Anonymous wrote:I would second Capitol Hill, and I'd stay away from Georgetown myself.
Another possibility I'd offer is downtown Bethesda-- pretty easy commute to Farragut North (almost as easy to Federal triangle, esp. if you don't mind walking from metro center). Very walkable, lots of families and things to do. Less urban than Capitol Hill but comparable (or more urban) than many parts of NW.
Also second re-thinking downtown preschool if you don't need to-- honestly if I was SAH I'd probably skip preschool entirely before commuting downtown just to do it.
(note: I've always found it odd DC doesn't have a well-defined "downtown" for me I'd say it roughly runs from 7th st to 15th St, north of the Mall, up to around I st.)
Anonymous wrote:If you want to live downtown and near the preschool, you should look around Penn Quarter -- but it's not really child friendly. Dupont is more child friendly. There aren't a lot of condos and apartments right at Federal Triangle or Farragut North. Many of the neighborhoods mentioned by other posters (Woodly Park, Cleveland Park, Ballston) are not downtown. Downtown would include Dupont Circle, Penn Quarter, Chinatown and a little wider out Logan Circle, Adams Morgan, Foggy Bottom and Georgetown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- What do you mean exactly by "downtown?" that means different things to different people in DC- it's not like NYC where the lower numbers mean downtown...some people interpret downtown differently here. Do you want to live in a very busy, active part of the city, or do you want a quieter residential neighborhood with easy access to Farragut West? Also, would you consider the close-in suburbs, which many families prefer (not all- don't jump down my throat people) because of the school situation in this area?
TBH I'm not quite sure what downtown is. I believe it is the part of the city on either side of the White House. We'd like easy access to Farragut West / Farragut North / Foggy Bottom (for DH's work) and Federal Triangle (for preschool). Preschool's not set in stone yet but so far anything we like seems to have a waitlist.
Locals refer to the city limits of DC, particularly Northwest DC (which is like our equivalent of Manhattan NY), as "downtown." The city limits of DC are very tiny - it only has 600,000 residents in its entirety, plus most of what's going on is only in the Northwest quadrant of DC, so imagine how small that is. Maybe another 4 million live inside the "beltway" (Highway 495 that circles DC), which would be more like living inside the city limits in any other major metropolitan area. Around the beltway includes Montgomery County MD, Fairfax County VA, Arlington VA, and Alexandria VA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- What do you mean exactly by "downtown?" that means different things to different people in DC- it's not like NYC where the lower numbers mean downtown...some people interpret downtown differently here. Do you want to live in a very busy, active part of the city, or do you want a quieter residential neighborhood with easy access to Farragut West? Also, would you consider the close-in suburbs, which many families prefer (not all- don't jump down my throat people) because of the school situation in this area?
TBH I'm not quite sure what downtown is. I believe it is the part of the city on either side of the White House. We'd like easy access to Farragut West / Farragut North / Foggy Bottom (for DH's work) and Federal Triangle (for preschool). Preschool's not set in stone yet but so far anything we like seems to have a waitlist.
Locals refer to the city limits of DC, particularly Northwest DC (which is like our equivalent of Manhattan NY), as "downtown." The city limits of DC are very tiny - it only has 600,000 residents in its entirety, plus most of what's going on is only in the Northwest quadrant of DC, so imagine how small that is. Maybe another 4 million live inside the "beltway" (Highway 495 that circles DC), which would be more like living inside the city limits in any other major metropolitan area. Around the beltway includes Montgomery County MD, Fairfax County VA, Arlington VA, and Alexandria VA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- What do you mean exactly by "downtown?" that means different things to different people in DC- it's not like NYC where the lower numbers mean downtown...some people interpret downtown differently here. Do you want to live in a very busy, active part of the city, or do you want a quieter residential neighborhood with easy access to Farragut West? Also, would you consider the close-in suburbs, which many families prefer (not all- don't jump down my throat people) because of the school situation in this area?
TBH I'm not quite sure what downtown is. I believe it is the part of the city on either side of the White House. We'd like easy access to Farragut West / Farragut North / Foggy Bottom (for DH's work) and Federal Triangle (for preschool). Preschool's not set in stone yet but so far anything we like seems to have a waitlist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- What do you mean exactly by "downtown?" that means different things to different people in DC- it's not like NYC where the lower numbers mean downtown...some people interpret downtown differently here. Do you want to live in a very busy, active part of the city, or do you want a quieter residential neighborhood with easy access to Farragut West? Also, would you consider the close-in suburbs, which many families prefer (not all- don't jump down my throat people) because of the school situation in this area?
TBH I'm not quite sure what downtown is. I believe it is the part of the city on either side of the White House. We'd like easy access to Farragut West / Farragut North / Foggy Bottom (for DH's work) and Federal Triangle (for preschool). Preschool's not set in stone yet but so far anything we like seems to have a waitlist.
If the commute is your primary concern, look at the orange line. The first metro stop in DC is Foggy Bottom, the ones before that in Virginia have much better (free) schools: Ballston, Virginia-Square, Clarendon, Court House.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- What do you mean exactly by "downtown?" that means different things to different people in DC- it's not like NYC where the lower numbers mean downtown...some people interpret downtown differently here. Do you want to live in a very busy, active part of the city, or do you want a quieter residential neighborhood with easy access to Farragut West? Also, would you consider the close-in suburbs, which many families prefer (not all- don't jump down my throat people) because of the school situation in this area?
TBH I'm not quite sure what downtown is. I believe it is the part of the city on either side of the White House. We'd like easy access to Farragut West / Farragut North / Foggy Bottom (for DH's work) and Federal Triangle (for preschool). Preschool's not set in stone yet but so far anything we like seems to have a waitlist.
Anonymous wrote:OP- What do you mean exactly by "downtown?" that means different things to different people in DC- it's not like NYC where the lower numbers mean downtown...some people interpret downtown differently here. Do you want to live in a very busy, active part of the city, or do you want a quieter residential neighborhood with easy access to Farragut West? Also, would you consider the close-in suburbs, which many families prefer (not all- don't jump down my throat people) because of the school situation in this area?