Submitted by erichinnw t3_11dea05 in washingtondc

I went to SW/Rubell over the weekend and a couple of things stood out to me. On my way to the museum, I had to use the bathroom, so I went to the SW Library. I've lived in a lot of places (ex-military) and DC Libraries are no joke. It was NICE. New computer equipment, beautiful architecture, comfortable seating, clean bathrooms and it's not just SW. I've been to a bunch of the libraries and they are fantastic. DC has its fair share of issues, but our library system is amazing.

The other thing was that the Rubell had an admission fee, but was free for DC residents with a valid ID. The number of free museums that we have here has completely re-set my expectations. When I travel and go to a museum/attraction and there's an admission fee, it annoys me.

I love to bitch about the crime levels, cat-sized rats, MD/VA drivers, etc... as much as the next person, but man, we do some things really fucking well here.

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potatopotatoed t1_ja827ga wrote

Getting interest on my apt security deposit! Never heard of this elsewhere.

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resdivinae t1_ja846ww wrote

I like the city's amount of green spaces and parks. I also like that DC has actual bars, unlike VA.

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joymarie21 t1_ja84ey2 wrote

Moving a lot of the annoying bureaucracy online has been so great. I just paid my auto registration/inspection fee/neighborhood parking pass on line and got my registration card and sticker in the mail in a few days. I remember when you had to spend at least half a day at the DMV to do anything.

I had to go there in person to the DMV a couple of years ago to update my license to a real ID and it wasn't bad at all. Waited less than an hour, all the employees were helpful and cheery. The DMV used to suck so bad.

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orionstein t1_ja84o7q wrote

Echostage has really good acts if you're into the current edm festival scene

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Ornery-Classic-894 t1_ja84wxn wrote

Libraries can be hit or miss, but that SW one is brand new and really impressive. I lived there with the old library and it was just fine. They did a great job redoing it

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demarginator t1_ja854tp wrote

Just came back from a great trip in NYC. Each time I return to DC I remark how much I love how many more trees there are here, and just how much greener it is here in general. NY has some amazing parks, but we have trees everywhere.

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london_toby t1_ja85qw8 wrote

My biggest surprise of moving to DC? How nice the people working at DMV are! And efficient! I went to two locations for different issues: taking driving test, getting my license, registering out of state car etc and everyone was so nice and helpful. And know what they are doing! Unlike NYC DMV …

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dcsnarkington t1_ja86bj0 wrote

Everything is close, 20 minutes in an Uber. You can go to lunch in Georgetown, a baseball game, and a ballet in the same day and you won't spend more than an hour getting between venues.

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dirtypinksweatshirt t1_ja87658 wrote

Obviously the metro can and should be improved, but compared to most other cities’ public transit infrastructure it’s really good. Lots of stops, relatively clean stations and cars, and well integrated with an enormous bus system that, together, will help you get anywhere.

Also, if you include the larger metropolitan area, DC has an enormous variety of immigrant food. Beyond the well known classics like Ethiopian (everywhere) and Vietnamese in Eden Center, you can find SO many cuisines to explore - Pakistani, Caribbean, Korean, West African, Central American of all sorts, Malaysian, Laotian, Filipino, the list goes on and on.

And if you’re a cook or home chef in DC, you can find almost any ingredient or specialty kitchen tool you could possibly imagine. There are soooo many good, local farmers and ranchers in MD, VA, WV, and PA who sell in the city, meaning you can get produce and proteins that are as good as the best stuff used in Michelin-starred restaurants. Just go to the DuPont farmer’s market in the Spring if you want to see for yourself. Foraged mushrooms, incredible salad greens, 40-month aged ham that’s as good as the best ham you could import from Spain, pasture-raised duck and chicken, and award-winning bloomy rind cheeses, just to name a few. For instance, the chef at The Dabney (Michelin-started and named Washingtonian’s top restaurant in the city) and I can get produce and local meat from the same local vendors who sell at Dupont. He’s better at cooking it, but we both get to use the same amazing, high quality ingredients.

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orionstein t1_ja88a08 wrote

We were at that show too! We worried whether they would hold up, but it was still a pretty fun show. Kind of hilarious to see him looking bored and chainsmoking up on stage though!

We've been going far too often though. Going to the Excision show on Saturday.

