Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh God, I hope the NYC is so much better folks don't come on here again. No one compares the two cities except New Yorkers. DC is DC, it doesn't want to be New York. Why not compare it to Miami or Morgantown, WV. Just enjoy it for what it is or move where you would be happier.
Agreed. I think that many people have chosen Washington over New York. I lived in NYC for a few years and enjoy visiting, but much prefer it here. I love the green spaces, the quiet neighborhoods, the free museums and galleries, the park-like settings downtown, the light and spacious feeling from the height limit, the fact that the Potomac is a wild river 3 miles upstream and the fact that it is somewhat less expensive to live here compared to New York. NYC is a better managed city that DC (unless DiBlasio screws it up and returns to the 1970s), is cleaner than it used to be. However, I don't understand why some want Washington to be much more like New York -- it's a free country, and if NYC is what gives you a buzz, why not move to Gotham?
some blocks of DC have a more Parisian feel than other US cities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh God, I hope the NYC is so much better folks don't come on here again. No one compares the two cities except New Yorkers. DC is DC, it doesn't want to be New York. Why not compare it to Miami or Morgantown, WV. Just enjoy it for what it is or move where you would be happier.
+1. This always happens and I don't get it. Why would you compare a city of 650,000 to a city of millions anyway? Also, DC is hamstrung by the bastards in Congress, whereas New York City is part of the powerhouse "Empire" state of New York. About the only thing they have in common is that they are both old cities on the East Coast. Apparently just that is compelling enough for comparison for many. DC has its own charms. It's not for everyone, but I've come to love it (lived here since 1994). NYC is a huge metropolis that compares with the greatest cities of the world (London, Berlin, Paris). Give it a break, people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bloomingdale = Park Slope? Seriously? Have you ever been to Park Slope?
Have you ever been to Bloomingdale?
Anonymous wrote:Oh God, I hope the NYC is so much better folks don't come on here again. No one compares the two cities except New Yorkers. DC is DC, it doesn't want to be New York. Why not compare it to Miami or Morgantown, WV. Just enjoy it for what it is or move where you would be happier.
Anonymous wrote:Agree. Why don't we compare DC to Paris while we're at it? Absurd exercise.
DC was modeled after Paris, not saying the cities are anything alike these days, but historically there is a connection in terms of how the older streets are laid out spirally out of downtown.
Anonymous wrote:Agree. Why don't we compare DC to Paris while we're at it? Absurd exercise.
DC was modeled after Paris, not saying the cities are anything alike these days, but historically there is a connection in terms of how the older streets are laid out spirally out of downtown.
Agree. Why don't we compare DC to Paris while we're at it? Absurd exercise.
Anonymous wrote:Bloomingdale = Park Slope? Seriously? Have you ever been to Park Slope?
OP- there are NO places in D.C. that remind me, or anyone I know, of NYC. Period.
Don't try to replicate even a smidgen of NYC, you will be severely disappointed each and every time. Just except the fact that DC is DC and there is no place like NYC so if you want to scratch that itch, just go up for a weekend and enjoy it. It's never going to happen here.
Signed,
Former NYC'er.
Anonymous wrote:DC housing prices continue to increase as transplanted New Yorkers seek a more affordable city and, because they are used to astronomical housing prices, are willing to pay the slightly inflated asking prices here.
Anonymous wrote:DC housing prices continue to increase as transplanted New Yorkers seek a more affordable city and, because they are used to astronomical housing prices, are willing to pay the slightly inflated asking prices here.