A recent headline in The Washington Post — “Homicides are falling in many big cities. In D.C., they’re rising” — struck a chord with Gary Rappaport.

The commercial real estate veteran and D.C.-area transplant didn’t dispute the facts citied by the newspaper, but still, Rappaport wondered: How do you convince prospective retailers and investors to commit to opening a new store in a place plagued by such problems?

“It was a really very negative article for people that are trying to decide should they should invest money and open a retail store in Washington, D.C., right now?” he said.

That cycle of closings and openings — the latest closures caused by Covid-induced work-from-home trends and concerns about crime — is nothing new for Rappaport, who has has navigated plenty of ebbs and flows in Greater Washington’s retail real estate market over the past five decades.

Daniel J. Sernovitz

Author Camille Seldin

More posts by Camille Seldin

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