We realized how good we had it when in just one week, they had Loud Luxury, Disco Lines, Benny Benassi, Nicky Romero, and Afrojack. We like dubstep and hardstyle (rip) more, but even that's not a bad lineup anywhere.

I tried to check out the scene in Atlanta and Philly when I visited, and it feels like a lot of other cities just don't have the names coming through that we do. They have smaller/more underground djs, but if you like the big name festival acts, Echostage is actually really good. So many acts that Steve Aoki is playing on a Wednesday!

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1800TurdFerguson t1_ja88lnv wrote

That’s a relatively recent development…LOL

The DMV was terrible for quite a few years after I moved here. They lost a copy of my car title when I paid it off, which caused a months-long stand-off between the finance company and the DMV.

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sardine_succotash t1_ja899yy wrote

Flag design. Minimalist but elegant. Simple but distinctive.

Not gaudy like Maryland or bizarre like Virginia.

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morganwr t1_ja89t2p wrote

Walking city and transit, 311 Bulk Pick Up Service, Tenant's Rights, Libraries (yes!), green space, and Ethiopian food of course.

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Strawbrawry t1_ja89yk1 wrote

I come from a college town and our library system was always one of my favorite things. DC has an excellent library system IME.

Protip: Lots of people are unaware that with a library card you also get access to a few apps that rival paid subscription apps, some apps work with what your library has IIRC. Hoopla, Kanopy, Overdrive, and Libby are all great apps to get when you grab a library card. I have also found most libraries have a pretty current selection of media content. Pretty sweet deal for $20 annually (free for DMV residents as I've been corrected, sorry for any confusion).

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BigLeagueBanker69 t1_ja8a4un wrote

100%. Every time I visit NYC I gain more appreciation for DC.

I think in addition to the greenery, it's also the way that the streets are wider & buildings shorter so you feel like you're truly in the open air / outdoors. Sometimes in Manhattan the masses of cement sky-scrapers going out in every direction can make one feel really caged in.

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PalpitationNo3106 t1_ja8auqi wrote

Your landlord holds your security deposit in a separate bank account (and it has to be a DC bank account) after one year whatever interest your account accrues is yours when it is returned to you. It’s not a lot of money, but it helps keep landlords honest about

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fatboybigwall t1_ja8d80r wrote

I don't think there's a charge for at least nearby MD or VA residents anymore... before moving into DC proper last year, I was living in Maryland (Prince George's County) and I got a DC card for free. I think there are now reciprocal agreements.

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NoNoNext t1_ja8dlzu wrote

I had to go to the DMV a few months ago, and even though I dreaded the wait times, it was actually a super quick and pleasant experience. They’ve really improved things, even my first visit in 2015 wasn’t terrible. I’m also a fan of the DIY inspection kiosks they’ve set up - I no longer have to go to Half St on the weekend and wait behind dozens of cars.

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joymarie21 t1_ja8ei8y wrote

Absolutely, it was terrible. I went to renew my license once and at the time I wore contacts with one eye corrected to see distance and one less corrected for close up. I failed the eye test. I went home, got my glasses, came back, got back in line, waited hours, and passed the test. It took a ridiculous amount of time and two managers to override the failed eye test and approve my license. Sort of my fault, but a crazy amount of time and work to fix.

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demarginator t1_ja8j1cj wrote

So I also like the skyscrapers in Manhattan. It's a totally different feel from here. Sorry, I wasn't trying to make my post a DC vs NY, because I love them both for how different they are yet can feel so similar. It might be the walkability of both that make me feel comfortable going between the two. My husband and I talked about how if we weren't happily settled in DC with our friends, house, and garden we would consider moving there. But (speaking of trees) we want to see the trees we planted in our yard grow into maturity.

I also think that DC is a lot better about tree planting/preservation than most suburbs in the US, where they should have room for more. Instead they have seas of strip malls and nearly empty parking lots. Again, trying to break the DC vs NY narrative I inadvertently started.

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borneoknives t1_ja8jqcz wrote

My buddy is the branch manager of the southwest library. She is an awesome person and an excellent librarian. She would be happy to see this.

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walkallover1991 t1_ja8jwhx wrote

DC provides a decent amount of resources for first-time homeowners compared to other cities I have seen.

They also provide funding for homeowners to install rain gardens and rain barrels, which I thought was neat.

