Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kalorama is walking distance from Dupont Circle metro, restaurants and shopping, and part of it also walkable from Woodley Park metro and restaurants.
If you're a gazelle, maybe. It's not like Logan, where it's all right out your front door.
In fact Kalorama is about 10 minutes from DuPont Circle, less if you’re going to restaurants north of the metro. It’s another 10 minutes to Woodley Park, and maybe 20 to Adams Morgan. My mom used to live on Connecticut and Kalorama and it’s a great location. And no, I’m not a gazelle.
That posters are arguing with a straight face that Logan and Kalorama are equally or even close to equally walkable is just plain laughable. Do you think the election was stolen as well?
Hell no the election wasn’t stolen. But if you think a 10-minute walk to restaurants is too far, and you can only do 5-minute walks, you seriously need to rethink your physical fitness regime.
There are a few restaurants on Connecticut Avenue within 10 minutes of the edge of Kalorama, yes. How about bars, grocery stores, pharmacies, post offices, hair salons, hardware stores, banks, take out joints, music venues, etc.?
Last I checked, there's more to a walkable neighborhood than a few expensive restaurants.
You don’t know Kalorama or Dupont Circle, do you? There’s a pharmacy at Conn and Florida—2 blocks away, or just outside your doorstep depending on where you live in Kalorama. Plenty of banks and bars and hair and nail salons and such on DuPont Circle.
And who wants to live next door to, or right above, a bar anyway? All this bragging about “steps to bars” isn’t a selling point for people who like to sleep after midnight.
Dupont isn't Kalorama. And I gave a long list of amenities that included bars, yes, but only after another poster tried to extol Kalorama's walkability by talking about restaurants and literally nothing else. Oh, and most people living in Logan don't live next to or on top of a bar.
You’re pushing Logan because it’s supposedly steps to everything. Which is it?
Steps, yes. On top of or next to, no. You must be obtuse.
Steps to==next to. Keep your story straight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kalorama is walking distance from Dupont Circle metro, restaurants and shopping, and part of it also walkable from Woodley Park metro and restaurants.
If you're a gazelle, maybe. It's not like Logan, where it's all right out your front door.
In fact Kalorama is about 10 minutes from DuPont Circle, less if you’re going to restaurants north of the metro. It’s another 10 minutes to Woodley Park, and maybe 20 to Adams Morgan. My mom used to live on Connecticut and Kalorama and it’s a great location. And no, I’m not a gazelle.
That posters are arguing with a straight face that Logan and Kalorama are equally or even close to equally walkable is just plain laughable. Do you think the election was stolen as well?
Hell no the election wasn’t stolen. But if you think a 10-minute walk to restaurants is too far, and you can only do 5-minute walks, you seriously need to rethink your physical fitness regime.
There are a few restaurants on Connecticut Avenue within 10 minutes of the edge of Kalorama, yes. How about bars, grocery stores, pharmacies, post offices, hair salons, hardware stores, banks, take out joints, music venues, etc.?
Last I checked, there's more to a walkable neighborhood than a few expensive restaurants.
You don’t know Kalorama or Dupont Circle, do you? There’s a pharmacy at Conn and Florida—2 blocks away, or just outside your doorstep depending on where you live in Kalorama. Plenty of banks and bars and hair and nail salons and such on DuPont Circle.
And who wants to live next door to, or right above, a bar anyway? All this bragging about “steps to bars” isn’t a selling point for people who like to sleep after midnight.
Dupont isn't Kalorama. And I gave a long list of amenities that included bars, yes, but only after another poster tried to extol Kalorama's walkability by talking about restaurants and literally nothing else. Oh, and most people living in Logan don't live next to or on top of a bar.
You’re pushing Logan because it’s supposedly steps to everything. Which is it?
Steps, yes. On top of or next to, no. You must be obtuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kalorama is walking distance from Dupont Circle metro, restaurants and shopping, and part of it also walkable from Woodley Park metro and restaurants.
If you're a gazelle, maybe. It's not like Logan, where it's all right out your front door.
In fact Kalorama is about 10 minutes from DuPont Circle, less if you’re going to restaurants north of the metro. It’s another 10 minutes to Woodley Park, and maybe 20 to Adams Morgan. My mom used to live on Connecticut and Kalorama and it’s a great location. And no, I’m not a gazelle.
That posters are arguing with a straight face that Logan and Kalorama are equally or even close to equally walkable is just plain laughable. Do you think the election was stolen as well?
Hell no the election wasn’t stolen. But if you think a 10-minute walk to restaurants is too far, and you can only do 5-minute walks, you seriously need to rethink your physical fitness regime.
