Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hahaha. Life with preschoolers/elementary schoolers had me daydreaming about retirement and a condo too tiny for the hordes, too. You should totally spend some time on Redfin, eyeing things up -its cheap escapism. Here's one:
https://www.peninsula88.com/
You got that right!
OP here.
Another factor was guest after guest arriving this holiday season. I don’t even want a guest room in my magical retirement condo. OMG send the kids back to school and end this holiday season pleeeaassseee
Anonymous wrote:Hahaha. Life with preschoolers/elementary schoolers had me daydreaming about retirement and a condo too tiny for the hordes, too. You should totally spend some time on Redfin, eyeing things up -its cheap escapism. Here's one:
https://www.peninsula88.com/
Anonymous wrote:SW/waterfront has condos and coops on the water with a nice sense of community and some good MCM architecture in the older complexes. Newer complexes have good amenities and a younger crowd. By the time you retire, it'll be pretty seamlessly linked by riverside sidewalks and bike path from the downtown monuments to navy yard and historic Anacostia, via the new south Capitol st bridge project. While its all zip code 20024, it almost feels like 3 sub markets: The older core, the new Wharf, and the new construction at Buzzard Point. Waterview units are expensive, however.
Phase 2 of the Wharf delivers in 2022:
https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/the-350-residential-units-and-maritime-services-planned-for-the-wharfs-seco/15236
Riverpoint and Peninsula 88 at Buzzard Point deliver this year:
http://www.buzzardpointdc.com/the-players/
https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/neighborhood/buzzard-point-development-signs-james-beard-winning-chef-looks-to-build-new-pier-94846
And the South Capitol St Bridge project will reshape that whole industrial stretch between the baseball and soccer stadiums and adjacent neighborhood.
https://www.newfrederickdouglassbridge.com/
Older established communities over there are nice, too.
http://www.tiberisland.com/
https://www.harboursquare.coop/
There's another condo building on the river, Riverside, but I can't find a website for them.
This one is a block off the river but has neat architecture.
http://www.riverparkdc.org/
Anonymous wrote:Don’t think this far ahead. Neighborhoods will be very different and you’ll know a lot more about how climate change will affect things.
Anonymous wrote:SW/waterfront has condos and coops on the water with a nice sense of community and some good MCM architecture in the older complexes. Newer complexes have good amenities and a younger crowd. By the time you retire, it'll be pretty seamlessly linked by riverside sidewalks and bike path from the downtown monuments to navy yard and historic Anacostia, via the new south Capitol st bridge project. While its all zip code 20024, it almost feels like 3 sub markets: The older core, the new Wharf, and the new construction at Buzzard Point. Waterview units are expensive, however.
Phase 2 of the Wharf delivers in 2022:
https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/the-350-residential-units-and-maritime-services-planned-for-the-wharfs-seco/15236
Riverpoint and Peninsula 88 at Buzzard Point deliver this year:
http://www.buzzardpointdc.com/the-players/
https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/neighborhood/buzzard-point-development-signs-james-beard-winning-chef-looks-to-build-new-pier-94846
And the South Capitol St Bridge project will reshape that whole industrial stretch between the baseball and soccer stadiums and adjacent neighborhood.
https://www.newfrederickdouglassbridge.com/
Older established communities over there are nice, too.
http://www.tiberisland.com/
https://www.harboursquare.coop/
There's another condo building on the river, Riverside, but I can't find a website for them.
This one is a block off the river but has neat architecture.
http://www.riverparkdc.org/