
I'd want land and a big house in the district close-ish to metro, so I think I'd go Woodley or Cleveland Park or Forest Hills. I like Palisades, but I'd want to be closer to metro.
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Courthouse/Clarendon |
Specifically, on Kalorama Circle NW, which overlooks Rock Creek. Extraordinarily convenient and yet private and leafy
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It is not Dupont East despite what real estate agents try to name it. The area is called Shaw and named after a great Colonel from the Civil War. |
+1... I live in Shaw and it most certainly is not Dupont East. If I tried to pull that one over on my friends who do live in Dupont they would find it quite humorous! |
Chevy Chase Village, Cleveland Park victorian or Potomac Ave in Palisades. |
Okaaaay, PP. I meant the blocks between Dupont and Logan Circles. You know, the greater "Borderstan" area. There are indeed some lovely blocks in Shaw beyond Borderstan, but that's still a place to go when money *is* an object, not when you can have your pick. |
The area between Dupont Circle and Logan Circle is called Shaw. |
Depending on what part of the Hill you're on, for restaurants there's Union Station, and H Street. When you say "music store" are you talking about CDs? Do they still have those? You've got a point with the crappy hair salons, though probably aren't a whole lot of folks for whom "Can't walk to an assortment of hair salons" is a deal-breaker. For me, the best thing about living on the Hill (other than living on the Hill) is that you can ride a bike downtown, to Penn Quarter/Chinatown, or to the National Mall in under 10 minutes, all on residential and side streets with wide bike lanes . That rocks. |
Mmmm... no. That is, you could say this of, maybe, 13th through 15th Streets if you're inclined to be uncharitable and haven't noticed 14th Street's metamorphosis, but this doesn't account for 16th to 19th Streets. Not to hate on Shaw, of course, because there are nice things about blocks that belong more specifically to Shaw, too. |
Just how I feel about Georgetown. Swore I would never leave and wouldn't go back in a million years. Claustrophobic hell. But I do love it aesthetically. |
This was going to be my response! |
Just to be clear, Logan Circle is IN Shaw. Shaw is a neighborhood located in the Northwest quadrant of Washington, D.C. It is roughly bounded by M Street, NW or Massachusetts Avenue NW to the south; New Jersey Avenue, NW to the east; Florida Avenue, NW to the north; and 11th Street, NW to the west. However, the area also includes the U Street Corridor, which is the commercial hub of the Shaw area, extending westward to 16th Street NW. The missing pieces of the puzzle are Kalorama/Adams Morgan and Dupont. There is no "Dupont East." |
As you must know, Logan Circle lies on 13th St., which is west of 11th St., and is several blocks south of the U St. Corridor. I can't imagine that you don't know the area I'm talking about and are be aware of how it's clearly distinct in character and separated by several blocks from anything that can properly be called Shaw. I agree with the very nice "Borderstan" bloggers that this can be described as its own neighborhood. Also, you would feel better if I called the 17th St. area I like so much the eastern reaches of Dupont? Again, no specific intention of hating on Shaw. I like Shaw, but I could already afford to move to a nicer home if I chose Shaw over Kalorama Triangle. It's not an option I'm inclined to exercise. In real life, my eastern Dupont and Logan Circle options couldn't get any shmancier, and we're supposed to be talking total quality of life fantasy package. If I could afford either a fabulous (rather than a merely pleasant) apartment or a rowhouse there (and you know very well where I mean), I would buy it. Or maybe I'd stay in Kalorama Triangle and just trade up. Like that's going to happen any time soon! Listen, there are things (often semantic quibbles) that annoy the hell out of me, too, so I sort of get it. But really! |
If I also did not worry about schools, I'd take logan circle. |