Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why so much big box outlet stuff? Its so cheesy and unappealing.
It might be unappealing to you, but these are often destination trips that bring people in — and then many of those people also shop, eat, and spend money at the smaller shops and restaurants. Originally, Friendship Heights was an upscale shopping destination, with the first Saks and the first Lord and Taylor in the area, plus Woodies. Restaurants and smaller shops grew to support the destination shoppers. Then the Mazza Gallery — with Neiman Marcus, restaurants, William’s-Sonoma, and movie theaters expanded the audiences for the neighborhood as a destination. Places like Borders, Linens N Things, and the strip of stores where the GAP is appealed to different types of shoppers, so: Mom could go to Saks, Sis could go to the Limited, Dad could shop at Brooks Brothers, and Chip could go to Borders and the music store, and refresh himself at McDonalds.
The growth of Tyson made doing all of this easier on the Virginia side. White Flint and Montgomery Mall developed as destinations on the Maryland side. The “Rodeo Drive” strip of shops was a horrible fit for the neighborhood— despite the demographics. As leases ended, shops fled to Bethesda (the Pottery Barn/ William’s Sonoma group) and City Center (The upscale transplants.) There really was enough to interest shoppers until internet shopping grew popular and successful department stores got trashed by buyers who saddled them with debt, and, eventually, like dominos, things tumbled.
It’s a lovely, convenient neighborhood that needs to find it’s footing as something other than a shopping destination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Friendship heights is a retirement community. Too many old people for it to be a “popping” place. Old people stay inside watching TV. They don’t (or can’t) walk enough. I mean this in the most clinical sense possible
You mean unlike the incel density bros who sit in their moms’ basements blogging about Smart Growth and NIMBYs.
Pretty sure the incel density bros you speak of in CP are married men, married women, single women, and some have kids and some don't. No incels, few actual bros, and no basement dwellers. If we expand north, we get more of the same. In Ward 3, no one fits your description.
They claim to be for transit but push to unmake the Red Line!
If you're talking about the "undesign the red line" thing at the CP library, I think that was meant to be a pun on "redlining" and the Red Line, not... literally a push to undo the Metro line.
More spin by the Smart Growth Trumper, who pretends that market rate Uberdevelopment is the remedy for decades ago redlining in some DC neighborhoods. Yet the firm he owns is on its third campaign for Donald Trump, who promises to “protect” communities from affordable housing and diversity.
Get help. You are obsessed.
One guy who makes some money from Trump's vain quest is not a villain and can certainly hold views different from one of his company's clients.
Your whole argument is contradictory. Your fixation has the opposite view of Trump, which would seem to mean that he isn't a Trumper.
Anonymous wrote:why so much big box outlet stuff? Its so cheesy and unappealing.
Anonymous wrote:why so much big box outlet stuff? Its so cheesy and unappealing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Friendship heights is a retirement community. Too many old people for it to be a “popping” place. Old people stay inside watching TV. They don’t (or can’t) walk enough. I mean this in the most clinical sense possible
You mean unlike the incel density bros who sit in their moms’ basements blogging about Smart Growth and NIMBYs.
Pretty sure the incel density bros you speak of in CP are married men, married women, single women, and some have kids and some don't. No incels, few actual bros, and no basement dwellers. If we expand north, we get more of the same. In Ward 3, no one fits your description.
They claim to be for transit but push to unmake the Red Line!
If you're talking about the "undesign the red line" thing at the CP library, I think that was meant to be a pun on "redlining" and the Red Line, not... literally a push to undo the Metro line.
More spin by the Smart Growth Trumper, who pretends that market rate Uberdevelopment is the remedy for decades ago redlining in some DC neighborhoods. Yet the firm he owns is on its third campaign for Donald Trump, who promises to “protect” communities from affordable housing and diversity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Friendship heights is a retirement community. Too many old people for it to be a “popping” place. Old people stay inside watching TV. They don’t (or can’t) walk enough. I mean this in the most clinical sense possible
You mean unlike the incel density bros who sit in their moms’ basements blogging about Smart Growth and NIMBYs.
Pretty sure the incel density bros you speak of in CP are married men, married women, single women, and some have kids and some don't. No incels, few actual bros, and no basement dwellers. If we expand north, we get more of the same. In Ward 3, no one fits your description.
They claim to be for transit but push to unmake the Red Line!
If you're talking about the "undesign the red line" thing at the CP library, I think that was meant to be a pun on "redlining" and the Red Line, not... literally a push to undo the Metro line.
Anonymous wrote:It has been in a slow decline for a long time.. I worked at the express in CCP in the early 90s, and we were never one of the busiest stores. It was always quiet compared to Tyson’s and Montgomery Mall. My guess is Tyson’s galleria was the real harbinger of doom way back in 1988. It siphoned off luxury shoppers.
Anonymous wrote:It has been in a slow decline for a long time.. I worked at the express in CCP in the early 90s, and we were never one of the busiest stores. It was always quiet compared to Tyson’s and Montgomery Mall. My guess is Tyson’s galleria was the real harbinger of doom way back in 1988. It siphoned off luxury shoppers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Friendship heights is a retirement community. Too many old people for it to be a “popping” place. Old people stay inside watching TV. They don’t (or can’t) walk enough. I mean this in the most clinical sense possible
You mean unlike the incel density bros who sit in their moms’ basements blogging about Smart Growth and NIMBYs.
Pretty sure the incel density bros you speak of in CP are married men, married women, single women, and some have kids and some don't. No incels, few actual bros, and no basement dwellers. If we expand north, we get more of the same. In Ward 3, no one fits your description.
They claim to be for transit but push to unmake the Red Line!
If you're talking about the "undesign the red line" thing at the CP library, I think that was meant to be a pun on "redlining" and the Red Line, not... literally a push to undo the Metro line.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Friendship heights is a retirement community. Too many old people for it to be a “popping” place. Old people stay inside watching TV. They don’t (or can’t) walk enough. I mean this in the most clinical sense possible
You mean unlike the incel density bros who sit in their moms’ basements blogging about Smart Growth and NIMBYs.
Pretty sure the incel density bros you speak of in CP are married men, married women, single women, and some have kids and some don't. No incels, few actual bros, and no basement dwellers. If we expand north, we get more of the same. In Ward 3, no one fits your description.
They claim to be for transit but push to unmake the Red Line!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Friendship heights is a retirement community. Too many old people for it to be a “popping” place. Old people stay inside watching TV. They don’t (or can’t) walk enough. I mean this in the most clinical sense possible
You mean unlike the incel density bros who sit in their moms’ basements blogging about Smart Growth and NIMBYs.
Pretty sure the incel density bros you speak of in CP are married men, married women, single women, and some have kids and some don't. No incels, few actual bros, and no basement dwellers. If we expand north, we get more of the same. In Ward 3, no one fits your description.