Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:20002. It peaked about 10 years ago. Downhill since.
Absolutely this. The standard of living has nosedived. Nearly everyone I know on my block -- one block south of H Street, which has gone to shit -- is talking about moving.
Yep. Areas like H Street had a magic and energy to them in the 2010s. Then cracks started to show in 2018/2019 and it went to h*ll during COVID and has never bounced back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on what you mean by “nicer.” Are you equating it with “wealthier?“
For example, a previous poster from 22207 says that that area was not “nicer“ 20 years ago. Actually, we were in the thick of raising kids there 20 years ago and from what I read on DCUM now I would argue that it was, in fact, “nicer” then. It was more affordable, the schools were smaller and less crowded, and the people generally seemed a lot nicer. We still live in the area and on occasion find ourselves in 22207, and the only thing different that we say about it now is that the smaller houses have been replaced with McMansions and I don’t think that makes it a “nicer” neighborhood. It just makes it a less affordable one.
Spoken like a true middle classer who would probably complain about their increased property taxes. I’d much rather have a $3m house in my neighborhood than the $500k teardowns that were there 20years ago.
So you’re confirming you’re one of the elitists who don’t feel like middle class families deserve to live in decent neighborhoods. You also are confirming you’re one of the people who doesn’t believe in cohesiveness or charm within neighborhoods. Putting up the $3 million huge homes among houses in a more modest neighborhood changes the entire dynamic and not in a positive way.
You realize your nitwit argument works both ways, right? Why are you too good for a regular working class or middle class neighborhood? Why do you need to be in a ritzy neighborhood amongst multi-million dollar new builds? Because you’re a shallow elitist without the bank account to back it up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:20002. It peaked about 10 years ago. Downhill since.
Absolutely this. The standard of living has nosedived. Nearly everyone I know on my block -- one block south of H Street, which has gone to shit -- is talking about moving.
Yep. Areas like H Street had a magic and energy to them in the 2010s. Then cracks started to show in 2018/2019 and it went to h*ll during COVID and has never bounced back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:20002. It peaked about 10 years ago. Downhill since.
Absolutely this. The standard of living has nosedived. Nearly everyone I know on my block -- one block south of H Street, which has gone to shit -- is talking about moving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on what you mean by “nicer.” Are you equating it with “wealthier?“
For example, a previous poster from 22207 says that that area was not “nicer“ 20 years ago. Actually, we were in the thick of raising kids there 20 years ago and from what I read on DCUM now I would argue that it was, in fact, “nicer” then. It was more affordable, the schools were smaller and less crowded, and the people generally seemed a lot nicer. We still live in the area and on occasion find ourselves in 22207, and the only thing different that we say about it now is that the smaller houses have been replaced with McMansions and I don’t think that makes it a “nicer” neighborhood. It just makes it a less affordable one.
Spoken like a true middle classer who would probably complain about their increased property taxes. I’d much rather have a $3m house in my neighborhood than the $500k teardowns that were there 20years ago.
So you’re confirming you’re one of the elitists who don’t feel like middle class families deserve to live in decent neighborhoods. You also are confirming you’re one of the people who doesn’t believe in cohesiveness or charm within neighborhoods. Putting up the $3 million huge homes among houses in a more modest neighborhood changes the entire dynamic and not in a positive way.
Anonymous wrote:20002. It peaked about 10 years ago. Downhill since.
Anonymous wrote:The West End of the City of Alexandria used to be so much nicer. Now they have installed a lot of affordable housing buildings mostly all clustered in the West End. It's way too dense and crime, that never used to be a huge issue is now a very big problem for residents daily. It's depressing.
Anonymous wrote:Bethesda, yes. Way more trees and no huge new houses on small lots. Our town picnic was grilling and potluck, now it’s catered - because it’s less work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:22044 doesn't seem to have changed much (unfortunately). It's overdue for an overhaul.
I really like 22044. It could be a great area, not sure why the development was mostly low-income housing and strip malls. I would much rather live there than my outside the beltway home.. but the schools....