Can't walk to much at all and talk about a homogenous neighborhood. It's like a suburb transplanted into the edge of the city. I'd suggest Dupont or maybe Kalorama. For a while I had the communte to georgetown and lived first in dupont and then in kalorama. Would generally walk or bike. People on this board seem to hate dupont, but we found it to have everything we loved and more. If you live there you'll get to know neightbors, have events in parks, walk to little hidden gens of restaurants but still close enought to downtown or logan for going out to maybe trendier places. We initially met tons of neighbors through walking our dog/dog parks and then later when our kids were young through playgrounds, etc. One thing that good friend who moved from san fran underestimated were the benefits of a covered parking space. We don't get a lot of snow/ice here, but when we do if you need to get your car, it's pretty nice to have it inside so it's all clean. Minor but it drove my friend crazy |
+1 (FYI- it’s McLean) |
If you are cherry picking 2 streets and calling them neighborhoods then you might as well just cherry pick at the house level. From the Woodland “neighborhood,” I would take the Australian Ambassador’s residence. |
Thanks, I noted my autocorrect mistake immediately after posting. |
Dupont isn't great for kids IMO. 1) no good public schools, 2) few parks, 3) few green spaces, 4) no SFHs (if that is what you are looking for). Commute to G-town is ok (I think there is a shuttle bus), but Dupont is also kind of a dying neighborhood. All the cool stuff moved further east & south in DC a while ago. Lots of tumbleweeds. Kalorama is great if you have $5 million budget. (Jeff Bezos, Barack Obama live there now. Vanky Trump lived there when she was moonlighting as a serious person in DC.) |
Look in Ward 2 & Ward 3:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neighborhoods_in_Washington,_D.C. |
Unsurprisingly this thread devolved pretty quickly, but some of the earlier posters had it right, georgetown/burlieth/woodley park for a rowhouse or any neighborhood 5 min north for a single family home. The only neighborhood in upper NW that is out is Glover Park, since there is pretty much nothing over 2M there, though it is the most family-friendly of all the neighborhoods. |
I don't feel like this thread devolved. People have their opinions but it hasn't gotten nasty. ???? |
Of course OP doesn't NEED to max out their housing budget. If they can get something that meets their needs in a neighborhood they like well under 2M, why not? It's a nice luxury to have. The extra could go to a college fund, a country house, you name it. It's pleasant to live a little below one's means. |
This:
|
I don’t mean to offend. But I will say this: we and our large group of friends who work in DC and have children are not from DC. We’ve lived on DC for a quarter of a century, and outside of targeted hikes or road-trips or airports have crossed over to Va/Md like fewer than ten times each? Rough, but enough said? Top Ed/top jobs (objectively): gvt-private sector. |
What does that last sentence mean? Your friend group consists of federal employees and nonprofit folks? Why would your post be offensive? |
Georgetown |
Historical a decent number of Chinese at Stoddert ES; mixed race families are pretty common in most of these neighborhoods (zip 20007/8 and eastern 20016), but they skew younger; most of the older neighbors are white. At your budget, you can pretty much do any neighborhood, have fun exploring! Try to get a sense of if the neighborhood is more public school vs private school. They have very different feels, especially after you have kids. Also, make sure to be within walking distance (like a block) of a grocery store or two, they make life so much easier. |
Hi, this is OP again. Thanks again for all the input. We are getting pretty excited for the move! |