There are a few restaurants on Connecticut Avenue within 10 minutes of the edge of Kalorama, yes. How about bars, grocery stores, pharmacies, post offices, hair salons, hardware stores, banks, take out joints, music venues, etc.?
Last I checked, there's more to a walkable neighborhood than a few expensive restaurants.
You don’t know Kalorama or Dupont Circle, do you? There’s a pharmacy at Conn and Florida—2 blocks away, or just outside your doorstep depending on where you live in Kalorama. Plenty of banks and bars and hair and nail salons and such on DuPont Circle.
And who wants to live next door to, or right above, a bar anyway? All this bragging about “steps to bars” isn’t a selling point for people who like to sleep after midnight.
Dupont isn't Kalorama. And I gave a long list of amenities that included bars, yes, but only after another poster tried to extol Kalorama's walkability by talking about restaurants and literally nothing else. Oh, and most people living in Logan don't live next to or on top of a bar.
You’re pushing Logan because it’s supposedly steps to everything. Which is it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kalorama is walking distance from Dupont Circle metro, restaurants and shopping, and part of it also walkable from Woodley Park metro and restaurants.
If you're a gazelle, maybe. It's not like Logan, where it's all right out your front door.
In fact Kalorama is about 10 minutes from DuPont Circle, less if you’re going to restaurants north of the metro. It’s another 10 minutes to Woodley Park, and maybe 20 to Adams Morgan. My mom used to live on Connecticut and Kalorama and it’s a great location. And no, I’m not a gazelle.
That posters are arguing with a straight face that Logan and Kalorama are equally or even close to equally walkable is just plain laughable. Do you think the election was stolen as well?
Hell no the election wasn’t stolen. But if you think a 10-minute walk to restaurants is too far, and you can only do 5-minute walks, you seriously need to rethink your physical fitness regime.
There are a few restaurants on Connecticut Avenue within 10 minutes of the edge of Kalorama, yes. How about bars, grocery stores, pharmacies, post offices, hair salons, hardware stores, banks, take out joints, music venues, etc.?
Last I checked, there's more to a walkable neighborhood than a few expensive restaurants.
You don’t know Kalorama or Dupont Circle, do you? There’s a pharmacy at Conn and Florida—2 blocks away, or just outside your doorstep depending on where you live in Kalorama. Plenty of banks and bars and hair and nail salons and such on DuPont Circle.
And who wants to live next door to, or right above, a bar anyway? All this bragging about “steps to bars” isn’t a selling point for people who like to sleep after midnight.
Dupont isn't Kalorama. And I gave a long list of amenities that included bars, yes, but only after another poster tried to extol Kalorama's walkability by talking about restaurants and literally nothing else. Oh, and most people living in Logan don't live next to or on top of a bar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kalorama is walking distance from Dupont Circle metro, restaurants and shopping, and part of it also walkable from Woodley Park metro and restaurants.
If you're a gazelle, maybe. It's not like Logan, where it's all right out your front door.
In fact Kalorama is about 10 minutes from DuPont Circle, less if you’re going to restaurants north of the metro. It’s another 10 minutes to Woodley Park, and maybe 20 to Adams Morgan. My mom used to live on Connecticut and Kalorama and it’s a great location. And no, I’m not a gazelle.
That posters are arguing with a straight face that Logan and Kalorama are equally or even close to equally walkable is just plain laughable. Do you think the election was stolen as well?
Hell no the election wasn’t stolen. But if you think a 10-minute walk to restaurants is too far, and you can only do 5-minute walks, you seriously need to rethink your physical fitness regime.
There are a few restaurants on Connecticut Avenue within 10 minutes of the edge of Kalorama, yes. How about bars, grocery stores, pharmacies, post offices, hair salons, hardware stores, banks, take out joints, music venues, etc.?
Last I checked, there's more to a walkable neighborhood than a few expensive restaurants.
You don’t know Kalorama or Dupont Circle, do you? There’s a pharmacy at Conn and Florida—2 blocks away, or just outside your doorstep depending on where you live in Kalorama. Plenty of banks and bars and hair and nail salons and such on DuPont Circle.
And who wants to live next door to, or right above, a bar anyway? All this bragging about “steps to bars” isn’t a selling point for people who like to sleep after midnight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s there in eastern market?
For restaurants:
Newland
Duck & Peach
La Collina
Radici
Joselito
La Casina
Some bar type places, like Tunnicliff's
The Eastern (really more of a wine bar than a restaurant)
There is also a peregrine coffee shop, a bagel shop, an Orange Theory, a Trader Joe's and a Sephora.
