Anonymous wrote:Crestwood is a real, easily defined neighborhood with a strong sense of self/community identity. No Forest Hills or Swampoodle or NoMa or whatever. If you don't know of its existence that's kind of on you.
Anonymous wrote:Where is Crestwood, seriously. I've heard of the other 2.
Anonymous wrote:Where is Crestwood, seriously. I've heard of the other 2.
Anonymous wrote:Ha ha, I think this Washingtonian article was based on this thread.
Can't find it in the 20 pages of comments now, but the poster with the "Shepherd Park/Crestwood/Colonial Village isn't real EOTP" quote mentioned here was responding to me, since I live in one of those "fake" EOTP neighborhoods.
http://www.washingtonian.com/blogs/capitalcomment/washingtonian-word/east-of-the-park-vs-west-of-the-park-which-type-of-washington-dc-resident-are-you.php
Anonymous wrote:Welcome to anyone joining the neighborhood, regardless of previous bloggering! Will be great if he blogs about Woodley and on up the redline, we shall see...
Anonymous wrote:No I'm not Jeff, but this is the schools forum. There is a thread over in the Real Estate Forum on this same topic.
Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking of Van Ness, the PoP blog states that the big Walgren's two story drug store, which was purpose-built just over three years ago, is closing. Interesting.....
Yeah, and I'm hoping he also finds out what's going on with the old "Babe's Billiards" space: hopefully another "mini-towncenter" type thingy with modern apartment living on top and upscale yet quirky shops on the bottom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking of Van Ness, the PoP blog states that the big Walgren's two story drug store, which was purpose-built just over three years ago, is closing. Interesting.....
Yeah, and I'm hoping he also finds out what's going on with the old "Babe's Billiards" space: hopefully another "mini-towncenter" type thingy with modern apartment living on top and upscale yet quirky shops on the bottom.
It would be nice if there were "quirky" shops. But the usual course with these mixed use developments is that the investor group wants to lease to chains and similar deep pocketed businesses.
The problem IIUC is that the lenders want financially safe businesses of commercial tenants. That said quite few new mixed use developments end up with either established local chains, or sometimes upscale independents as tenants. Quirky really needs old buildings though. So you need to wait for these buildings to age.