Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are considering a few different DC neighborhoods but I am curious from folks who live there what the vibe is. I'd really love my kids (5 and 7) to make friends with other kids on the street and have a community feeling (think street parties for big holidays, neighbors helping each other, kids trick or treating, etc.)
-Palisades
-AU Park
-Kent
-Wesley Heights
-Berkley
Thank you!
You want either of the first two. The last three are full of the ultra-wealthy who isolate themselves in mansions.
+1 Only 14% of the 20007 zip code, which is everything you list except Palisades and AU Park, is families with children under 18. In the 20016 zip code the population is 26% families with children under 18.
Zip code may not be the right metric. 20007 includes Georgetown - how much of it is university students and retirees that keep to themselves in Georgetown, a neighborhood OP isn’t interested in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why anyone chooses to live in any of these neighborhoods in Upper Caucasia, to be honest. You’re basically paying top dollar to live in what are essentially suburbs - except you’re stuck with city services and city schools and can’t walk anywhere. Why bother? It’s the worst of both worlds.
Gimme a break. I live EOTP but if you think people who live in Kent and Wesley Heights are "stuck with city schools" you're thick in the head. Nobody with a $3.5M budget is worrying about neighborhood schools.
But they’re still stuck with city services. And most of them don’t have school aged kids anyway.
I just don’t get it. Those neighborhoods are BORING.
I live in WH and don't care about schools or "city services" - bluntly, we can pay for better services privately.
You can’t pay for a different mayor, different police department, different water company, etc. Nice try.
I’m not impressed with your money.
And you’re neighborhood is BORING.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why anyone chooses to live in any of these neighborhoods in Upper Caucasia, to be honest. You’re basically paying top dollar to live in what are essentially suburbs - except you’re stuck with city services and city schools and can’t walk anywhere. Why bother? It’s the worst of both worlds.
Gimme a break. I live EOTP but if you think people who live in Kent and Wesley Heights are "stuck with city schools" you're thick in the head. Nobody with a $3.5M budget is worrying about neighborhood schools.
But they’re still stuck with city services. And most of them don’t have school aged kids anyway.
I just don’t get it. Those neighborhoods are BORING.
I live in WH and don't care about schools or "city services" - bluntly, we can pay for better services privately.
You can’t pay for a different mayor, different police department, different water company, etc. Nice try.
I’m not impressed with your money.
And you’re neighborhood is BORING.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why anyone chooses to live in any of these neighborhoods in Upper Caucasia, to be honest. You’re basically paying top dollar to live in what are essentially suburbs - except you’re stuck with city services and city schools and can’t walk anywhere. Why bother? It’s the worst of both worlds.
Gimme a break. I live EOTP but if you think people who live in Kent and Wesley Heights are "stuck with city schools" you're thick in the head. Nobody with a $3.5M budget is worrying about neighborhood schools.
But they’re still stuck with city services. And most of them don’t have school aged kids anyway.
I just don’t get it. Those neighborhoods are BORING.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why anyone chooses to live in any of these neighborhoods in Upper Caucasia, to be honest. You’re basically paying top dollar to live in what are essentially suburbs - except you’re stuck with city services and city schools and can’t walk anywhere. Why bother? It’s the worst of both worlds.
Please let us know where you live. Must be an edgy neighborhood based on the not-at-all-tired "Upper Caucasia" mention.
I live near Logan Circle. In the actual city. If I wanted to live in the suburbs I’d actually live in the suburbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are considering a few different DC neighborhoods but I am curious from folks who live there what the vibe is. I'd really love my kids (5 and 7) to make friends with other kids on the street and have a community feeling (think street parties for big holidays, neighbors helping each other, kids trick or treating, etc.)
-Palisades
-AU Park
-Kent
-Wesley Heights
-Berkley
Thank you!
As a mom of 3 kids under 8 that lives WOTP... the only one of these neighborhoods I would move to is AU Park (and even then I mean specifically closer to Tenleytown, in the Janney school district). The others are fine, but they absolutely won't have " neighborhood kids riding bikes in the alley" vibes. Its more "look at my big house and old money" vibes.
