Anonymous wrote:Op here. Let me clarify that i plan to drive to georgetown/foggy area and husband olans to metro to city center.
Havent thought about FH...seemed very mall like/generic to us but could be wrong.
Anonymous wrote:FH is a blend of both. Definitely not as crowded as Bethesda, but more shops and restaurants then Tenley. And a better Whole Foods for food (but no wine there). We just moved, but lived a few blocks from the metro there for a decade & had a more or less car free existence with DH working in Foggy bottom & commuting via metro.
But I recognize my tolerance for crowds may be different from OP - Bethesda doesn't seem too crowded to me, and I'd pick busy pedestrian traffic over deserted-feeling streets anytime. Tenley has always seemed kind of run down to me. Plus, you have a thriving drug scene on the bit in front of CVS - ick.

Anonymous wrote:FH is a blend of both. Definitely not as crowded as Bethesda, but more shops and restaurants then Tenley. And a better Whole Foods for food (but no wine there). We just moved, but lived a few blocks from the metro there for a decade & had a more or less car free existence with DH working in Foggy bottom & commuting via metro.
But I recognize my tolerance for crowds may be different from OP - Bethesda doesn't seem too crowded to me, and I'd pick busy pedestrian traffic over deserted-feeling streets anytime. Tenley has always seemed kind of run down to me. Plus, you have a thriving drug scene on the bit in front of CVS - ick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Van Ness has that strip of stores but it's never been that pedestrian friendly.
I'm guessing you haven't been there in 7 years or more, right?
No. I have a good friend that lives there and know a few other people that live in the apts. I admit I haven't been to Sfoglina yet but I am in the neighborhood pretty regularly. I don't think opening Bread Furst makes the street scape any more inviting than it's been for the past 20 years.
+1. Van Ness is still a terrible area to walk around in. Tenleytown is a bit better, but I prefer Friendship Heights over both in terms of streetscape.
I wonder why OP is considering either Tenleytown or Bethesda and not Friendship Heights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Van Ness has that strip of stores but it's never been that pedestrian friendly.
I'm guessing you haven't been there in 7 years or more, right?
No. I have a good friend that lives there and know a few other people that live in the apts. I admit I haven't been to Sfoglina yet but I am in the neighborhood pretty regularly. I don't think opening Bread Furst makes the street scape any more inviting than it's been for the past 20 years.
+1. Van Ness is still a terrible area to walk around in. Tenleytown is a bit better, but I prefer Friendship Heights over both in terms of streetscape.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Van Ness has that strip of stores but it's never been that pedestrian friendly.
I'm guessing you haven't been there in 7 years or more, right?
No. I have a good friend that lives there and know a few other people that live in the apts. I admit I haven't been to Sfoglina yet but I am in the neighborhood pretty regularly. I don't think opening Bread Furst makes the street scape any more inviting than it's been for the past 20 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you work in Foggy Bottom and DH works near the Verizon Center, check the schedules/maps of the 30s buses that go down Wisconsin Avenue in Tenleytown. There are multiple routes on these overlapping lines, but some of them should work for both of you. You might like the chance to ride together either way and you spare yourself the stress of driving or the randomness of the subway. I also like having the option of getting off early on a nice day to walk the rest of the way.
And since you might be coming from out of town, remember that Tenleytown would let you get aclimated to the area, while being very central, to see how you would judge the trade offs between Bethesda's more hopping scene and being further from work.
Tenleytown is hardly "very central" in the way Dupont and Logan or Kalorama are. It's just 2 stops away from Bethesda--both pretty far from the downtown DC/Foggy Bottom area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Van Ness has that strip of stores but it's never been that pedestrian friendly.
I'm guessing you haven't been there in 7 years or more, right?
Anonymous wrote:If you work in Foggy Bottom and DH works near the Verizon Center, check the schedules/maps of the 30s buses that go down Wisconsin Avenue in Tenleytown. There are multiple routes on these overlapping lines, but some of them should work for both of you. You might like the chance to ride together either way and you spare yourself the stress of driving or the randomness of the subway. I also like having the option of getting off early on a nice day to walk the rest of the way.
And since you might be coming from out of town, remember that Tenleytown would let you get aclimated to the area, while being very central, to see how you would judge the trade offs between Bethesda's more hopping scene and being further from work.
Anonymous wrote:Van Ness has that strip of stores but it's never been that pedestrian friendly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tenley does feel very suburban, but in its favor, it is a quick drive down Wisconsin to the Friendship Heights Whole Foods and shopping and is also a fast 30-bus to Georgetown/Foggy Bottom and H bus to 14th Street area. If I had to pick between Bethesda and Tenley, I think I'd learn more to Tenley because it's so much easier to access the rest of the city.
Tenleytown also has its own Wholefoods (although I much prefer the one in Friendship Heights, which is more spacious).
I consider the Tenley Whole Foods to be more like a Whole Foods Express.Friendship's is so much nicer.