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embassy+of+kenya+washington+d.c. Latitude and Longitude:

38°54′46.1″N 77°3′1″W / 38.912806°N 77.05028°W / 38.912806; -77.05028
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Embassy of Kenya, Washington, D.C.
Location Washington, D.C.
Address2249 R Street, N.W.
Coordinates 38°54′46.1″N 77°3′1″W / 38.912806°N 77.05028°W / 38.912806; -77.05028
AmbassadorCharge de Affaires' David K Gacheru

The Embassy of Kenya in Washington, D.C. is the Republic of Kenya's diplomatic mission to the United States, located in the Kalorama neighborhood at 2249 R Street Northwest, Washington, D.C. [1] It is headed by Lazarus O. Amayo.

Building

Previous owners of the Beaux-Arts building include C. Peyton Russell (original owner; 1908–1915), politician James D. Phelan (residence while serving in the United States Senate; 1915–1921) and the government of Sweden ( embassy; 1921–1971). The 2009 property value of the Kenyan embassy is $6,554,280 ($6,133,120 – main building; $421,160 – side building). It is a contributing property to the Massachusetts Avenue Historic District and Sheridan-Kalorama Historic District. [2][ non-primary source needed]

References

  1. ^ "The Embassy of Kenya". Embassy.org. Retrieved 2022-05-08.
  2. ^ "Kenya Embassy Washington D.C. – with accreditation to Mexico". Kenyaembassydc.org. Retrieved 2022-05-08.

External links



embassy+of+kenya+washington+d.c. Latitude and Longitude:

38°54′46.1″N 77°3′1″W / 38.912806°N 77.05028°W / 38.912806; -77.05028
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Embassy of Kenya, Washington, D.C.
Location Washington, D.C.
Address2249 R Street, N.W.
Coordinates 38°54′46.1″N 77°3′1″W / 38.912806°N 77.05028°W / 38.912806; -77.05028
AmbassadorCharge de Affaires' David K Gacheru

The Embassy of Kenya in Washington, D.C. is the Republic of Kenya's diplomatic mission to the United States, located in the Kalorama neighborhood at 2249 R Street Northwest, Washington, D.C. [1] It is headed by Lazarus O. Amayo.

Building

Previous owners of the Beaux-Arts building include C. Peyton Russell (original owner; 1908–1915), politician James D. Phelan (residence while serving in the United States Senate; 1915–1921) and the government of Sweden ( embassy; 1921–1971). The 2009 property value of the Kenyan embassy is $6,554,280 ($6,133,120 – main building; $421,160 – side building). It is a contributing property to the Massachusetts Avenue Historic District and Sheridan-Kalorama Historic District. [2][ non-primary source needed]

References

  1. ^ "The Embassy of Kenya". Embassy.org. Retrieved 2022-05-08.
  2. ^ "Kenya Embassy Washington D.C. – with accreditation to Mexico". Kenyaembassydc.org. Retrieved 2022-05-08.

External links



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