Anonymous wrote:Say what you will about Georgetown but it’s so much better than the Navy Yard.
I know it has this and that and blah blah blah, but there’s something so creepy about it. It’s like a great-on-paper boyfriend but you keep having dreams that he’s an axe murderer. And yesterday he brought home an axe so he could “chop wood.”
Or like you got adopted and you told your new parents you like Disney and they got an Ariel to come for your birthday but now she’s just sitting in your living room not leaving and she seems afraid and you’re not sure if she’s a slave or what.
Anyway I have a lot of feelings about the Navy Yard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So what are the upscale/ritzy neighborhoods of DC now if any?? My husband and I just moved here from Dallas and it seems like there isn't any perfectly maintained, chic, upscale neighborhoods like what we're used to. Lots of newly gentrified hoods that are still kinda sketchy that appeal to young people. I had thought it was Georgetown and some of the streets are very quaint but commercial areas are disgusting-empty storefronts, homeless people pissing on the street...![]()
Kalorama seems okay but it's pretty small
cleveland park, true Capitol Hill, Kent, Palisades, Colonial Village, parts of Shepard Park and Crestview. New money-the Wharf.
Also Spring Valley and Massachusetts Heights. Anything off of Foxhall.
I've lived in both Highland Park in Dallas, and Cleveland and Woodley Park (and have friends in the other neighborhoods you mention), and I get pp's point. The neighborhoods are really not comparable. For whatever reason, people in DC don't spend as much time and $$ on maintaining and decorating their homes. If you look at Park Cities real estate listings, the photos almost all look like they're from a high-end home decor magazine.
Anonymous wrote:I recall seeing seriously sun-faded items of clothing and shoes in several store window displays a few years ago--as if the merchants had had the same items in the window for ages and paid zero attention to the awful fading and dustiness of their display. Little details like that turned me off long ago. OP's term "run down" is right. Combine that with pain in the neck parking and you've got an area that's just not appealing.
Anonymous wrote:We had dinner at Tony and Joe's a couple of weeks ago. It was packed and the food was really good. I did hear that J.Pauls is closing and the absence of all the old school watering holes probably contributes to the lack of energy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So what are the upscale/ritzy neighborhoods of DC now if any?? My husband and I just moved here from Dallas and it seems like there isn't any perfectly maintained, chic, upscale neighborhoods like what we're used to. Lots of newly gentrified hoods that are still kinda sketchy that appeal to young people. I had thought it was Georgetown and some of the streets are very quaint but commercial areas are disgusting-empty storefronts, homeless people pissing on the street...![]()
Kalorama seems okay but it's pretty small
cleveland park, true Capitol Hill, Kent, Palisades, Colonial Village, parts of Shepard Park and Crestview. New money-the Wharf.
Also Spring Valley and Massachusetts Heights. Anything off of Foxhall.
I've lived in both Highland Park in Dallas, and Cleveland and Woodley Park (and have friends in the other neighborhoods you mention), and I get pp's point. The neighborhoods are really not comparable. For whatever reason, people in DC don't spend as much time and $$ on maintaining and decorating their homes. If you look at Park Cities real estate listings, the photos almost all look like they're from a high-end home decor magazine.
Anonymous wrote:
So what are the upscale/ritzy neighborhoods of DC now if any?? My husband and I just moved here from Dallas and it seems like there isn't any perfectly maintained, chic, upscale neighborhoods like what we're used to. Lots of newly gentrified hoods that are still kinda sketchy that appeal to young people. I had thought it was Georgetown and some of the streets are very quaint but commercial areas are disgusting-empty storefronts, homeless people pissing on the street...![]()
Kalorama seems okay but it's pretty small
Anonymous wrote:And now, J. Paul's is closing!
Anonymous wrote:Was just there tonight and it was completely hopping, totally busy. There are great light displays everywhere and more coming. Streets were packed. Perhaps few of you have been there recently?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone shops online now + pain in the neck parking + sky high rents.
+increase in crime, +airplane noise, + rat problem. Overpriced Gtown rents and real estate prices need to come back to reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So what are the upscale/ritzy neighborhoods of DC now if any?? My husband and I just moved here from Dallas and it seems like there isn't any perfectly maintained, chic, upscale neighborhoods like what we're used to. Lots of newly gentrified hoods that are still kinda sketchy that appeal to young people. I had thought it was Georgetown and some of the streets are very quaint but commercial areas are disgusting-empty storefronts, homeless people pissing on the street...![]()
Kalorama seems okay but it's pretty small
cleveland park, true Capitol Hill, Kent, Palisades, Colonial Village, parts of Shepard Park and Crestview. New money-the Wharf.
Also Spring Valley and Massachusetts Heights. Anything off of Foxhall.