Washington, D.C
Living in Dupont Circle | The heart of Washington DC
If Dupont Circle had a theme song, it would be by Dua Lipa. Fun, always great, classic, has staying power and the kids like it. Dupont Circle holds a special place in my heart. I lived here for 10 years in the last of my single girl days and I wouldn’t trade that time for anything. What is so continuously appealing through the decades about living in Dupont Circle?
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Of the 109 DC neighborhoods Niche.com tracks, Dupont Circle ranks 12th of Best Neighborhoods for Professionals, and 15th Best Overall. For Families, Dupont ranks 39th out of 109 neighborhoods. I’m not a Niche.com fan because so much information there is faulty. But I would generally agree with the rankings. It is one of the better neighborhoods for both professionals and overall, and for families it’s just outside the top third. If you’re the kind of parents who don’t want to trade lifestyle to leave the neighborhood, then the downsides may not matter.
Dupont Circle – Location
Dupont Circle is a small neighborhood. Florida Avenue is the northern border, 15th on the east, M Street to the south and 22nd street on the west side. It’s about seven blocks north-south and seven blocks east-west, if you don’t count the half-blocks between the lettered streets.
The actual circle of Dupont Circle has an inner and outer ring and 5 roads, or, 10 different spokes that go through. Actually, it’s 12 spokes because Connecticut Avenue is split by the underpass and let’s just say it’s a disaster to navigate by car, bike or foot. The streets that run through it are Connecticut, Massachusetts and New Hampshire – so 3 of your New England States. And then 19th and P Streets also intersect here.
Red line metro runs through Dupont with a stop underground in the circle.
North and east of the circle has a different feel than south and west which is the older part of Dupont, closer to downtown more commercial. North and east are more leafy and residential – combining city living with walkability and streets framed with trees and parks.
Dupont Circle Real Estate
Dupont is urban, dense living. There are more condos than you will find single family homes here. There used to be only single-family homes here with a few apartment buildings. As prices rose, homes got carved up into condos to make living here more affordable and provide homes for more people.
Dupont has rowhomes, condos and apartments. One of the most famous condo buildings is the Cairo. Built in 1894, the Cairo was the tallest building in DC, thus spurring all sorts of controversy. And after successful lobbying, the Height of Buildings Act was passed in 1899. This outlines that the type of street dictates the maximum height of the buildings on that street.
The average price of all condos in Dupont Circle over the last six months is $545,000. The median price is $519,000. This is for studios, one and two bedrooms. If we break it down by number of bedrooms, the average for studios is $261,000. One bedrooms sold at an average price of $418,000 and median price is $400,000. The average price for two bedrooms is $725,000 and the median price is $688,000.
Dupont Circle is famous for its gorgeous Victorian homes built in the early 1900’s. Prices for these gorgeous grand dames range can run up into the $3M’s. You can get a smaller rowhome just over $1M. The average price of rowhomes in Dupont is $1.877M and the median price is $1.75M.
Many of the large Victorian homes have basement apartments that are rentable, which help subsidize the mortgage payment. There is a steady demand for these rentals as well. Dupont tends to be one of the DC neighborhoods that parents can feel okay with their newly graduated 22-year-old moving to. There’s enough city-vibe for the young professional and a good neighborhood feeling for the parents to not worry about their kiddo in the city.
Fun in Dupont
Dupont Circle has fun for all! The circle alone is a huge gathering place for many people. You will often see people stop and sit here on their way home from work just to read or people watch.
The Baron Hotel Pub is here and it is home to the Comedy Loft of DC.
The Phillips Collection Museum is in Dupont Circle.
Do you miss old board games like Trouble, Risk, Operation, Sorry or Hungry Hungry Hippos? Check out the Board Room on Connecticut Avenue which is a pub with vintage board games.
Aside from the games, what else makes them cool? Their motto is “Put down the phone and interact at the Board Room.” And they don’t have a kitchen so you are allowed to bring in your own food. This is the kind of cool place you feel like you would see in other cities but not DC. But here it is!
