Anonymous wrote:I live in CCDC and go to the Cathedral commons giant. It’s bigger and nicer than anything near me.
We also go to raku and cactus on the regular
Parking a big plus
Never set foot in the oyster place
Anonymous wrote:Aren’t you guys rich? Why are you worried about the this shopping center?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rent increase is killing a lot of small business.
Our zoning laws make it too hard to build densely in cities. Until we fix zoning and take power out of the hands of NIMBYs we’re never going to have an affordable DC.
There’s density on top Cathedral Commons and on both sides of it. In fact Cathedral Commons is supposed to be a Greater Greater Washington blogger’s mixed-use wet dream. The problem is that developers and their co-investors want chains and tenants with deep balance sheets and corporate guantees, not so much independent businesses. They market and price their retail space accordingly. So much for your theory, but nice try.
Ummm no Cathedral Commons is hardly a GGW blogger's mixed-use wet dream - far from it actually - but you probably already knew that.
Any smart growther with common sense would prefer that Cathedral Commons be at least as dense as the buildings around it which it is not. And they'd also object to the amount of parking and the requirements that it be given away for free - but I bet you knew that already too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rent increase is killing a lot of small business.
Our zoning laws make it too hard to build densely in cities. Until we fix zoning and take power out of the hands of NIMBYs we’re never going to have an affordable DC.
There’s density on top Cathedral Commons and on both sides of it. In fact Cathedral Commons is supposed to be a Greater Greater Washington blogger’s mixed-use wet dream. The problem is that developers and their co-investors want chains and tenants with deep balance sheets and corporate guantees, not so much independent businesses. They market and price their retail space accordingly. So much for your theory, but nice try.
Anonymous wrote:We live a few blocks away and go to the Cathedral Commons strip all the time. In stark contrast to the other restaurants on the strip, Grilled Oyster was always empty, even on Saturday night. Because we love seafood, we wanted to like Grilled Oyster and gave it a try maybe a half dozen times, but the service was consistently terrible (nice servers, but long waits for food, no water refills, messed up orders) and the food was hit or miss. I think that if a better run restaurant moves into that spot, it will have more success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rent increase is killing a lot of small business.
Our zoning laws make it too hard to build densely in cities. Until we fix zoning and take power out of the hands of NIMBYs we’re never going to have an affordable DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What placed closed?
All the places there seemed ridiculously overpriced. Plus parking isn't validated and the building is ugly as sin.
The Cathedral Commons businesses are required to validate parking for at least 60 minutes. That may have been a condition when the development got approved as a PUD. It’s surprising if this is not happening.
Anonymous wrote:Rent increase is killing a lot of small business.
Anonymous wrote:If you build it, someone else will build something a few blocks away.
There is nothing overly inviting, most of the stuff is along ugly Wisconsin and isn't family friendly. Who are they targeting hip dink’s (It isn’t a hip place)
Anonymous wrote:What placed closed?
All the places there seemed ridiculously overpriced. Plus parking isn't validated and the building is ugly as sin.