The local network of Fresh Farm Markets is pretty great and I like that the District government has a decent spread of food waste/composting drop-off points.

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BigLeagueBanker69 t1_ja8kg8m wrote

NO! You must pick one or the other. There is no room for nuance and/or respectful disagreements in the Reddit comments.

Reddit comments section is WAR. Come prepared to die on your hill, or evacuate the hill with your hands up immediately. This is a zero sum game friend. Every compliment to the subject means you're insulting all things other than the subject. You can't tell me you like DC without it being implicit that you HATE nyc. You want to drop a BOMB on it along with all those smelly garbage bags that make the entire city smell like urine on hot summer days.

HEY EVERYONE u/demarginator IS OUR NEW GENERAL. HE IS LEADING THE WAR CRY TO ASSERT DC'S DOMINANCE OVER OVERRATED AND SMELLY NYC. ALL ABOARD THE WAR TRAIN, LOCK AND LOAD BOYS!

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EhrenScwhab t1_ja8ko04 wrote

Being a military dude who has lived her a couple times, whenever friends or family come to visit, I always tell them that there is no better place to do good stuff for "free" than Washington DC.

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BigLeagueBanker69 t1_ja8kzqq wrote

How beautiful and relatively easy driving and/or flying in or out of the city is (outside of rush hour). At least if you're coming/going from the VA side. I will die on the hill that the flight into DCA on a clear day, is one of the most beautiful landing views of any airport on earth. Same with driving out to VA/Alexandria on the Arland D Williams Memorial Bridge. It's literally a stunning view as you're crossing out of the city. Normally you're met with project buildings, industrial zones, etc. as you cross over the city limits.

Manhattan is a classic example, you have to drive through the valley of ashes and industrial wasteland every time you come or go from the city. There's like 30 minutes of driving through absolute hellscapes before you get to any form of nice / inhabitable suburbs or greenery. Flying in is the same. Whether you come into JFK / Newark / LaGuardia you're going to have to trek through a lot of mess to get into Manhattan. Also hard to get much of a pretty view of the skyline when you're stuck in traffic under the tunnel!

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Panda_alley t1_ja8oe81 wrote

The public recs and public pools are fantastic, at least my neck of the woods.

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nakoros t1_ja8omd3 wrote

On the subject of city services, I absolutely love the Ft Totten Transfer Station. I never thought going to a dump would make my day, but every time it's been a great experience. Employees are friendly, helpful, and I get junk out of my house. Went to Benning Road, since Ft Totten was/is closed, and it was also a good experience

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nakoros t1_ja8oueg wrote

It's so great, they do an amazing job. My daughter loves the kids area. One of the saddest things about putting her in daycare is that she can't go to their storytime anymore!

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Tulrin t1_ja8oy0q wrote

The original MLK Library design is by Mies van der Rohe, so it's a great visit if you're into architecture. They did an excellent job on the redesign, updating it while keeping a Modernist look. I love the main stairwell.

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hopefulbaconn t1_ja8pdga wrote

You cannot help comparing though because they are two very different cities. NYC is a one of a kind city, full of lives and characters and humanity and rats and trash bags and dirty air and bumpy smelly roads and arts and styles and lights and concrete.

I visited NYC a few days ago and I still found the city so damn exciting even though I had been there so many times before. Then I came back to DC and I realized how nice DC is in every way, and that most of the time, all I really want is ‘nice’ 🥹

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let-it-rain-sunshine t1_ja8qudd wrote

We do Happy Hour(s) really well. There are some places that this sort of discount alchohol is not permitted. How sad.

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MFoy t1_ja8tbb1 wrote

Yes it is. All establishments in Virginia have to sell a certain percentage of their total sales in food if they want to have a liquor license. You can't just sell alcohol. There are also extreme limitations over happy hour specials and even advertising them. Until just a few years ago, you couldn't put a sign outside telling what happy hour specials an establishment had.

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resdivinae t1_ja8v1rh wrote

Legally, VA does not have stand-alone bars. There are only restaurants that serve alcohol. Any establishment that serves alcohol must earn 51% of its revenue from food sales.

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MFoy t1_ja8wpa5 wrote

Because if you serve hard liquor, you have to maintain a 45%-55% food to mixed drink ratio (beer and wine don't count). You can't have a hole in the wall establishment that focuses on selling alcohol.

