WASHINGTON — President Obama
and his family plan to move to a mansion in the upscale Kalorama neighborhood
of Washington, a mere two miles from the White House, when he leaves office in
January, according to people familiar with his plans.
Mr. Obama, who has said his
family will remain in the capital until his daughter Sasha completes high
school in 2018, will rent the 8,200-square-foot, nine-bedroom home, the people
said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized
to reveal his plans.
The house — valued around $6
million, according to several real estate websites, with an estimated monthly
rent of $22,000 on Zillow — is owned by Joe Lockhart, a former press secretary
and senior adviser to Bill Clinton. Mr. Lockhart was until this year the
managing director of a communications and political consulting practice he
founded, the Glover Park Group, but has moved to Manhattan to become executive
vice president for communications for the National Football League.
Mr. Lockhart and his wife,
Giovanna Gray Lockhart, an editor at Glamour magazine, would not comment on the
matter, referring queries to the White House. Jennifer Friedman, the deputy
White House press secretary, also declined to comment on the president’s plans,
first reported on Wednesday by Politico.
The move will put the Obamas in
one of Washington’s wealthiest ZIP codes, in a secluded precinct backing up to
Rock Creek Park that is home to diplomats and a focal point of the capital’s
cocktail-party circuit. The home itself is luxurious; photographs posted by
Washington Fine Properties, which listed it when it sold in 2014, show spacious
rooms with hardwood floors, white marble countertops, his-and-her master
bathrooms and a terrace with formal gardens.
It also has an “au pair suite”
that could be suitable for Marian Robinson, Michelle Obama’s mother, who has
lived with the family in the White House.
The location appears to meet
Mr. Obama’s need to accommodate the Secret Service contingent that remains with
a president after leaving office. A gated courtyard on the side has space for
several vehicles and the addition of a guardhouse.
The
neighborhood already has a sizable security presence because of its proximity
to the stretch of Massachusetts Avenue known as Embassy Row. The Obamas will
live down the block from the embassy of Oman and the European Union ambassador
to the United States, and around the corner from Gérard Araud, the French
ambassador known for entertaining often at his Tudor Revival mansion.
“It’s
a very quiet neighborhood; that’s part of the reason why all of us like it
there,” said Tony Podesta, a well-connected Democratic lobbyist and brother of
John D. Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman.
Mr.
Podesta, who lives two doors from the house the Obamas will rent, invites
neighbors for pizza parties in his backyard, where he has a pizza oven. Several
times a day, a line of parked taxis snakes down the street, their occupants
drawn to the Islamic Center on the block for Muslim prayers.
As
news of the Obamas’ housing plans became public on Wednesday, journalists and
news photographers flocked to the block. “My housekeeper was a little freaked
out,” Mr. Podesta said.
While
the Obamas still own a home in Chicago, the president said in March that his
family would remain in the Washington area until Sasha, who attends the Sidwell
Friends School, graduated from high school. The Obamas said this month that
their older daughter Malia, who graduates from Sidwell next month, would take a
gap year before enrolling at Harvard.
Mr.
Obama’s future home has a rich history. It was built in 1928 by F. Moran
McConihe, a real estate developer who played an important role in the expansion
of Kalorama and served in the General Services Administration under President
Dwight D. Eisenhower.
It was
bought by Capt. Charles Hamilton Maddox, a veteran of both world wars, who in
1912 designed and tested, in-flight, the first successful radio equipment used
in Naval aircraft. His daughter, Muriel Maddox, acted alongside Marlon Brando
in the movie “The Men” and wrote a number of romance novels.
The
neighborhood has long been home to prominent politicians, including Woodrow
Wilson, William Howard Taft, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Warren G. Harding, Herbert
Hoover and Senator Edward M. Kennedy. Last year, Donald H. Rumsfeld, a former
defense secretary, sold the house in Kalorama that he lived in throughout the
Bush administration.
Residents
describe the neighborhood as an oasis of residential calm in the middle of a
bustling city.
“You
can get almost anyplace in Washington that you want to go to in 15 minutes, but
on the weekend, it’s like you’re in the country,” said Bart Gordon, a former
Democratic congressman from Tennessee who is now with the law firm K & L
Gates and will soon be the Obamas’ next-door neighbor. “He’ll be welcomed to
the neighborhood; I just hope he doesn’t get too rowdy.”
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