More stuff if you go to Pennsylvania (Beuchert's, Fight Club, etc) or Barrack's Row.
Forgot that there are also a couple of hair salons, a nail salon, a CVS, two bookstores (if you include both East City and Capitol Hill Books), an ice cream shop, a cake shop, a public library and Eastern Market itself.
There is more if you are willing to venture a few blocks further into the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would Kalorama or Capitol Hill work for 20 something young professional female who works near US Botanic Gardens?
Yes, either neighborhood would work for a boring 20 something young professional female looking to live with neighbors who are a decade or two her senior and have kids. A fun-loving 20 something young professional female would want to live in any of the other neighborhoods.
What familiarity to you have with Capitol Hill? There are definitely a lot of families, but a good chunk of the neighborhood is also comprised of younger people who work on the Hill or downtown.
OP, another option to consider might be Navy Yard. That is easily accessible to the Botanic Gardens area, has a lot of apartments full of younger people and has a lot of other stuff going on.
Logan Circle and Shaw are also fine. Nothing against them, but I get the impression that some of the people posting on here have little familiarity with anything other than Shaw or Logan Circle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kalorama is walking distance from Dupont Circle metro, restaurants and shopping, and part of it also walkable from Woodley Park metro and restaurants.
If you're a gazelle, maybe. It's not like Logan, where it's all right out your front door.
In fact Kalorama is about 10 minutes from DuPont Circle, less if you’re going to restaurants north of the metro. It’s another 10 minutes to Woodley Park, and maybe 20 to Adams Morgan. My mom used to live on Connecticut and Kalorama and it’s a great location. And no, I’m not a gazelle.
That posters are arguing with a straight face that Logan and Kalorama are equally or even close to equally walkable is just plain laughable. Do you think the election was stolen as well?
Hell no the election wasn’t stolen. But if you think a 10-minute walk to restaurants is too far, and you can only do 5-minute walks, you seriously need to rethink your physical fitness regime.
There are a few restaurants on Connecticut Avenue within 10 minutes of the edge of Kalorama, yes. How about bars, grocery stores, pharmacies, post offices, hair salons, hardware stores, banks, take out joints, music venues, etc.?
Last I checked, there's more to a walkable neighborhood than a few expensive restaurants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is a little project, if you may. Please rank these areas according to best deal for safety, walkability, metro access, prestige, shopping and dinning.
Kalorama, Columbia Heights, Capitol Hill, Logan Circle, Shaw
Who is both able to buy in Kalorama and considering Columbia Heights. I'm trying to picture that buyer
Kalorama went to @#% when Jared and Ivanka moved in - so maybe people looking for greener pastures.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is a little project, if you may. Please rank these areas according to best deal for safety, walkability, metro access, prestige, shopping and dinning.
Kalorama, Columbia Heights, Capitol Hill, Logan Circle, Shaw
Who is both able to buy in Kalorama and considering Columbia Heights. I'm trying to picture that buyer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is a little project, if you may. Please rank these areas according to best deal for safety, walkability, metro access, prestige, shopping and dinning.
Kalorama, Columbia Heights, Capitol Hill, Logan Circle, Shaw
Who is both able to buy in Kalorama and considering Columbia Heights. I'm trying to picture that buyer
Anonymous wrote:Here is a little project, if you may. Please rank these areas according to best deal for safety, walkability, metro access, prestige, shopping and dinning.
Kalorama, Columbia Heights, Capitol Hill, Logan Circle, Shaw
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s there in eastern market?
For restaurants:
Newland
Duck & Peach
La Collina
Radici
Joselito
La Casina
Some bar type places, like Tunnicliff's
The Eastern (really more of a wine bar than a restaurant)
There is also a peregrine coffee shop, a bagel shop, an Orange Theory, a Trader Joe's and a Sephora.
More stuff if you go to Pennsylvania (Beuchert's, Fight Club, etc) or Barrack's Row.
Forgot that there are also a couple of hair salons, a nail salon, a CVS, two bookstores (if you include both East City and Capitol Hill Books), an ice cream shop, a cake shop, a public library and Eastern Market itself.
There is more if you are willing to venture a few blocks further into the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s there in eastern market?
For restaurants:
Newland
Duck & Peach
La Collina
Radici
Joselito
La Casina
Some bar type places, like Tunnicliff's
The Eastern (really more of a wine bar than a restaurant)
There is also a peregrine coffee shop, a bagel shop, an Orange Theory, a Trader Joe's and a Sephora.
More stuff if you go to Pennsylvania (Beuchert's, Fight Club, etc) or Barrack's Row.