One of the best book stores and cafes is here – Kramerbooks, is now called Kramers. They were always great but under new ownership, this feels like a new institution of an old institution for DC. I love their books but I also love their pie.
There was a point when Kramers was considering a move, but seems they have closed the chapter on that idea. See what I did there? Kramers is excellent at curating an interesting selection of books for kids and adults. Their children’s section encourages kids to read and makes reading fun. This is easily a place the whole family can spend an afternoon! They host book readings and author events.
Dupont Underground is where the old trolley lines used to go through DC under the circle. When the trolley cars were retired they had stores under the circle, but eventually that closed up. The space was finally reopened as an arts venue called Dupont Underground. They aren’t opened every day, but if you check the events calendar you will see the events coming up and you can run around underneath Dupont Circle!
I bet you didn’t know there’s a mini golf course in Dupont! Swingers Crazy Golf.
You can also tour the Heurich House Museum/Mansion. German Immigrant Christian Heurich had a DC brewery and you can tour the home and learn about DC History!
There are a couple low key awesome bars in Dupont as well. Larry’s Lounge and The Commodore are both places that are like Dupont’s version of Cheers.
There are also events that come to 17th Street. The Dupont Drag Race is the week of Halloween. It’s literally one of the reasons I bought my condo, because it has a view of the drag race. And these are not cars racing, no, it’s drag queens in heels. It’s actually the High Heel Drag Race!
You may wonder why there’s a drag race. While the neighborhood is very diverse in present day, Dupont used to be a marsh. Then as development moved from K Street and Georgetown to the north and east, Dupont became a place of mansions for the wealthy. As those mansions were passed to the next generations, and the turbulent times of the early to mid 1900’s came, many mansions were sold to other countries and turned into embassies.
Dupont then started to fall into disrepair. But then, in the 1970’s, Dupont became the epicenter of gay culture in DC, and along with it came gentrification. By the year 2000, the prices started to rise quite a bit and this became a solid neighborhood with steady home values.
Fun for Kids – Human and Fur Children
Ross Elementary School was once going to close, and then the families in the neighborhood banded together and sent their kids there, helping the school turn around. Now it’s one of the sought after DC elementary schools. Ross has a playground that is opened to the public on weekends and after the kids go home from aftercare.
There’s another park in the area is the Stead Recreation Center. If you’ve been in the area you’ve definitely heard of this spot. This playground has an area for the big kids and an area for wobbly toddlers so everyone has a safe space. Although this park is not dog friendly, there’s still plenty of places that are!
S Street Park is a large fenced in dog park that is covered with astroturf. This used to be a triangular dirt pit but now attracts dog owners and lovers from all over the area so that their furry friends can play. People actually line up outside the fence to watch the dogs inside. There’s a water fountain for the dogs and this place is always filled with people so there are lots of friends for you pooch to play with and stay entertained.
While we’re on the topic of doggies, one of the best, most long-standing pet stores and groomers is on 17th Street – it’s called Doggie Style.
Food
There is so much packed into this 7 block by 7 block neighborhood.
On Connecticut Avenue there are quite a few places to eat. There’s Bistrot du Coin for French food and mussels. It’s always packed, and always delicious. There’s also Alero which is one of the best Mexican Restaurants we have. There’s Thai Chef Street Food and Zorba’s Greek Food. Closer to Dupont Circle there’s more fast casual, plus the only Krispy Kreme in the city. On the south side there’s Tatte, which is a café and bakery from Boston that’s popped up all over DC to much approval.
Lauriol Plaza on 18th Street for Mexican Food. Their patio is amazing and a lot of people bring their dogs too. Downtown on 19th you there’s the Palm Steakhouse which is more upscale.
The 17th Street Corridor has a lot of restaurants packed into a 2 block stretch.
Sacrifical Lamb at the corner of 17th and R is not to be missed. The restaurant doesn’t look like a lot from the outside but don’t let it fool you. It’s the most delicious Pakistani food and they do an incredible delivery service too. They have been here for close to 20 years.
Agora is another favorite of mine, it’s on 17th Street and they serve Turkish tapas. You can order a sampling of different foods and it’s all so good.
