Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How bad is street parking in Gover Park? We heard it was easy but perhaps not.
It’s bad if you don’t have a dedicated space, especially if you’re looking for parking in the evening. The substandard public transportation in the neighborhood means many people need cars.
I think it must differ by block. On my block in GP I have no problem getting a space whenever I need it. I think there's roughly the number of spots on the street minus ~3-5 cars that are owned by neighbors who street park. As there aren't usually that many people visiting, there's always a spot on the street (on my block, on either side) for me. In the rare case someone's having a party of some sort, there's parking a block away for the same reason.
Anonymous wrote:
People comment that Glover Park feels so green, but note the lack of private outdoor space. For those who live there, how does that balance out?
When my kids were very young, they were satisfied with our fenced backyard. When they grew up, we went to the field off W st., or Whitehaven park (or into Glover park for hiking). I do more in nature here than I ever did elsewhere, though I'm also in a much different place in life.
Thank you. Any other thoughts on parking or green space?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really a starter house/group home for people just out of college area. While people tried to pretend it wasn’t just that and did ridiculous additions and talked it up, it is what it was and always will be.
15 years ago I recall it having the rep of groups of unreformed aging frat boys and barfly aging sorority girls living together. Has it not evolved since then?
They were not aging. They were 22-25 years old. But people pretend it has but it really should still be a transitional area for just out of college types. Trying to turn it into a family neighborhood is kind of a farce.
What? There are not many college houses anymore. It is a family neighborhood.
+1.
This person has no idea what they're talking about.
I know what it is and what it should be. It isn’t a post college transition area anymore but it still should be. The people who hunkered down there and stayed and did this make believe “it’s a family neighborhood” are awful. They put a cork in the natural progression of DC movement. Instead of getting in the way, they should have moved to Annandale or the like instead.
Optimally, people should start in GP or Cap Hill, then move to Kent and land your forever home in Normanstone. Shame on those who didn’t.