Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in Upper NW and it is definitely not the suburbs.
All of upper NW was built around street car lines and most neighborhoods are very walkable to both transit and retail.
And several of the commercial corridors in Upper NW (really all of them except Wisconsin Avenue) have some fairly dense residential areas though the residential side streets are obviously mostly single family homes but even there the houses are mostly on lots that are a fraction the size of suburban lots including the lots just across the line in MD.
BTW there are many similar neighborhoods across all 4 quadrants of DC (ok not really SW DC) with single family homes immediately adjacent to higher density corridors with commercial and multi-unit buildings so NW isn't really that different from much of DC except it only has some small pockets of blocks with rowhouses which are more common in other DC neighborhoods.
Cool. We have all of that and live in MoCo, outside the Beltway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you live in a SFH with a yard? Yeah, that’s suburban.
Sure but idk why that's seen like a bad thing. A home with a yard in a major city? Where you can walk to some restaurants and the metro? Count me in.
Most of Chevy Chase isn't particularly walkable to the metro.
I guess if you are lazy - geographically about half of Chevy Chase DC is west of Connecticut and all of those homes are comfortably within walking distance of a Metro station. And technically some of the neighborhoods east of Connecticut are not even Chevy Chase.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you live in a SFH with a yard? Yeah, that’s suburban.
Sure but idk why that's seen like a bad thing. A home with a yard in a major city? Where you can walk to some restaurants and the metro? Count me in.
Most of Chevy Chase isn't particularly walkable to the metro.
Anonymous wrote:Do you live in a SFH with a yard? Yeah, that’s suburban.
Anonymous wrote:We live in Upper NW and it is definitely not the suburbs.
All of upper NW was built around street car lines and most neighborhoods are very walkable to both transit and retail.
And several of the commercial corridors in Upper NW (really all of them except Wisconsin Avenue) have some fairly dense residential areas though the residential side streets are obviously mostly single family homes but even there the houses are mostly on lots that are a fraction the size of suburban lots including the lots just across the line in MD.
BTW there are many similar neighborhoods across all 4 quadrants of DC (ok not really SW DC) with single family homes immediately adjacent to higher density corridors with commercial and multi-unit buildings so NW isn't really that different from much of DC except it only has some small pockets of blocks with rowhouses which are more common in other DC neighborhoods.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve always thought that part of DC is pretty suburban. You need a car and there are a lot of SFHs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you live in a SFH with a yard? Yeah, that’s suburban.
Sure but idk why that's seen like a bad thing. A home with a yard in a major city? Where you can walk to some restaurants and the metro? Count me in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you live in a SFH with a yard? Yeah, that’s suburban.
Sure but idk why that's seen like a bad thing. A home with a yard in a major city? Where you can walk to some restaurants and the metro? Count me in.
Anonymous wrote:Do you live in a SFH with a yard? Yeah, that’s suburban.
Anonymous wrote:Do you live in a SFH with a yard? Yeah, that’s suburban.