Capitol Visitor Center

Primary Capitol The new Capitol Visitor Center began construction shortly after I arrived in DC, so the whole time I have lived here the whole East side of the Capitol has been hidden behind unsightly construction walls. The project had initially been slated to be done for the 2005 inauguration (that turned out well, didn’t it?) but went so late and over-budget that I seriously wondered if they’d even make the 2009 ceremonies. I’ve always been something of an “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it” mindset about the whole thing: why spend money on a hole in the ground for tourist lines when just going in and out through the doors on the upper terrace has served for 200 years?

Capitol Visitor Center Panorama

Against my expectations, the Visitor Center finally opened last week, and it’s lovely. The space is much prettier and roomier than the concrete bunker I thought it would be: rather, we found ourselves in “Emancipation Hall,” a grand plaza of marble and granite with glass skylights viewing the dome, accessible via a finely landscaped approach of grassy terraces. There’s an exhibit hall with the history of the Capitol and its resident legislature, a cafeteria-style restaurant serving various cooked and prepared meals, two gift shops, two theaters, ample restrooms, staging areas for tourists about to tour the Capitol itself, and even a winding underground tunnel leading to the Library of Congress. More photos:

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Full Capitol Visitor Center photoset here. A nice place, possibly even worth the time and expense it took to make it, and the restored East Capitol plaza and drive is also good to have back open.

Snake-urday!

Am I doing it right?

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(I didn’t have a cat photo to show today but I do have this snake we saw basking atop a tree stump in the sun by the boardwalk during our last Roosevelt Island hike. Isn’t it a cute snake?)

Thanksgiving Weekend 2008

We spent Thanksgiving up in the Albany, NY area with Amy’s uncle. For some reason I was a lot more snap-happy on the road than at the house itself. Some oddities from the trip, including a Mayflower on wheels, a wooden bear “holding” a trout, a real dead bear on top of someone’s truck, a head mug from 1973, and a fortune cookie typo:

Mayflower on Wheels Bear
Bear on Truck Bear on Truck Assets Protection, Target Head Mug Fortune Fail

Full Thanksgiving weekend photoset here. I also got a time lapse of the trip on I-87 going back down to NJ, and some fuzzy video of the world’s tallest water sphere.

National Museum of American History Reopens

Sunday after church, we checked out the newly reopened Smithsonian National Museum of American History. I was there on its last day before renovation and was eager to see the changes — and was somewhat disappointed.

IMG_0516 Most of the changes took place in the middle of the museum, where a special exhibit chamber for the Star Spangled Banner had been constructed and the grand central hall was redone as a large, sweeping atrium in “Apple Store” white glass. Exhibits off to the sides were largely unchanged: “America on the Move” and “Within These Walls” were the same as always. Sadly, the “Information Age” exhibit with its Stephen Hansen carousel sculpture was gone, as were Foucault’s Pendulum and the red-carpeted hall. The museum didn’t even really get the full “U.S. history” treatment I thought it would get; the renovation concentrated mostly on getting the Star-Spangled Banner into its new display chamber, while leaving the old “History and Technology” exhibits mostly the same. I wouldn’t mind that so much if they’d just kept “Information Age” where it was.

On the up side, the renovation finished on schedule. That definitely deserves a Smithsonian high-five.

Anyway, I took pictures:

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More stuff: “Farewell” photoset from before they closed up for renovation, photoset from this trip for the reopening weekend, and some fuzzy cellphone video of a quick Friday night jaunt to see the museum on Reopening Day itself.

Theodore Roosevelt Island in the Fall

These photos are from a week before our Rock Creek hike, so we didn’t catch the island at peak color, but it was quite lovely nonetheless. I experimented a bit with upside-down reflections in the marsh water, got a nice closeup of Teddy Roosevelt’s bronze face, and we caught a bit of tense drama between a fire ant and a daddy longlegs.

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Feed Changes

As promised before, I have aggregated my relevant content from various sites to one Feedburner feed to rule them all, and redirected the old feed URL to that. Apologies to anyone who suddenly got hundreds of new items from my site feed because of the redirect. I failed to consider that every entry from the new feed location would come up as new and unread in feed readers, and while I can’t really control what your feed readers mark as “new,” I should have given advance warning of a potential flood. Sorry about that.

If you would rather get content from only this site, or if you want to engorge yourself from a firehose of content, refer to the feed page .

Site Changes

Notice anything different? I’ve moved the site over to Axishost, upgraded to Movable Type Open Source (the latest version, 4.21, up from 3.36), and redesigned stuff.

Inside pages, which were already pretty minimal to begin with, are now even more simplified, with extraneous lines removed and titles devolved into breadcrumb blocks. I’ve also adjusted my use of type with a mind towards mobile users, using a container block width and larger font size which should make reading easier on devices like Nokia tablets and iPhones, without needing pinchy zooming or horizontal scrolling.

Randomizing layouts are off for the moment and the weblog runs on the same template as inside pages while I think about how best to redo the main index with action streams. Meanwhile, a Friendfeed embed will suffice. I’m also going back to a single-column sidebar for simplicity’s sake.

This will all take me a while to get back down to. When you work in code full time, sometimes the last thing you want to come home to is more code.