AKA White House

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hotel chainAKA
LocationUnited States, 1710 H Street NW, Washington, D.C.
Coordinates38°54′00″N 77°02′25″W / 38.899917°N 77.040362°W / 38.899917; -77.040362
Opened2005
AKA White House
Interactive map of the AKA White House area
Hotel chainAKA
General information
LocationUnited States, 1710 H Street NW, Washington, D.C.
Coordinates38°54′00″N 77°02′25″W / 38.899917°N 77.040362°W / 38.899917; -77.040362
Opened2005
OwnerKorman Communities
ManagementAKA
Technical details
Floor count11
Other information
Number of rooms141[1]
Website
AKA White House

AKA White House is a luxury extended stay hotel owned by Korman Communities located at 1710 H Street NW in Washington, D.C., in the United States. The operator is AKA, the extended-stay hotel brand owned by Korman Communities. AKA White House opened in 2005.

The Metropolitan Building

1710 H Street NW was constructed in 1958. Originally known as the Metropolitan Building, it was considered one of the finest Modern architecture structures in the city.[2] It was occupied for many years by the Bell Atlantic subsidiary of AT&T, which purchased the building in 1967.[3][4] The building was shuttered in 1990,[5] and some time after 1997 to H Street Associates, a consortium of developers.

Conversion to AKA White House

In May 2004, H Street Associates proposed converting the building into condominiums.[6] Later that year,[7] however, the property was purchased by Korman Communities, a fourth-generation family-owned real estate development company.[8]

Korman Communities intended to create a mix of standard long-term-contract apartments and short-term extended-stay hotel units. But the leasing of extended-stay units was so popular that the company decided to convert all units to extended-stay hotel rooms.[7] Korman Communities gave control over the property to AKA, its extend-stay hotel brand.[9] AKA invested $50 million to transform the office building into luxury extended-stay hotel rooms.[4]

Hotel rooms and amenities

As constructed in 2005, the AKA White House had 141 rooms.[7] Units featured brushed stainless steel fixtures,[4] dark wood parquet floors, and marble countertops in the kitchen.[7] Kitchens were fully outfitted with refrigerator, oven, stove, microwave oven, dishwasher, toaster, coffee maker, and a complete set of cookware. Each unit was outfitted with a large, flat-screen television and DVD player in the living room and each bedroom; a stereo system in the living room; high-speed Internet access in the living room, dining room, and each bedroom; and a front-loading washer and dryer. All units featured an open floor plan and high ceilings.[7] Most of the units were one- and two-bedroom apartments. The top four units, however, were penthouse suites, which featured higher ceilings, a balcony complete with table and chairs, and a private elevator.[4][7]

AKA White House also featured a business center (with conference room), fitness center, day spa, and rooftop deck with a retractable canopy.[4][7] A cafe,[4] Heidi's Brooklyn Deli,[1] originally existed on the first (street) floor. Hotel amenities included a concierge and daily or weekly maid service, but no room service (although a continental breakfast was offered on weekdays).[7]

Prices for AKA White House in 2005 were $165 ($272 in 2025 dollars) a day for a one-bedroom unit to $595 ($981 in 2025 dollars) to $895 ($1,475 in 2025 dollars) a day for penthouse suites.[4]

AKA White House no longer requires a minimum stay of 30 days.[7] Guests may stay just a few days, or a few months, although some stay as long as a year.[4] Many companies rent units on long-term contracts.[7] Longer-term stays require 15 days' notice before a guest moves out.

2011 renovation

References

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