If you have a beer/wine only license, you have to sell $4,000 in food a month, no matter what. $2,000 of that must be in entrees.

Exceptions have been carved out over the years for entertainment venues, vineyards and breweries where alcohol is brewed on-premise, but these laws date back to the end of prohibition, and have basically stopped all dive bars from existing in Virginia.

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goba101 t1_ja8wpsz wrote

It’s diverse, but not hectic as NY. You have a good amount of fine dinning options, the metro is so much better than many metro in other parts of the country. Buying a property here makes economical sense, since the fed government is here and has most of the workforce.

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IamMe90 t1_ja91exq wrote

What's the point of this? The OP didn't even mention New York. I love NYC too but why don't you go appreciate it somewhere where it's the actual subject of discussion? Unless you just enjoy shitting on DC in its own sub for sport or something, in which case, you do you I guess 🤷‍♂️

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MusignyBlanc t1_ja92eox wrote

Very true. Lots of under-appreciation.

For example, I got my catalytic converter removed in under 2 minutes. AND is was free!!!

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XcXBOX360 t1_ja92rfn wrote

How does that work if they happen to get a bunch of customers who only buy booze and throw off the ratio? Do they just stop selling drinks until enough people have bought food again?

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CandyCaneCrisp t1_ja93x03 wrote

DC is remarkably pretty for a city of its size. I first came in the winter and it was the nicest looking of the big East Coast cities I had seen. The cherry blossoms cinched the deal.

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resdivinae t1_ja94gyv wrote

I'm not sure, tbh. But judging by the lack of generous happy hours around here, I think that might be one tactic used.

Also, one time I went to the Brass Rabbit in Clarendon for a $3 wine night. Of course, it turned out that was too good to be true. Wine was only $3 is you ordered it with food.

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lobotomy42 t1_ja96hsn wrote

Playground quality is best in the nation.

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PlaceAdHere t1_ja97uv1 wrote

I like being able to drive into DC (as a visitor in the last and local now) and be able to drive and more importantly park without a massive headache or financial hardship.

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Formergr t1_ja98ivj wrote

Wow, I had no idea!! My inspection is due end of the month and I've been trying to figure out when to shoehorn in a visit to Half Street and fight the line before then.

The info at the link isn't too explicit.

~~If I already renewed my registration (which I did, got new sticker a couple weeks ago), this included the cost of inspection, right? Even if I didn't select that anywhere on an online menu when I renewed my registration?

If so, I just roll up to that kiosk, do the thing, and they'll somehow know and send me a new sticker?~~

Sorry, hate to hit you with questions, but the link is less than forthcoming on the details...

ETA: I just looked it up on Google Maps to get the drive time, and some of the reviews included enough info to answer my questions: >The on screen prompts are easy to follow and a temporary inspection sticker will print for you while one gets sent to your address in the mail.

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Ok_Culture_3621 t1_ja99fed wrote

Same experience here. I managed to get one of last quick appointments when I moved here in 2020 and no one acted like they quietly debating on whether or not they could get away with killing me. Which has been more my experience in the five other states I’ve lived in.

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AlienBeach t1_ja99voz wrote

Public tash cans in general. I know the way NYC handles trash is unique to them among American cities. But every time I travel to a different American city, especially on the west coast, I'm always annoyed at the lack of public trash cans. Portland Oregon and San Francisco are particularly bad at this. I wouldn't be shocked if their reputations for being dirty was directly tied to this. In DC/Silver Spring/Alexandria/Arlington etc, the commercial districts and major roads have public trash cans basically on every block, on both sides of the block, and on every bus stop. I always notice it when I travel to a different city and I have trash and I go to where I expect a trash can to be but nothing.

I was in Portland recently and had a candy wrapper I wanted to throw away. I was on a major commerical street, and I had to walk so many blocks to find a single public can, and even then, I had to cross the street to use it

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dafishinsea t1_ja9bhfl wrote

Being the right size. Not overly crowded or hectic, but dense enough for walkability, or for investments in public transit/pedestrian infrastructure to be feasible.

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Devastator1981 t1_ja9fnca wrote

Did DC libraries make a decision a few years ago to “have fun” with the architecture of their libraries? Love them. They are inviting unique designs.

