Anonymous wrote:Not suggesting another toy store. Suggesting anything that we can walk to in our own neighborhood other than a used car lot and barren streetscape.
Anonymous wrote:I support GDS moving forward with a revised plan but I have no expectations that more condos or retail are going to improve the neighborhood in any way. There is nothing I like about GDS plan other than improving the school's facilities - I think every school should be allowed to do that. But condos and retail as a game changer - nope. it's just stacked boxes for people to live in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try walking more/farther. Seriously, Van Ness and CC border Tenleytown.
I walk to Child's play instead of Sullivan's and go to Van Ness all of the time. It would be nice to do stuff in my own neighborhood though rather than clog up everyone else's neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of people -- including people with school-aged kids --don't want to live in everyone else's go-to neighborhood for nightlife. And when we want a night out, we'd rather head downtown than around the block.
Around the block, we want everyday stuff like grocery stores, drugstores, schools, playgrounds, gym/yoga studio/pool/dojo, places to buy toys, books, and music, a library, fast casual dining and takeout, a hardware store, a dry cleaner, and a Metrorail station. We've got all that -- and more.
Anonymous wrote:Frankly, Wilson HS and, yes, GDS students themselves create a drag on the Tenley commercial area -- which lead to a preponderance of fast food and fast casual restaurants. It's unlikely that things will change, particularly with the almost daily "wilding" when Wilson lets out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tenley has never been Georgetown -- but it is a nice place to live. Zoning helps keep it that way. Hipper restaurants, bars and retail could be great. BTW -- Connecticut Ave. used to be cool, too. But it is looking vacant as well. Letting landowners determine density is the wrong approach.
There's nothing wrong with trying to stay a nice neighborhood in which to live. Several decades ago, for example, Cleveland Park faced a choice whether to bulldoze much of Connecticut Ave. and become a restaurant and bar destination like Adams Morgan. Instead, they put in an historic district and tried to maintain a mixture of restaurants, shops and a great movie theater through zoning. Today, U Street may be a hipper destination, but the C.P. is highly valued for its green spaces, walkability and historic streets. The great thing about Washington is the diversity of neighborhoods where people can choose what's important to them -- it's not necessary that Tenleytown or Cleveland Park or Chevy Chase DC be just like Friendship Heights, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Tenley has never been Georgetown -- but it is a nice place to live. Zoning helps keep it that way. Hipper restaurants, bars and retail could be great. BTW -- Connecticut Ave. used to be cool, too. But it is looking vacant as well. Letting landowners determine density is the wrong approach.