Washington, D.C
Is Buying a Condo Worth it in WASHINGTON DC | 5 Reasons
Is Buying a Condo Worth it in WASHINGTON DC
Condos enjoyed a decades-long run of popularity in the Nation’s Capital. Then this thing called Covid hit and everyone scrambled to get out to the suburbs. They wanted land and space. This was short-sighted, even without knowing how long the pandemic would last. Now that we are coming up on the four-year anniversary of the world lockdown, how has condominium ownership fared? And is it time to consider buying a condo again?
Buyers have come back to the condo market, and the condo market is embracing them. The condo was in the corner of the room, smoking a cigarette, nursing a gin and tonic and saying, “Of all the gin joints in all the town, in all the world…”
I’m going to tell you five reasons why it’s a great idea to consider buying a condo.
1) Not many other people are…yet
Who do we always quote around here? Warren Buffet – Be greedy when others are fearful and fearful when others are greedy. Since 2023 when mortgage rates started rising, we’ve seen a resurfacing in the interest in condos. Why? These are buyers who have been priced out of single-family homes. The rat race of chasing the new homes, watching the prices get bid up, the contingencies be waived, that got old after a couple years. Condos in DC basically fell off a cliff and became very difficult to sell. We’ve seen a resurgence of people coming back to reconsider a condo. Of course, city life having opened back up again has helped.
Historically, as in, pre-covid, condos weren’t as sought after in the suburbs as they were in DC. People wanted their city-living but when they moved out to Northern Virginia or Montgomery County Maryland it was to buy a house. That’s not the case anymore in many parts of Northern Virginia. I have a client who is currently finding multiple offers on condos in places like Oakton, Reston and Herndon.
2) The Condo Market is Ready to Embrace Buyers
There is enough for sale in many areas that the buyer now has options of places to see, and choices to make. This is a good feeling when the last decade has been a time where all choices have been taken from buyers. You won’t have to settle. You can get a place that checks most if not all your boxes.
3) Escalations are Minimal
In cases where there is interest from multiple buyers, translating to multiple offers, you won’t see escalations like you used to or that you see on houses. The price escalations may go up $10,000 – $15,000. And while I get that this is money you would rather not spend, this feels like a dream compared to what things used to be like with a mass exodus of the condo market to single family homes and escalations of hundreds of thousands of dollars over asking price.
It’s also easier to “predict” what will happen on a condo escalation as opposed to houses where it was anyone’s guess if it would go up $50,000, $100,000 or $300,000.
4) Minimal Upkeep
Do you want to spend time mowing lawns, shoveling sidewalks or constantly fighting mice. Because that’s what homeownership has boiled down to for us. We don’t want to spend our time doing these things and it can be a real drag. I miss the days of dumping my trash down a chute and never seeing it again. I won’t miss not being on the email list serv for the rat patrol for our alley, where we’re reminded to put a rock on our trash cans to keep the rodents away.
If you are back to a life of travel and leisure again, then the idea of turning the key and walking away from a condo and not needing anyone to watch it for you is pretty appealing.
5) The Lender is Your Friend
You may recall that during the whole Covid pandemic, we also witnessed the collapse of the Surfside Condo building in Miami. Things changed with lenders as a result of this, and they changed for the better. Side note – I have a couple videos on condo documents and what you should look for in reviewing them.
Long before Surfside, I would tell anyone who would listen that I despise 1980’s construction. It feels shoddy no matter where it is. My condo in DC is from the early 80’s and it’s been riddled with issues that trace back to the corners that were cut when it was built. My parents had an early 80’s condo in Florida, same thing. You can usually tell 80’s construction by its general ugliness and popcorn ceilings. Surfside was also a 1981 product.
Your lender is going to do everything in their power to ensure you don’t find yourself in a Surfside situation. They have strengthened the requirements of condos, requiring larger amounts to be set aside for reserves, engineering studies in some areas and stronger insurance requirements. In some places like Florida all eyes are on insurance and the companies and the state have gotten involved to mandate more protections for these homes. In many cases, condos are forced to replace roofs at regular increments (i.e. every 20 years) regardless of condition, otherwise their insurance company could drop them.
We’re only seeing the beginning of this in the DC Area, but I did tour a condo in Northern Virginia that had structural issues. They still had multiple offers, but whether it makes it through financing is another story. My client and I determined this was a risk not worth taking.
Are condos going away? I vote no. They aren’t making any more land and as the population explodes, we need places for people to live. The prices on condos now are fantastic and I wholeheartedly believe their heyday is coming.