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BoogerPresley t1_ja9hv2t wrote

Capital Bikeshare- DC did it early and did it well*.

*(after learning from the mistakes made with SmartBike)

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orionstein t1_ja9i75w wrote

Really it depends on the crowd. When we went to BTSM or Shaq it was overcrowded but the crowd had some really good vibes, and everyone was there for that, so we were happy and had a lot of fun. When we went to Meduza it was overcrowded but everyone was acting like they were out at a nightclub instead of a show, so it kind of sucked.

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ClusterFugazi t1_ja9idj1 wrote

I called 311/911 for various issues and the city responded QUICKLY. Here’s a list:

  1. Our blocks trash was not picked up, the city sent a trash truck a few hours later.
  2. Alley lamp was out behind our house and within the week it was fixed.
  3. Street lamp was out on our block (parts of the block was pitch black), the city fixed the lamp with 24 hours.
  4. Bundy field in Shaw had nearly all of the flood lights out for nigh soccer. Within a reasonable time all of the lights were fixed. Within a year later they upgraded to LED lamps.
  5. Shooting on the corner of Quincy Pl NE and North Capitol last summer, police showed up within 3min?
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9throwaway2 t1_ja9jdv8 wrote

I know! I showed up with my paperwork and was out with in 15 minutes. I had so much free time I ended up going to TJ max next door and wasting money on a cat tree. My cat did not like that and ripped it all up. So the efficient DMV actually cost me money.

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Snow_source t1_ja9nttx wrote

> The DMV was terrible for quite a few years after I moved here.

It highly depends on the service center.

The one off Rhode Island Ave?

They lied straight to my face about what documents they needed to register my out-of-state car. I literally pulled out the lady's business card the next visit and said "Is this you? I talked to you yesterday and this is what you told me I needed."

She suddenly remembered me and registered my car.

The one in Georgetown? I was in and out in 30 min. No issues.

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NorseTikiBar t1_ja9ogzt wrote

It's more in how you'll see square footage allocated. There's always going to be a few extra tables next to a dance floor, and the kitchen is likely to stay open longer. They're mostly subtle things that you wouldn't think about, but it does mean that a small bar like Showtime couldn't work in VA.

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layzie77 t1_ja9ozki wrote

The parks, so many museums, the train system (for American standards), the Salvadoran,Vietnamese and Ethopian food is really good.

I also think we do well for things to do and see as a tourist.

The Architecture in this city is one of the best.

I am being bias since this is my hometown. Any DC natives or long term residents here who moved far away from the DMV? What do you miss the most?

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mr_grission t1_ja9pm1z wrote

The walkability is awesome. If you live anywhere near downtown you can pretty easily walk to a ton of places that scratch different itches. I can go to Eastern Market, to a Smithsonian museum, to Nats Park, to U Street, etc just on foot pretty easily.

You can get around the downtown core even as a newcomer thanks to the basic organizational system of letters and numbers.

DC has enough to do to keep yourself entertained but not so much that it's overwhelming.

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BirdLawyerPerson t1_ja9rlxf wrote

Not only that, they must also have a certain percentage of their floor space and seats in a traditional dining room setting.

So even if they're serving enough food to cover the revenue requirement, it'd be illegal to open a bar that just has a bar and barstools.

Plus they're not allowed to keep the bar open for drinks unless the kitchen is also open for food orders.

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BirdLawyerPerson t1_ja9sipv wrote

There's a floor plan requirement, too, where at least half of the seats in an establishment must be at tables or booths, rather than at the bar. So there aren't the traditional narrow bars like in most cities, where you walk in and it's a few high tops plus the bar itself.

Throw in the food requirement (and more importantly, the requirement that the kitchen always be serving full entrees while alcohol is being served), and you basically don't have bars in Virginia.

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Alex3M3TI8 t1_ja9v17b wrote

Yup! I used it the about a month ago for registration renewal on a car with the necessary plug (whatever that thing is that they plug into, I have no idea). It looks like it is in the parking lot of a school building, which I think it is.

You drive up, and the instructions on the screen are pretty comprehensible. You run your car for a few minutes and it was pretty painless and I didn't need amazing automotive skills to understand and get it done.

The registration sticker arrived in my mailbox a little while later. Super easy and Covid-Approved!

