Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you typically near neighbors through the walls of a row home in DC?
In the three rowhomes I have live in dc (all between 150-110 years old), no.
In a brand new “luxury” building? Absolutely.
What about smoke ? Cooking smells?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Choosing Dupont over the Hill seems weird to me.
Not the op (in fact, I live in a far flung MoCo suburb, but I commute to DC), but I suspect the op and their spouse work somewhere off CT Ave or near DuPont. It makes sense to live close to work rather than on the Hill.
Anonymous wrote:Choosing Dupont over the Hill seems weird to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One aspect nobody touched upon here: kids' social lives. It will be difficult if there are no families nearby walking distance away you can be friendly with, so that you don't always have to drive out of your way for playdates. You will find it difficult to host playdates where parking is competitive and not have guest parking. When they are little babies and toddlers it's not that challenging, more people with babies around as people usually move to the burbs when kids are older.
why wouldnt there be any kids? you people are absurd. dupont is totally the right move here
Anonymous wrote:One aspect nobody touched upon here: kids' social lives. It will be difficult if there are no families nearby walking distance away you can be friendly with, so that you don't always have to drive out of your way for playdates. You will find it difficult to host playdates where parking is competitive and not have guest parking. When they are little babies and toddlers it's not that challenging, more people with babies around as people usually move to the burbs when kids are older.
Anonymous wrote:I would put location over more space any day, especially if you like the rowhouse, which I assume you do.
I am a little confused though that you "tried" to like Georgetown, but preferred Foggy Bottom. I work in GT and FB, and can't imagine a universe in which this could possibly be true.
Anonymous wrote:Do it! We did the same thing and stayed until we had our 4th. We were right by Ross and loved it! The kids are old now and still have great memories and reminisce when we go back for brunch, farmers market, etc. As long as you have parking, you’re set.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you typically near neighbors through the walls of a row home in DC?
In the three rowhomes I have live in dc (all between 150-110 years old), no.
In a brand new “luxury” building? Absolutely.
What about smoke ? Cooking smells?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you typically near neighbors through the walls of a row home in DC?
In the three rowhomes I have live in dc (all between 150-110 years old), no.
In a brand new “luxury” building? Absolutely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would put location over more space any day, especially if you like the rowhouse, which I assume you do.
I am a little confused though that you "tried" to like Georgetown, but preferred Foggy Bottom. I work in GT and FB, and can't imagine a universe in which this could possibly be true.
I don’t really have an explanation, just a combination of available housing options, the congestion on M street, and also not wanting to be in a concentrated wealthy area where everyone is sending their kids to private school. Sounds like there’s a good community around Hyde-Addison, but we felt like we’d be the odd people out in most of the Georgetown houses we looked at.