Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cleveland Park is great. Great restaurants and retail. Leafy neighborhood, but with an urban vibe. Beautiful, classic older homes and a few apartment buildings. Great schools, easy metro, safe. Close to downtown. Good mix of families with kids, older established residents, single folks. But rents and home costs are quite high, so it's hard to see how Cleveland Park fits into the rest of your list.
<snort>
Wait - that wasn't a joke?
Never mind.
Anonymous wrote:Or this: http://washingtondc.craigslist.org/doc/apa/2948184263.html
It looks like this listing is in Eckington?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not live in Trinidad with a small child. I have a property there, and while we kept it as a rental, we fleed to VA once my son was born. You do not want your school-age kid to see these examples.
I want to give you a tip on a building in Dupont that used to be very affordable, if basic. The neighborhood is the tops and since you are going for charters anyway, schools should not be a factor. State House Apartments, 2122 Mass Ave, NW. Phone # is 202-293-2122 (I think). They don't market themselves at all because they are full anyway due to low prices. You have to go in and bug the manager. This is how I did it. They were always a couple of hundred dollars under market for such a prime location.
I know this building - it is decent and in a great location. Parking would be awful tho.
Anonymous wrote:I would not live in Trinidad with a small child. I have a property there, and while we kept it as a rental, we fleed to VA once my son was born. You do not want your school-age kid to see these examples.
I want to give you a tip on a building in Dupont that used to be very affordable, if basic. The neighborhood is the tops and since you are going for charters anyway, schools should not be a factor. State House Apartments, 2122 Mass Ave, NW. Phone # is 202-293-2122 (I think). They don't market themselves at all because they are full anyway due to low prices. You have to go in and bug the manager. This is how I did it. They were always a couple of hundred dollars under market for such a prime location.
Anonymous wrote:This is a really random list of neighborhoods. You need to think about what you can afford to pay, transportation to your work, what kind of neighborhood you like, and what kind of amenities you need. In general, the young, hip, and broke are living in Columbia Heights/Petworth, and Bloomingdale/Shaw/Eckington. If you're willing to live in very small studio, you still find deals for around $1100 - $1400 in some of the centrally located bigger buildings in Dupont (eg, those owned by Bernstein Management). If you're willing to live with other people, you can find group houses in Mt. Pleasant and many other fun areas of the city for less than $1000.