by Daniel Johnson
August 31, 2025
Angel Gregorio, proprietor of The Spice Suite, conceived the open-air market after shopping for the property that turned Black and Forth.
As reviews flow into about Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser’s Trump-friendly response to the federal authorities’s presence within the metropolis, a close-by strip mall continues to function a hub for Black companies and native residents.
In accordance with D.C. Information Now, a farmer’s market blooms on the second and fourth Sunday of every month on the metropolis’s Black and Forth strip mall, serving as a number to distributors, Mid-Atlantic farmers and meals artisans.
Angel Gregorio, who additionally owns The Spice Suite, advised the outlet that she got here up with the concept for the open-air market after her expertise shopping for the business property that she was Black and Forth.
“I observed the shortage of illustration of Black farmers on the markets domestically, so I made a decision to create a free area for Black farmers to indicate up and promote their produce, spend money on their neighborhood and sort of have a bi-weekly block social gathering,” Gregorio mentioned.
She continued, “It’s so many issues that we do effectively and that we do for the neighborhood. So many issues that we do is free that it’s additionally tough for the neighborhood to not present up for us as a result of we’re pouring a lot into the neighborhood.”
As BLACK ENTERPRISE beforehand reported, Gregorio bought a 7,500-square-foot lot in 2023, which she christened Black and Forth, and homes her aforementioned enterprise in addition to a number of different outlets.
The title, as Gregorio advised Dcist, is derived from her personal time period for coping with varied Black-owned companies within the metropolis.
“It was simply this catchy, cool title that I created for a way I describe my technique of going back-and-forth with Black enterprise homeowners,” Gregorio advised the outlet. “And now it’s the title of a shopping mall—a strip mall —that I personal in D.C. So I be ok with that and I’m grateful to be within the area.”
She continued, “We now have a number of dialog about inexpensive housing, however we don’t speak sufficient about making business area inexpensive for Black ladies. And so since nobody is speaking about it, I’m simply going to do it and let individuals speak about it.”
Her buy of the lot, which was facilitated at the least partly by a program instituted by Mayor Bowser which was aimed toward growing the quantity of Black ladies enterprise homeowners within the metropolis, happened following reviews from a number of Black farmers that in 2020, one among Washington D.C.’s largest farmers markets and its father or mother firm, Freshfarm denied Black farmers and meals artisans spots at Dupont Circle, its most worthwhile farmer’s market.
As a substitute of resigning to coping with the microaggressions of Freshfarm, a 12 months after this scandal rocked the town’s Black farm-to-table neighborhood, Gregorio reportedly turned the preliminary recipient of a $750,000 grant from D.C.’s Industrial Property Acquisition Fund, the brainchild of Metropolis Councilman Kenyan McDuffie.
In accordance with McDuffie, that grant was supposed to be the primary constructing block for fairness and inclusion within the metropolis’s monetary system because it pertains to Black entrepreneurs.
“We’re going to maintain making these types of investments, so we will do the kinds of transformational issues that permit our Black and brown entrepreneurs not solely to be nice enterprise individuals [but] to construct wealth that they’ll cross on for generations to return,” he mentioned on the ribbon slicing for Gregorio’s strip mall in 2023.
Gregorio agreed, noting on the ceremony that she wished Black and Forth to function a mannequin for what is feasible in D.C.
“The objective of this area is to construct neighborhood. I need this to grow to be the mannequin. I need to have the ability to seek the advice of free of charge and speak to different individuals on how to do that in your metropolis, in your quadrant, so this turns into the usual of how we look after one another and the way we present up for neighborhood.”
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