![]() ![]() Image by District of Columbia Office of Zoning used with permission. The games were called as of 3 PM on Monday, and you can review the earlier posts to see who was eliminated in the Northwest, Southwest, Northeast, or Southeast quadrants. As you can see below, mixed-use zones at a neighborhood scale did very well last week, which means that many of the contenders left on the board are very closely matched. ![]() Today in Round Three, our readers will decide the quarter-finals for our championship - and the quadrant finalists. Read up in their Zoning Guidebook about what makes each zone special, vote for your favorites, and root for your team in the comments! Since March is mad for tournaments, we've teamed up with the DC Office of Zoning to devise Game of Zones: a fun way to learn about zoning districts that shape neighborhoods across the DC. But they also seem mysterious to many people. Zoning laws shape the buildings that surround us, leaving some land with tall office buildings and other places with only single-family houses. Image by Peter Dovak used with permission.
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