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Rtstevie t1_ja9z75g wrote

Went to Paris a few years ago and went to the national French military museum because I’m that guy, where the tomb of Napoleon is also located.

There was a fee for the museum itself, and another one to see Napoleon’s tomb.

It just made me reflect and how here in DC we’d never consider charging people for our public museums or charge people to go see say, JFK’s grave at Arlington. Would be antithetical to us.

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demarginator t1_ja9zsod wrote

I hope DC listens to our tree praises and tightens protections. It was hard enough when I had to deal with developers holding trees hostage or just not caring and cutting them down. Now I hear they're poisoning special and heritage trees? If the city doesn't protect our existing canopy we will become (edit: Nova).

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bhu87ygv t1_jaa0k0k wrote

Clean downtown; clean, decent metro; beautiful architecture (residential and government).

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laborpool t1_jaa1vfp wrote

I thought this was the law everywhere. The deposit money is supposed to go into escrow where it gains interest. The landlord isn’t supposed to spend it. Your money is being held and to compensate for that you get to keep the interest earned on it (because theoretically you could have invested it or placed that money into a savings account).

I’ve earned interest on security deposits in Richmond and Columbus OH.

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moonbunnychan t1_jaa7cmx wrote

Also since all bars have to also technically be a restaurant, you get WAY more people bringing their kids to what is very clearly an adult environment and that gets annoying fast. Some places have a no kids after a certain time policy, but not many, and even the ones that do often don't enforce it.

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moonbunnychan t1_jaa7n2t wrote

The theater scene here is probably only behind NYC in scope. There's SO many shows!

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JaapHoop t1_jaa8qck wrote

Handjibbers. Nobody gives a good ‘old fashioned’ like a Washingtonian. Over the pants, under the pants. It’s crazy.

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NoDesinformatziya t1_jaaa1ee wrote

Because he's a New Yorker and it's both their birthright and a compulsion to interject how cool NY is into every conversation without noticing how little people care or want to hear it. Bonus points if they manage to ruin their own night by complaining so often it takes them out of whatever experience they're currently having.

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Kenearionlloyd t1_jaacj5c wrote

DC born and bred, now living in Mt. Vernon. Working on an assignment in DC now and realize it is no longer my home. Grew up by RFK, DC General, old DC jail, Armory…. Well remember the East side West side beef! DC no longer feels like home.

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miles-1243 t1_jaacuuw wrote

I grew up in DC and it wasn’t till my 20s that I realized any museum charged admission.

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truce_m3 t1_jaadn69 wrote

DC is very lush for a major city.

Also, the city does a lot of things free or for little cost -- public transportation, museums, etc,.

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Pipes_of_Pan t1_jaae3wj wrote

Amen. The difference between sitting in a line of cars around the block for five+ hours to get inspected vs. the four minutes it takes today is almost too much to believe. The DMV and inspection station have had a remarkable improvement and deserve a ton of credit.

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romulusjsp t1_jaafvgx wrote

Everyone rightly talks shit about how awful DC summer is. Winter isn’t great either, though it’s far from as bad as someplace like Chicago. DC in the spring and autumn, though, is absolutely fucking beautiful*

*i do not get bad seasonal allergies, YMMV

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someotherbitch t1_jaag8xu wrote

I think DC is just prettier in general. I suspect the lack of skyscrapers plays quite a big part in the greenery being so widespread.

Coming back to DC from NYC feels almost serene. Especially if you ride the metro, you have a good 3 months of loving it after experiencing the NYC subway

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LeucasAndTheGoddess t1_jaah0on wrote

Bookstores - new and especially used. I’ve lived in Boston, London, and NYC, and DC/the greater metro area is hands down the best for an inveterate bibliophile like me.

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marcove3 t1_jaajpi1 wrote

I love cycling around the city. We have amazing trails and many places are reachable using only bikelanes. Still dream of the day they make them all protected. Maybe even raise some to sidewalk level. 15th street would be an amazing place to start.

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marcove3 t1_jaak1gc wrote

Does this apply to breweries? Or only for places that sell spirits? I feel I've been to breweries/wineries in VA that dont sell food or just have food trucks that dont seem to be affiliated to the establishment.