Washington, D.C
What’s that noise? What you need to know about D.C. flyovers Friday and Saturday – WTOP News
Reagan National Airport will close for America 250 flyover rehearsals Friday and celebrations Saturday featuring the Thunderbirds, Blue Angels and more.
Reagan National Airport will close from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday for rehearsals ahead of this weekend’s America 250 celebrations, meaning people around D.C., Arlington and Alexandria may hear and see low-flying military aircraft.
According to Freedom 250 event organizers, Friday’s “Wings of Freedom” demonstrations over the National Mall will feature parachute teams, helicopters and military aircraft, including the U.S. Marine Corps’ MV-22 Osprey and F-35B, the Navy’s F-18F and F-35C, the Air Force’s F-22 Raptor, the Thunderbirds and a tri-bomber formation.
On Saturday, the FAA will close the airport from noon to midnight for the full celebration. All arrivals and departures at Reagan National are scheduled to end before noon.
Flyovers and demonstrations are scheduled throughout the afternoon and evening along the National Mall and Washington Monument grounds, including appearances by Air Force One, the Thunderbirds, Blue Angels, military aircraft fleet reviews, parachute demonstrations and B-2 stealth bombers.
Highlights include an Air Force One flyover scheduled for 7:03 p.m., a Thunderbirds demonstration beginning at 6:25 p.m., a tri-bomber formation at 6:02 p.m. and a stealth aircraft flyover at 7:38 p.m.
Friday’s schedule of flyovers and demonstration rehearsals along the National Mall and Washington Monument
- 10 a.m.: Golden Knights, Leap Frogs
- 10:15 a.m.: Army Helo Flyover
- 10:20 a.m.: USMC V-22 Osprey Demo
- 10:35 a.m.: USMC F-35B STOVL Demo
- 10:50 a.m.: USN F-18F Demo
- 11:10 a.m.: USN F-35C Demo Team
- 11:30 a.m.: USAF F-22 Raptor Demo
- 11:50 a.m.: NASA F-5s
- 12 p.m.: HUGE (1) Formation
- 12:05 p.m.: USAF Thunderbirds
- 12:55 p.m.: USAF Tri-Bomber
Saturday’s schedule of flyovers and demonstration along the National Mall and Washington Monument
- 1:14 p.m.: – NASA F-5 Flyover
- 1:24 p.m.: -NASA Fleet Review
- 1:44 p.m.: USCG Helo Flyover
- 1:54 p.m.: USCG Fixed Wing Flyover
- 2:09 p.m.: Golden Knights, Leap Frogs
- 2:29 p.m.: Army Helo Flyover
- 2:44 p.m.: USAF Fleet Review – Wave 1 – Heavies
- 2:54 p.m.: USAF Fleet Review – Wave 2 – AFSOC
- 3:04 p.m.: USAF Fleet Review – Wave 3 – Fighters
- 3:29 p.m.: Executive Rotary Wing Airlift
- 3:39 p.m.: USMC Fleet Review – Wave 1 – Rotary
- 3:49 p.m.: USMC Fleet Review – Wave 2 – Fixed Wing
- 3:59 p.m.: USN Fleet Review – Wave 1 – Rotary
- 4:09 p.m.: USN Fleet Review – Wave 2 – Fixed Wing
- 4:19 p.m.: USN Fleet Review – Wave 3 – Fighters
- 4:21 p.m.: USN F-18F Demonstration
- 4:59 p.m.: USN Blue Angels
- 5:26 p.m.: USMC MV-22 Osprey Demonstration
- 5:44 p.m.: USAF Fleet Review – Fighters
- 6:02 p.m.: USAF Tri-Bomber Formation
- 6:05 p.m.: USN F-35C Demonstration
- 6:25 p.m.: USAF Thunderbirds Demonstration
- 7:03 p.m.: Air Force One Flyover
- 7:07 p.m.: USAF Thunderbirds Delta Break
- 7:17 p.m.: HUGE 1 Flyover Led by the Newly Renovated Air Force One
- 7:38 p.m.: U.S. Stealth Airpower Flyover
- 7:39 p.m.: F-22 Raptor Demo
- 7:53 p.m.: F-22 Raptor in Afterburner
- 7:59 p.m.: B-1 Flyover
- 8:07 p.m.: B-1’s in Afterburner
- 8:11 p.m.: HUGE ONE Fly Over Review
- 8:22 p.m.: Golden Knights Twilight Jump
- 10:36 p.m.: B-1 Afterburner Night Pass
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Washington, D.C
Air Force officer arrested at Capitol after calling for Trump’s impeachment
An Air Force major was arrested in uniform on the steps of the Capitol after he called for the impeachment of President Donald Trump.