Floriana on 17th Street is also pretty highly rated and delivers consistently great Italian Food. And don’t miss the neighborhood staple, Annies Steakhouse which has been in business for decades. There’s also Hanks Oyster Bar around the corner on Q Street, if you’re a fan of oysters or other delicious seafood items!
There’s Commodore on 17th Street which is a very low-key chill bar with a good menu.
For grocery stores, the obvious one here is Safeway on 17th. But, if DC had a meme it would be “What’s Your Safeway Called?” There was Secret Safeway, Senior Safeway, Social Safeway – they all had nicknames. The one on 17th Street was called Soviet Safeway for its uncanny ability to consistently have empty shelves and long lines.
Sunday the farmer’s market in Dupont is a huge hit. It draws people from all over the city in the same way Eastern Market in Capitol Hill does the same.
Dupont Circle is an iconic neighborhood famous for being consistent but also for reinventing itself. Being less than a mile from downtown, this is a very convenient neighborhood for everyone from young professionals to families to empty nesters. Everyone cohabitates here peacefully and many people stay for decades and generations.
Washington, D.C
Sherry Abedi has been appointed as General Manager at LINE DC
Washington, D.C
‘We did not have the votes:’ DC Council does not take up expanded summer curfew
WASHINGTON (7News) — Tuesday was the last day the D.C. Council could vote to enact an expanded curfew in time for summer.
7News learned it never even made it on the agenda for a discussion and went to council members to find out why.
For the next two months, it’ll be up to the mayor to declare a curfew until the permanent version kicks in. There is already a city curfew. The curfew that has been up for debate for more than a year is the expanded version of the curfew. The expanded version allows the Metropolitan Police Department to create zones where teens 17 and under cannot gather in groups of nine or more.
RELATED | DC curfews pushed large groups into local neighborhoods, some residents say
Mayor Muriel Bowser currently has her own curfew order in place, which ends Saturday. The mayor can continue issuing an order. Councilmembers against the expanded curfew said that’s why it doesn’t need to come from the council.
In a video posted two weeks ago, D.C Council public safety chair Brooke Pinto said she wanted her councilmembers to vote to fill the gap today. 7News asked her why she never presented it to the council.
“Unfortunately, in working with my colleagues over the last several weeks, we did not have the votes,” said Pinto. “We have to have enough votes to pass the law and make sure that we didn’t have a gap.”
Bowser, in a letter to council Tuesday, said councilmembers Trayon White, Robert White, Zachary Parker, Brianne Nadeau and Janese Lewis-George are “blocking the will of the public and majority of council.”
7News spoke to three of the members she called out about the mayor’s pushback.
“I reject the rhetoric and the political games that are being played, and I’m wanting for us to get to the bottom of how do we stop the teen takeovers and the delinquent behavior we’ve been seeing,” Parker said.
“I stand by my belief that a curfew policy is a failed policy, kind of smoke and mirrors, and what we really needed is investments in our young people, so I’m pretty firm on that,” Nadeau said.
“We have to choose our tools and the time we use those tools. I’ve supported the curfew in the past, but I think with the current surge of more federal troops that have been impending, we’re putting our youth in even more danger by extending that work. I know the executive has put in an emergency executive order that will fill the gap. I hope that comes alongside extended hours, I’ve funded at DPR, extended weekends, and opening more safe spaces for youth here in the city. And that’s the solution that we do agree on,” Lewis-George said.
The mayor has not confirmed if she’ll issue another order, but it is on the table.
Washington, D.C
Memorial to honor journalists like Don Bolles, killed in pursuit of truth
Whispers, mysteries still hang in air 50 years after Bolles’ murder
Arizona Republic reporter Don Bolles died on June 13, 1976, 50 years ago. There are still mysteries surrounding his death from a car bombing.
A memorial designed to pay tribute to journalists who have died in pursuit of a story — including Arizona Republic reporter Don Bolles, who had a bomb explode under his car 50 years ago — will soon have a home on the National Mall in Washington, DC.
The Fallen Journalists Memorial, set to open in June 2028, won’t include individual names of journalists. A rule says that unless Congress makes an exception, a memorial wall can only include a group whose last member died more more than a quarter century prior.
