The Presidential is located at the southwest corner of
16th and L Streets, N.W., four blocks due north of the
White House. The eight-story building was completed in
1923, and was converted to cooperative use in 1959, with
42 residences on floors two through eight, plus
commercial units on the first floor. Today, several of
the original residences have been combined into larger
apartments, and three of the four first floor units are
still in commercial use.
Built by Mrs. Clara R. Dennis for $350,000, the
structure was designed by architect Appleton P. Clark,
Jr. (1865-1955), whose projects in Washington included
The Roosevelt Hotel at 2101 16th Street (now the Camden
Roosevelt Apartments) and Riggs National Bank on
Pennsylvania Avenue, opposite the Treasury Department.
Mrs. Dennis named the building "The Presidential"
because she felt it was ideally situated to house
members of President Warren G. Harding's cabinet, who
could live in large apartments created by combining
several small ones on each floor.
In 1959, the Edmund J. Flynn Company, pioneers in
co-operative ownership in D.C., converted The
Presidential into a cooperative apartment house. Prices
ranged from $8,100 for bachelor units to $65,000 for one
of the doctor's suites on the ground floor, and the
annual operating budget was $45,792.
With its central location, proximity to museums, restaurants and the K street corridor, and with its old
world charm, the Presidential is a highly sought-after
address, as described in James W. Goode’s book “Best
Addresses.”