U.S. Capitol Police arrested Jason Watson, an active-duty service member, on Wednesday afternoon following remarks at a news conference where he said Trump and Vice President JD Vance should be removed from office.
The event was organized by the Removal Coalition, a group that lobbies members of Congress to impeach Trump, and attended by Rep. Al Green, D-Texas, who has repeatedly introduced articles of impeachment against Trump.
“I’m here with him because Rep. Green is the only member of Congress that has demonstrated the courage and conviction to … force a vote on articles of impeachment,” Watson said at the event. “If Congress followed his example, we could remove the entire Trump administration, but Congress remains unconvinced of the urgency and necessity for them to honor their oaths, so we must persuade them with our unrelenting, uncompromising civil resistance.”
Watson said he is not a Democrat and does not share policy positions with Green, who lost his re-election bid this year. Green’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Watson’s arrest.
Capitol Police said in a statement that it “is generally against the law for the public to demonstrate on the House Steps unless they are with a Member of Congress.”
“Yesterday afternoon, a man was escorted to the House Steps by a Member of Congress,” the statement said. “When the Member of Congress left the area, our officers gave the man lawful orders to stop the illegal demonstration or he would be arrested. The man refused our lawful orders.”
Capitol Police identified the man as Watson, adding that he was arrested on charges of “Crowding, Obstructing, and Incommoding” and that it is legal to protest in other spots on the Capitol grounds.
Service members are subject to stricter laws than the average citizen when it comes to protesting. The Uniform Code of Military Justice prohibits officers from “using contemptuous language towards the President, Vice president, the Secretaries of War and of a military department, Congress, and certain other officials,” according to an Air Force memo last year.
An Air Force spokesperson said in a statement Thursday: “Service members must comply with all laws, regulations and policies governing conduct and the wear of the uniform. All Department of the Air Force personnel are expected to uphold the highest standards of discipline and professionalism, both on and off duty.”
All service members, not just members of the Air Force, are prohibited from participating in “political activities” in uniform.
Watson’s criticism of Trump and Vance focused on the administration’s actions in Venezuela and Iran, calling them “an unconstitutional usurpation of Congress’ authority and a violation of the War Powers Clause.”
“These violations resulted in the deaths of 13 service members and injuries of hundreds more,” he said, referring to the number of U.S. military deaths tied to the Iran war. “For this, the president and vice president must be impeached, convicted and removed.”
Watson also called the administration’s immigration policies and tactics unconstitutional.
The Removal Coalition did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and Watson could not be reached.
President Donald Trump responded to criticism of a financial disclosure that listed $1.4 billion in crypto earnings largely driven by meme coins.
Washington, D.C
Hegseth faces protests at ‘Safe and Beautiful’ Washington, DC ceremony
Berk Kutay Gökmen
02 July 2026•Update: 02 July 2026
US Defense Secretary Hegseth on Thursday faced protesters while hosting the Trump administration’s DC Safe and Beautiful Task Force ceremony in Washington DC.
During the ceremony at Meridian Hill Park, which saw the gathering of National Guardsmen, dozens of demonstrators gathered near the park to protest Hegseth.
Footage shows the demonstrators chanting a short distance away from where Hegseth and roughly 200 members of the National Guard had gathered in the park
In social media posts, one protester was seen holding a Palestinian flag, while another person was holding a sign that reads “arrest Hegseth.” The protesters want a “Free DC,” according to social media posts.
In his address to the National Guard, Hegseth said that “this background noise is perfect,” referring to the protests.
“It’s the sound of ingrates, of ingratitude—of people who are so blinded by ideology they can’t see law and order and common sense in front of them,” he said.
Meridian Hill Park was repaired by the National Park Service and the Interior Department as part of a larger initiative to restore and enhance federal parks and public spaces throughout the nation’s capital in preparation for America’s 250th anniversary, which falls on this Saturday, July 4.
Though such beautification projects are typically popular with the public, the current initiative has been controversial both for its choice of projects and the use of no-bid contracts to hire firms to do the work, sometimes with disappointing results.
The work aligns with President Donald Trump’s DC Safe and Beautiful Task Force, established by a March 2025 executive order that directs federal agencies to coordinate public safety and beautification efforts across Washington.
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