Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just purchased in the Hollywood neighborhood moving from a rental in Brookland. We are thus far very happy with our decision. I previously rented in the Hollywood neighborhood from 2013-2015 and loved it then as I do now but with a dozen new restaurants/amenities. There is a wide age range on our block and yes, there are some students renting in the neighborhood as I was once was. As a testament to the livability of the neighborhood at all life stages, the previous owner of our home lived here for 45 years. A neighbor across the street bought in 1948 and lived in his home for 70 years with the exception being the last year of his life. Several young families have moved in the past few years. A big selling point for us was easy access by all modes of transit to community-oriented MOM's grocery store and Proteus bike shop as well as Lake Artemesia and Greenbelt Park. I cannot speak for schools, but down the road there is the full French immersion elementary and middle school, Dora Kennedy, that has very positive reviews with a lottery entry in kindergarten. We have both lived in DC and Montgomery County and will certainly miss DC, but the prices here were more reasonable as we are in public service professions.
So College Park has a Chinese and French immersion school?
Yup! The Chinese one is a neighborhood school and the French is lottery based.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just purchased in the Hollywood neighborhood moving from a rental in Brookland. We are thus far very happy with our decision. I previously rented in the Hollywood neighborhood from 2013-2015 and loved it then as I do now but with a dozen new restaurants/amenities. There is a wide age range on our block and yes, there are some students renting in the neighborhood as I was once was. As a testament to the livability of the neighborhood at all life stages, the previous owner of our home lived here for 45 years. A neighbor across the street bought in 1948 and lived in his home for 70 years with the exception being the last year of his life. Several young families have moved in the past few years. A big selling point for us was easy access by all modes of transit to community-oriented MOM's grocery store and Proteus bike shop as well as Lake Artemesia and Greenbelt Park. I cannot speak for schools, but down the road there is the full French immersion elementary and middle school, Dora Kennedy, that has very positive reviews with a lottery entry in kindergarten. We have both lived in DC and Montgomery County and will certainly miss DC, but the prices here were more reasonable as we are in public service professions.
So College Park has a Chinese and French immersion school?
Anonymous wrote:We just purchased in the Hollywood neighborhood moving from a rental in Brookland. We are thus far very happy with our decision. I previously rented in the Hollywood neighborhood from 2013-2015 and loved it then as I do now but with a dozen new restaurants/amenities. There is a wide age range on our block and yes, there are some students renting in the neighborhood as I was once was. As a testament to the livability of the neighborhood at all life stages, the previous owner of our home lived here for 45 years. A neighbor across the street bought in 1948 and lived in his home for 70 years with the exception being the last year of his life. Several young families have moved in the past few years. A big selling point for us was easy access by all modes of transit to community-oriented MOM's grocery store and Proteus bike shop as well as Lake Artemesia and Greenbelt Park. I cannot speak for schools, but down the road there is the full French immersion elementary and middle school, Dora Kennedy, that has very positive reviews with a lottery entry in kindergarten. We have both lived in DC and Montgomery County and will certainly miss DC, but the prices here were more reasonable as we are in public service professions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At what point are cheap neighborhoods just cheap neighborhoods full of cheap people? Not everywhere is getting nice
I feel like you're being racist bc cheap people live in Bethesda, Foxhalll, Fairfax......
Anonymous wrote:At what point are cheap neighborhoods just cheap neighborhoods full of cheap people? Not everywhere is getting nice
Anonymous wrote:At what point are cheap neighborhoods just cheap neighborhoods full of cheap people? Not everywhere is getting nice
Anonymous wrote:At what point are cheap neighborhoods just cheap neighborhoods full of cheap people? Not everywhere is getting nice
Anonymous wrote:Cp is the next area where prices are cheap and heading up quickly . The location is so convenient and two metro lines in the future / Big Ten University / ten huge projects going on rt 1 right now . Only 4 houses have been listed in the old town/Calvert hills area in the whole year since nobody is leaving before prices skyrocket. Berwyn/Hollywood is next
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
that's what people said about petworth, columbia heights, shaw, ledroit park, etc.
pg isn't as convenient to downtown as those areas, or nearly as walkable, sure. but it has great public transportation options and is a fairly convenient place to live. i lived there for years, but only moved because of a job change.
also, when you say those things about pg, you're ignoring that it's a very large place with a variety of neighborhoods, both good and bad. i mean, would you not live in some parts of DC just because other parts aren't so great? That's essentially what you're saying when you talk about pg with such broad strokes.
Exactly! It wasn't too long ago that the "trendy" neighborhoods were mostly high crime no go zones. Also true people don't judge DC (or any other place for that matter) off of a few bad parts of the city and PG is the same way.
I actually live in Hollywood, the neighborhood in College Park being discussed and it is the best kept secret in the area! I'm in a safe, quiet, and VERY diverse (young, old, black, white, Latino, Asian, gay, Muslim, I've seen it all lol) neighborhood that is within walking distance of the Greenbelt Metro station. The location is perfect. I can get to downtown DC in about 25-30 mins on Metro. We also have a MARC station that goes to Camden Yards in Baltimore. 495 and 95 are real close too, so if I need to get to Silver Spring or Tysons..I can usually get there within a reasonable amount of time if traffic isn't too hectic.
There are a ton of amenities including bike trails, shops/restaurants (independent ones and chains), farmer's markets, and parks. There is a lot going on within College Park with all the development along Route 1 including a new high end hotel, possible Art house, Whole Foods, and more housing. The city and the university are pushing hard to make this a great place and I'm glad I moved in when I did.
The best part you can still get a decent house under $300k... for now anyway.![]()