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mthchsnn t1_jaavqxz wrote

If you produce alcohol it's a different kind of license, and if you do it on a farm it's another different kind of license. The rule doesn't apply to wineries, for example.

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Gorf_the_Magnificent t1_jaazwwi wrote

Man, I’m glad to hear that. I lived in D.C. in the 1970’s and early 1980’s, and I called the non-emergency number on two occasions (one hit-and-run - minor car damage, but I was driving a government vehicle - and one illegal parker who had impossibly blocked my car when I needed to be somewhere). When the police arrived, they literally whined about how much work I was creating for them and encouraged me to drop it. There were also multiple WaPo stories about ambulances that took 20-30 minutes to get to their destination. It soured me against living in D.C. ever since. But I must say I’ve been hearing better things lately.

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LumpyPumpkin21 t1_jab1y48 wrote

DC leaves potholes unrepaired super well and then repair them incompletely also very well

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Sad-Cupcake-3919 t1_jab2ni3 wrote

We also have the best recreation centers, distribute it all across the city that I have ever seen in any other urban city.

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Sad-Cupcake-3919 t1_jab4hnp wrote

I agree with everyone’s celebration of free, museums and access to the public zoo. But those things are only free to us because we live here. We should remember they are owned by the federal government. Your tax dollars pay for all those free, museums and the zoo. So it only makes sense in other cities you would have to pay for museum entry

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thekalby t1_jab6cbv wrote

I felt the same way when I went and I thought it was just me? Big crowd, but I was still in and out in under 20 min and everyone I interacted with was super nice and helpful! What a difference from NJ.

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filstolealan t1_jab6djt wrote

Pools and golf courses are underrated. You’re never more then 20 mins from an indoor pool with lap lanes.

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gobias t1_jab8rpz wrote

There are some good dive bars that get by the food sales rule by having some awesome stuff on the menu, like Cue Club in Annandale, and also Mark’s Pub in Falls Church. There’s also Dogwood, 4 P’s, Spacebar, etc…but all of these places are forced to focus a huge amount of their attention on having a large food menu and not just be a bar.

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cubgerish t1_jac4r8c wrote

Your "nice" sentiment pretty much encapsulates it.

NYC without a doubt has more diversity and general 'stuff' on almost every block but......

DC streets don't smell like dog piss from April to October.

I love visiting NYC.... But I truly do love living here.

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Rude_Macaroon3741 t1_jac7tbm wrote

Wow never heard of that and certainly didn’t get a higher deposit back when I was a renter here? Thank you - I need to go look into this bc we are about move to London for a few years and plan to rent out our house while we’re gone.

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PalpitationNo3106 t1_jac94ja wrote

Well interest rates for escrow accounts have been almost nothing for years. But yes. You must open an escrow account at a bank in DC. You must tell your tenants what bank you are using, and every six months what the interest rate for the previous period was. Just remember that the security deposit is the tenant’s money, not the landlord’s

For a small landlord, or for any individual tenants, it’s a small amount of money (my last security deposit in DC was $500 (I lived there for 13 years so it’s been a while) even over that time at .25% it’s not much. But imagine being bozzutto, and having $2000 from each of 5000 tenants. The temptation to use that $10m for an investment must be high.

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Littlecat10 t1_jacrtcz wrote

I bitch about DC like it’s a part time job (I’m a reluctant transplant from Texas). But now that you mention it… the routine-type city services actually are amazing here. And the roads! The layout is pure chaos, but the lack of potholes is incredible. Credit where it’s due, I suppose.

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marcove3 t1_jad97sq wrote

They could improve the cost of metro though. It upsets me a little bit that I have to pay more during rush hr and that there are like 5 different fares based on distance.

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Just give us a flat fare like NYC does. or at least a low fare for local rides and a slightly higher one if you cross state lines or go to IAD.

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borneoknives t1_jadkqal wrote

> Does anyone know if DC libraries have any reciprocity with VA? (I have a card with Arlington’s library)

RECIPROCAL JURISDICTIONS

District of Columbia

Maryland Counties of: Frederick Montgomery Prince Georges

Virginia Cities of: Alexandria Falls Church Manassas Manassas Park

Counties of: fairfax Arlington Fauquier Loudoun Prince William

Takoma Park Md is NOT in the COG

https://research.fairfaxcounty.gov/c.php?g=726085&p=5445065

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