What? I live in Falls Church. It's as bland as bland can be. |
| Your friend sounds like me when I moved to Charlotte, NC (from the Midwest, not New England). I looked and looked for *anything* original, but none was to be found. Some places really just have “no there” there. |
Well, except maybe amazing schools, charming towns, and meaningful history blended with small-town whimsy. I guess besides that, no. |
This is a decent list! I would add Georgetown as an area with at last some character (not M St but a little further up Wisconsin) and nice architecture. |
| DC is not a world class city. It never will be. It is what it is. |
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Occoquan, VA
Clifford, VA Vienna, VA Herndon, VA Annapolis MD All these for a day visit. |
All three of those are horrible. City of falls church is probably the worst. I hate going there, with OT just about as bad. |
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DC DC, or a suburb of DC?
There are plenty of "neighborhoods" within DC that are what makes DC what it is. Why search for New England in DC? If I were in New England, certainly wouldn't be looking for a DC there. Bye! |
Wtf no!!!! |
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I agree with posters saying just move to DC already. Also recommend some day trips.
Hampden Baltimore The Fan Richmond Berkeley Springs WV St Michaels MD Rittenhouse Sq Philly Ghent Norfolk VA |
| Frederick and Annapolis are more like Mass towns. |
| Boston transplant here — the only comparable areas are Georgetown (up Wisconsin Ave and in the neighborhood) and Old Town. That’s it basically. The rest of the suggestions are stretching the comparison. |
I’m a native and think most of DC and the suburbs are soulless. People I work with love The Wharf. I think it’s lame. Went to the overhyped Mexican restaurant, that the Post food critic raved about, and it was pretty mediocre. Prices weren’t mediocre- $35 for enchiladas, $20 for a terrible margarita, which was mostly ice and finished in three sips. National Harbor is also pretty unremarkable. Gentrification has pushed DC natives out and brought in a slew of overpriced apartments, all which feature a slew of generic chain eateries and coffee shops on their ground floors. |
Yes, both are great towns. Baltimore, though it has its problems, has way more character, and more of an identity, than DC. Thankfully, B-more , like DC, seems to be finally trending the right direction with violent crime- though it’s still prevalent. |
| I'm a New Englander and have lived happily in Mt Pleasant, Cleveland Park, and Woodley Park. |