Having played East Potomac, I can understand the logic behind a major renovation. The views from the property are wonderful, the location is easily accessible from downtown, and they could possibly find a creative way to keep an 18 hole course together throughout the course of the renovation so that it would still be playable in some form. The course on the ground is one of the most boring I've ever played, but the surroundings are phenomenal and, while the property isn't great, it does seem like it could produce one of the coolest urban courses in the US.
Then again, I have pretty big reservations about making changes to any course that generates a profit in 2014, and it is already a pretty cool urban course in a sense despite the generally below-average golf holes.
The idea of turning Langston into a CCFAD is the kind of thing I find infuriating. It's a course and club with a rich and significant history, and really one of the most visible bastions of accessibility in a game that has garnered an appallingly discriminatory reputation in this country. It needs a bit of an upgrade, but any changes made there should honor the history of the club as opposed to leveling it. Turning it into a CCFAD is like putting a shopping center with an Old Navy, Panera, and Whole Foods in on the site of the battle at Gettysburg - completely tone-deaf. We need clubs like Langston far more than we need more mini-Augustas.