Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, CCDC.
I would only disagree because Friendship Heights had tons more shops 20 years ago.
You had L&T, Hechts, Borders Books, Linens N Things, Neiman Marcus (yeah...not really a day-to-day store), an AMC 8 movie theatre, Loehmanns, TJ Maxx, Pottery Barn, Williams Sonoma...Sur La Table just a block down.
Yes, we now have a Bloomingdales and some upscale shops on the CC MD side, but FH was decimated by the Internet and Covid.
Let's hope the new Trader Joe's, Total Wine, new TJ Maxx and the new Mazza-replacement (ground floor retail, plus apartments on top) are the start of lots of great new things.
You're speaking exclusively of retail and you're correct. That is but one aspect of a neighborhood.
However, the residential streets are all "nicer" in that Casey Trees has added thousands of new trees in 20015 over the past 20 years. DCDoT + Pepco have felled and/or trimmed the dying street oaks. Any last rental boarding house from 2005 has been coverted back to a SFH and repainted, re-roofed, relandscaped by the new SFH owners. Sidewalks have been installed. Murch and Lafayette have new playgrounds. Livingston Park has had multiple upgrades to the playground/ball field / spray park in the past 20 years. The city consistently picks up leaves when it says it will and consistently plows snow when it should -- something that was starting to improve by 2005 and has grown much more reliable.
I personally do not think the *people* who moved into the now-$2.9 million four-squares are "nicer" than the OG CCDC families who vacated the same homes after living there on two NPR salaries since 1970. Not really close.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on what you mean by “nicer.” Are you equating it with “wealthier?“
For example, a previous poster from 22207 says that that area was not “nicer“ 20 years ago. Actually, we were in the thick of raising kids there 20 years ago and from what I read on DCUM now I would argue that it was, in fact, “nicer” then. It was more affordable, the schools were smaller and less crowded, and the people generally seemed a lot nicer. We still live in the area and on occasion find ourselves in 22207, and the only thing different that we say about it now is that the smaller houses have been replaced with McMansions and I don’t think that makes it a “nicer” neighborhood. It just makes it a less affordable one.
Spoken like a true middle classer who would probably complain about their increased property taxes. I’d much rather have a $3m house in my neighborhood than the $500k teardowns that were there 20years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on what you mean by “nicer.” Are you equating it with “wealthier?“
For example, a previous poster from 22207 says that that area was not “nicer“ 20 years ago. Actually, we were in the thick of raising kids there 20 years ago and from what I read on DCUM now I would argue that it was, in fact, “nicer” then. It was more affordable, the schools were smaller and less crowded, and the people generally seemed a lot nicer. We still live in the area and on occasion find ourselves in 22207, and the only thing different that we say about it now is that the smaller houses have been replaced with McMansions and I don’t think that makes it a “nicer” neighborhood. It just makes it a less affordable one.
Spoken like a true middle classer who would probably complain about their increased property taxes. I’d much rather have a $3m house in my neighborhood than the $500k teardowns that were there 20years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, CCDC.
I would only disagree because Friendship Heights had tons more shops 20 years ago.
You had L&T, Hechts, Borders Books, Linens N Things, Neiman Marcus (yeah...not really a day-to-day store), an AMC 8 movie theatre, Loehmanns, TJ Maxx, Pottery Barn, Williams Sonoma...Sur La Table just a block down.
Yes, we now have a Bloomingdales and some upscale shops on the CC MD side, but FH was decimated by the Internet and Covid.
Let's hope the new Trader Joe's, Total Wine, new TJ Maxx and the new Mazza-replacement (ground floor retail, plus apartments on top) are the start of lots of great new things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sligo park hills was nicer, feels like Langley Park is spilling over and piney branch is a nightmare. Flower Ave is a mess
To be fair, hasn’t Langley park always been kinda shady? If I’m wrong please correct me.
It wasn’t this bad and it wasn’t always growing
Anonymous wrote:Depends on what you mean by “nicer.” Are you equating it with “wealthier?“
For example, a previous poster from 22207 says that that area was not “nicer“ 20 years ago. Actually, we were in the thick of raising kids there 20 years ago and from what I read on DCUM now I would argue that it was, in fact, “nicer” then. It was more affordable, the schools were smaller and less crowded, and the people generally seemed a lot nicer. We still live in the area and on occasion find ourselves in 22207, and the only thing different that we say about it now is that the smaller houses have been replaced with McMansions and I don’t think that makes it a “nicer” neighborhood. It just makes it a less affordable one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC version. Connecticut Avenue corridor from DuPont to Chevy Chase, no. Ditto U Street, Columbia Heights, and Petworth. Everywhere else, yes.
Meant this the completely opposite way. Upper NW was much nicer 20 years ago as was the whole U Street, Petworth, and Columbia Heights neighborhoods. Petworth peaked in 2008-2013 and has been way more crimey ever since.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have been in McLean/22101 for about 15 years. Housing stock has definitely gotten upgraded with more expensive homes in more neighborhoods. Retail was blah then and blah now, but there's a bit more variety. Schools are still good but overall confidence in FCPS leadership and basic competence has declined.
Way back when most of us were still kids, the architects who designed Seaside Florida and Kentlands (in Gaithersburg) proposed a massive overhaul of downtown McLean with shops, European/style streets with cafes and apartments above, offices, upscale retail, urban parks, and a town center or town green with community amenities. What the heck happened to that? That would’ve been amazing. Instead, downtown McLean looks the same—aging strip malls minus the Pizza Hut, Gourmet Giant, and Evan’s Farm Inn.
Anonymous wrote:Mine was marginally nicer (20906). There were mostly one family and 1-2 cars per house in a neighborhood of starter homes, and lots of little kids. By the time I moved out last year it had become multiple families and cars per house, loud music blasting at all hours and a much more transient population.