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==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.k12.dc.us/schools/Park_View/index.html Park View Elementary School]
* [http://www.k12.dc.us/schools/Park_View/index.html Park View Elementary School]

==Notes==
<references />


{{neighboring hoods
{{neighboring hoods

Revision as of 13:32, 6 February 2010

Map of Washington, D.C., with Park View highlighted in red

Park View is a neighborhood in central Washington, D.C., immediately north of Howard University. It is situated in the Northwest quadrant of the city and bordered by Park Place and the Armed Forces Retirement Home (known by its historic name, the Old Soldiers Home) to the east, Harvard Street to the south, Sherman Avenue to the west, and New Hampshire Avenue and Rock Creek Church Road to the north.

The name of the neighborhood comes from its views east into the campus of Old Soldiers' Home. At the time Park View was developed, and well into the 1960s, the Home's grounds were open to the public as a park. Those grounds were a designed urban landscape, including pedestrian paths and ponds, modelled along the principles of New York's Central Park. Indeed, when the Home's campus was developed into a public park in the later 1880s, it often was compared to Central Park.

Politically, Park View is in D.C.'s Ward 1.

A solidly residential community, Park View is a quiet corner of the city, one in which the recent trend toward gentrification has only recently found a foothold. Its one commercial corridor, Georgia Avenue, has a generous share of liquor stores, but the area has been declared a FOCUS improvement zone by the Mayor. The recent addition of a sit-down restaurant, the Looking Glass Lounge, and a yoga studio, Yogahouse, have reignited interest in the neighborhood. The Lamont Street Lofts, at Lamont Street and Georgia Avenue, offers probably the only genuine loft-space dwellings in the city. Further, a new charter school has been built at Georgia Avenue and Otis Place.

The neighborhood itself is well maintained and pleasantly suburban, populated mostly by middle-class African American families. Park View Elementary School, a major community anchor, is one of the most consistent and highly regarded public elementary schools in Washington.

Geography

The historical borders of Park View extended from Gresham Street north to Rock Creek Church Road and from Georgia Avenue to the Soldiers' Home grounds. The area bounded by Park Road, Georgia Avenue, and New Hampshire Avenue complete the Park View neighborhood.[1]


Notes

  1. ^ Directory and History of Park View, 1921.

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