Anonymous wrote:We are considering a few different DC neighborhoods but I am curious from folks who live there what the vibe is. I'd really love my kids (5 and 7) to make friends with other kids on the street and have a community feeling (think street parties for big holidays, neighbors helping each other, kids trick or treating, etc.)
-Palisades
-AU Park
-Kent
-Wesley Heights
-Berkley
Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why anyone chooses to live in any of these neighborhoods in Upper Caucasia, to be honest. You’re basically paying top dollar to live in what are essentially suburbs - except you’re stuck with city services and city schools and can’t walk anywhere. Why bother? It’s the worst of both worlds.
Gimme a break. I live EOTP but if you think people who live in Kent and Wesley Heights are "stuck with city schools" you're thick in the head. Nobody with a $3.5M budget is worrying about neighborhood schools.
But they’re still stuck with city services. And most of them don’t have school aged kids anyway.
I just don’t get it. Those neighborhoods are BORING.
I live in WH and don't care about schools or "city services" - bluntly, we can pay for better services privately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why anyone chooses to live in any of these neighborhoods in Upper Caucasia, to be honest. You’re basically paying top dollar to live in what are essentially suburbs - except you’re stuck with city services and city schools and can’t walk anywhere. Why bother? It’s the worst of both worlds.
Gimme a break. I live EOTP but if you think people who live in Kent and Wesley Heights are "stuck with city schools" you're thick in the head. Nobody with a $3.5M budget is worrying about neighborhood schools.
But they’re still stuck with city services. And most of them don’t have school aged kids anyway.
I just don’t get it. Those neighborhoods are BORING.
I live in WH and don't care about schools or "city services" - bluntly, we can pay for better services privately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why anyone chooses to live in any of these neighborhoods in Upper Caucasia, to be honest. You’re basically paying top dollar to live in what are essentially suburbs - except you’re stuck with city services and city schools and can’t walk anywhere. Why bother? It’s the worst of both worlds.
Gimme a break. I live EOTP but if you think people who live in Kent and Wesley Heights are "stuck with city schools" you're thick in the head. Nobody with a $3.5M budget is worrying about neighborhood schools.
But they’re still stuck with city services. And most of them don’t have school aged kids anyway.
I just don’t get it. Those neighborhoods are BORING.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why anyone chooses to live in any of these neighborhoods in Upper Caucasia, to be honest. You’re basically paying top dollar to live in what are essentially suburbs - except you’re stuck with city services and city schools and can’t walk anywhere. Why bother? It’s the worst of both worlds.
Gimme a break. I live EOTP but if you think people who live in Kent and Wesley Heights are "stuck with city schools" you're thick in the head. Nobody with a $3.5M budget is worrying about neighborhood schools.
But they’re still stuck with city services. And most of them don’t have school aged kids anyway.
I just don’t get it. Those neighborhoods are BORING.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why anyone chooses to live in any of these neighborhoods in Upper Caucasia, to be honest. You’re basically paying top dollar to live in what are essentially suburbs - except you’re stuck with city services and city schools and can’t walk anywhere. Why bother? It’s the worst of both worlds.
Gimme a break. I live EOTP but if you think people who live in Kent and Wesley Heights are "stuck with city schools" you're thick in the head. Nobody with a $3.5M budget is worrying about neighborhood schools.
But they’re still stuck with city services. And most of them don’t have school aged kids anyway.
I just don’t get it. Those neighborhoods are BORING.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why anyone chooses to live in any of these neighborhoods in Upper Caucasia, to be honest. You’re basically paying top dollar to live in what are essentially suburbs - except you’re stuck with city services and city schools and can’t walk anywhere. Why bother? It’s the worst of both worlds.
Gimme a break. I live EOTP but if you think people who live in Kent and Wesley Heights are "stuck with city schools" you're thick in the head. Nobody with a $3.5M budget is worrying about neighborhood schools.