
The first architects for the Roosevelt, planned in 1918 to be Washington's finest apartment house, were Carrère and Hastings of New York. Construction was delayed due to the shortage of materials during World War I, and a design by local architect Appleton P. Clarke, Jr., was implemented beginning in 1919. Clarke planned five identical, three-bay wings to face 16th Street and project from a long central spine; they are connected by single-story limestone screens at ground level and serve as the entrances through gardens to each wing. Using a variety of materials for discrete sections and specific purposes of the building was a common solution on other contemporaneous large buildings: variegated brown brick for the walls, limestone to cover the lowest stories, and glazed terracotta for details on the upper stories, as the quoins and sunken two-story balconies ornamented with twisted columns and segmental pediments. The architectural language of the Roosevelt