Anonymous wrote:LOVED the Warf. The only problem is parking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in Navy Yard. There is very little retail. No place to shop, no place to get your nails done. I would not want to live there.
I’ll give you there is little retail, but the nail salon on 4th Street is steps from Yards Park is always packed.
Ok, one nail salon doesn't make it a neighborhood. Honestly the areas around are a bit sketchy and not so nice, some ugly housing around outside shiny condos and it feels isolated to me, I would not live there, not to mention with kids and school options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Navy Yard is okay. I don’t care for the Wharf, it has a suburban feel and most of the restaurants are too expensive/not kid friendly.
I love the Wharf and think the exact opposite. Its the only neighborhood in DC with waterfront access and amazing amenities. The outdoor entertainment with live musicians feels like the kind of thing you'd see in Miami and California. We're lucky to have it here.
What? It's definitely not the only area of DC with waterfront access. Georgetown waterfront has been around for a while even before the new park opened up. Alexandria also has waterfront and water views.
A) Alexandria is in Virginia.
B) I know about Georgetown hence my qualifier 'and amazing amenities'. Georgetown's waterfront is boring and sad. And its their own fault. The local community has been fighting development in business and transportation for decades. Well now stores are closing left and right, and people are flocking to other areas of D.C. and the Wharf to get what they could have been.
Georgetown is a real residential neighborhood with functional amenities, there is shopping, entertainment, drug stores and banks and grocery stores and hair salons, schools and major universities as well as offices. It's not just a tourist or a night out destination. There are more food choices there than what Wharf has to offer, there is fast food and fancy restaurants and euro bakeries and coffee shops. Sure it's not a hot new culinary destination, but there are still more options there and it's a much more developed area. You make it sound like it's urban decay. Boring is in the eye of the beholder, every area has its charms. Wharf charm is largely artificial, similar to Mosaic or Reston, e.g. suburban outdoor mall but without retail. It's natural charm is waterfront, but the area is too small for more than a day outing. People are flocking wherever it's convenient, I doubt any of these neighborhoods will completely lose their patrons.
There are more food options in Georgetown, it's true. Of course, with a few exceptions, they universally suck. Seriously, other than Baked 'n Wired and Chez Billy Sud, where's the good food in Georgetown?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in Navy Yard. There is very little retail. No place to shop, no place to get your nails done. I would not want to live there.
I’ll give you there is little retail, but the nail salon on 4th Street is steps from Yards Park is always packed.
Ok, one nail salon doesn't make it a neighborhood. Honestly the areas around are a bit sketchy and not so nice, some ugly housing around outside shiny condos and it feels isolated to me, I would not live there, not to mention with kids and school options.
Wut? What sketchy areas are there near 4th Street SE?
I know, right? Where is the ugly housing and sketchy areas? The Potomac River is south. Head east to Barracks Row. Head west to SW waterfront. Head north and you are in Capitol South and the Brent catchment. Maybe all those senators are too sketchy for PP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in Navy Yard. There is very little retail. No place to shop, no place to get your nails done. I would not want to live there.
I’ll give you there is little retail, but the nail salon on 4th Street is steps from Yards Park is always packed.
Ok, one nail salon doesn't make it a neighborhood. Honestly the areas around are a bit sketchy and not so nice, some ugly housing around outside shiny condos and it feels isolated to me, I would not live there, not to mention with kids and school options.
Wut? What sketchy areas are there near 4th Street SE?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in Navy Yard. There is very little retail. No place to shop, no place to get your nails done. I would not want to live there.
I’ll give you there is little retail, but the nail salon on 4th Street is steps from Yards Park is always packed.
Ok, one nail salon doesn't make it a neighborhood. Honestly the areas around are a bit sketchy and not so nice, some ugly housing around outside shiny condos and it feels isolated to me, I would not live there, not to mention with kids and school options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in Navy Yard. There is very little retail. No place to shop, no place to get your nails done. I would not want to live there.
I’ll give you there is little retail, but the nail salon on 4th Street is steps from Yards Park is always packed.
Ok, one nail salon doesn't make it a neighborhood. Honestly the areas around are a bit sketchy and not so nice, some ugly housing around outside shiny condos and it feels isolated to me, I would not live there, not to mention with kids and school options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The grit will come as the shine wears off.
This. "Why didn't they build an OLD building?" is about the stupidest anti new urbanism take there is.
This is one of the reasons I slightly prefer Navy Yard to the Wharf, though I can see the benefit of each. Navy Yard has been developed slowly, by multiple builders. A few of the old actual "Navy Yard" buildings have been preserved and repurposed like the boilermaker shops and lumber shed.
The Wharf had multiple architects but was redeveloped en masse. There wasn't much to preserve other than the fish market, or what was there couldn't be preserved while creating a more vibrant urban environment. That, plus the mix of restaurants seem more geared toward special event dining than the variety of price points available in the Navy Yard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in Navy Yard. There is very little retail. No place to shop, no place to get your nails done. I would not want to live there.
I’ll give you there is little retail, but the nail salon on 4th Street is steps from Yards Park is always packed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The grit will come as the shine wears off.
This. "Why didn't they build an OLD building?" is about the stupidest anti new urbanism take there is.
Anonymous wrote:I work in Navy Yard. There is very little retail. No place to shop, no place to get your nails done. I would not want to live there.
Anonymous wrote:The grit will come as the shine wears off.
Anonymous wrote:Personally I think the places are boring and sterile with manufactured culture and overpriced too boot
But, this is the new trend in what yuppies want. Taking the worst of the suburbs (National Harbor, the "new" Clarendon" and putting it in an "urban" environment.