(This photo is from Getty Images and was found at the website of the Wall Street Journal.)
It looks like a historical site is fixing to bite the dust -- the garage where reporter Bob Woodward met with his inside source "Deep Throat" when trying to expose the scandalous behavior of the Nixon White House. Here is how the Wall Street Journal is reporting it:
A piece of history is slated to be demolished after a county board voted to allow the parking garage where "Deep Throat" relayed information that fueled the Watergate scandal to be torn down.
The five-member Arlington County Board voted unanimously Saturday to allow developer Monday Properties to move ahead with a plan to replace the 1960s-era office building in Rosslyn, Va., across the Potomac River from Washington, D.C., with a 28-story residential building of 274 units and a separate commercial building housing office and retail space.
The project also will include a grocery store, a public park, underground garage bike facilities, pedestrian walkways and improvements to nearby streets.
Monday Properties has said it hopes to start construction in early 2017. The county board and developer have promised to commemorate the site by keeping a historical marker added in 2011 and working with the community to find other ways to memorialize the site's history.