Anonymous wrote:Buy on 16th. Brookland is hellish for crime, but even if that miraculously got better, the neighborhood is so cut off from the rest of DC that the commute isn’t worth it. Might as well live in the burbs.
Brookland is an acquired taste. People who bought there have a Stockholm syndrome. We almost bought there and thank your lucky stars every day for bailing on it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I swear it’s also the smell of weed. It’s not the weed itself for me, but the smell is awful.
Ha ha that's everywhere in DC now, and actually a lot of other cities also.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stats say NW appreciates the most
Went to Brookland, was burglared and almost shot, never stepped foot in again. Good riddance
Where and when? I've lived in Brookland twice. Was wonderful both times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There will always be a ceiling on appreciation in Brookland because of the neighborhood schools. Until the residents who are buying $1 million homes start sending their kids to their neighborhood schools instead of sending them out of the neighborhood, nothing will change.
There are a dozen good charter schools quite close to Brookland. Many people actually move to the neighborhood because their kid found a place in the schools.
Anonymous wrote:There will always be a ceiling on appreciation in Brookland because of the neighborhood schools. Until the residents who are buying $1 million homes start sending their kids to their neighborhood schools instead of sending them out of the neighborhood, nothing will change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:EOTP areas are always the first he feel downturns and then the hardest. Did people think that because a couple white people from state schools moved in that the dynamics of disproportionate crime and economic impacts would cease? That the schools would turn around?
People with means didn’t want to live there for the last 100 years but you thought the last ten years was the new forever normal? This could be a blip a dip or a crash but what ever it is you signed up for a front row seat to it and all future neg fluctuations. Not the end of the world but don’t act surprised.
Brookland has ALWAYS been stable because of Catholic. Some neighborhoods don't want to mirror WOTP. The people there are fantastic. I also think in the last 10 years it's become too expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Stats say NW appreciates the most
Went to Brookland, was burglared and almost shot, never stepped foot in again. Good riddance
Anonymous wrote:Instead of Brookland, you would be better off in Anacostia. Better location, cheaper and newer built homes.
Anonymous wrote:EOTP areas are always the first he feel downturns and then the hardest. Did people think that because a couple white people from state schools moved in that the dynamics of disproportionate crime and economic impacts would cease? That the schools would turn around?
People with means didn’t want to live there for the last 100 years but you thought the last ten years was the new forever normal? This could be a blip a dip or a crash but what ever it is you signed up for a front row seat to it and all future neg fluctuations. Not the end of the world but don’t act surprised.
Anonymous wrote:No. That’s all.
Too dangerous, too mosquitoey, too isolated, too no-good-school
Just no
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope that the DC council understands that people are leaving DC. Forget about tax hikes, the council needs to focus on bringing down crime. Not just violent crime, but petty theft as well. So tired of going into stores where everything is locked up.
DC's population is actually growing (slowly) it's just not growing the demographic that buys million dollar houses in Brookland.
The real problem though isn't crime, despite the weird obsessions of this board, it's that houses in Brookland were only worth a million dollars with a 3% interest rate. A $900,000 mortgage at 3% is $3,794 a month, which is a totally reasonable price to pay to live in a SFH in a decent part of the city with a good commute despite not having amazing schools or walkability. A $900,000 mortgage at 7% is $5,988, which is absolutely not a reasonable price to pay for that same neighborhood.
If people listed their homes at $600-700K to get that sub-$4k mortgage payment houses in Brookland would sell like hotcakes, but nobody wants to lower their price and take a haircut.
Something's got to give though, because there are only so many buyers who can afford a million plus and they have no reason to pay that in Brookland when that same money could get them so much more elsewhere.