secret sauce" of many great cheesesteaks β tells Axios its Maryland business is booming.
π¦ The bottom line: Crab cakes β and now cheesesteaks β that's what Maryland does.
π€§ Anna is feeling allergy season.
π Cuneyt is going to Grazie Nonna.
πΆ Mimi is on parental leave.
Today's newsletter was edited by Kristen Hinman.
Sign up for Axios D.C.