And the number of journalists who die in pursuit of truth continues to grow every year.
The foundation creating the memorial has featured journalists on its website. Included in the first round of those showcased is Bolles.
Bolles was a reporter with The Arizona Republic who investigated the mafia, land fraud and political corruption. He was killed in June 1976 by a bomb planted under his Datsun at a midtown Phoenix hotel, an incident that shocked the nation and shook the journalism community.
Barbara Cochran, president of the Fallen Journalists Memorial Foundation, said the aim was to remind people of the work done by journalists like Bolles.
“They go as eyewitnesses. They document,” she said. “They dig deep and come up with information that people don’t have time to do on their own.”
Bolles’ legacy was not just forged by his death, Cochran said, but the work his death inspired.
Scores of reporters from around the country descended on Phoenix to continue investigating political corruption as Bolles had.
That collective action sent a message.
“Even if you kill the journalist, you won’t kill the story,” Cochran said. “Don Bolles was really the symbol of that.”
The memorial will honor journalists who, like Bolles, were targeted for their reporting, Cochran said. It would also honor those who died in pursuit of a story.
That’s the story of at least five more Arizona journalists.
In 1985, Republic reporter Charles Thornton was killed in Afghanistan, which at the time was invaded by the Soviet Union. Thornton was a health reporter and took the trip to cover a clinic set up by Americans looking to save the lives of people injured in the war by bombs and chemical weapons.
Thornton knew the risks of traveling to a war zone. But said he thought it was worth it to bring the story of the injuries suffered by the Afghan rebels to Republic readers.
In 2007, two news helicopters collided while covering a police chase in midtown Phoenix. The helicopters, one from Channel 3, KTVK-TV, and one from Channel 15, KNXV-TV, each carried a cameraman and a pilot. All four men died when the helicopters crashed onto Steele Indian School Park.
Bolles will be the only Arizona reporter among the first to be honored as part of the new National Mall memorial project.
The physical memorial in Washington will be made up of glass rectangles.
On one end of the plaza, they will be laid in an abstract design. The glass rectangles could serve as benches on the plaza.
As visitors walk to the other end, the glass rectangles begin stacking. Visitors will then enter a circle formed by more glass rectangles.
On the ground in the center of the circle will be the words of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Reporter writes ‘the book I wanted to read’ on slain journalist Don Bolles
Axios reporter Jeremy Duda discusses “Murder in the Fourth State,” a book on the murder of The Arizona Republic’s Don Bolles, who died after a car bombing in 1976.
Arizona effort to create a Don Bolles memorial stalls at state Capitol
The DC memorial was introduced in Congress in 2019. It passed both the House and Senate unanimously in 2020 and was signed into law in December 2020 by President Donald Trump.
In contrast, a push to create a memorial for Bolles on the grounds of the state Capitol was proposed at the Arizona Legislature each of the past few years. But every attempt has stalled.
The bill passed the Arizona House unanimously this year. It was bottled up in the state Senate, as has happened since it was first introduced in 2023.
The Bolles memorial bill was assigned to the Senate Government Committee, chaired by state Sen. Jake Hoffman, R-Queen Creek. He did not give the bill a hearing, just as he had declined to do in the previous two sessions.
Hoffman, who has done contract work for the conservative groups Turning Point USA and Turning Point Action, has had an antagonistic relationship with the mainstream press and The Republic.
Rep. Selina Bliss, R-Prescott, the sponsor of the measure, said she is not sure exactly why Hoffman hasn’t given the bill a hearing. She expected it would easily pass if it made it to the state Senate floor.
“I can’t get into the minds of others,” she said, “why they choose to hear or don’t hear a bill.”
Bliss said she recognized the passion that Bolles had for journalism.
“It’s like a line of duty death, if you will,” she said. “People are killed in action doing what they do.”
Bliss said she was a teenager in Prescott at the time of the Bolles bombing. She remembers the experience as searing.
“It shook everyone so dramatically,” she said.
Bliss said she might expand the bill next session to include all fallen Arizona journalists, in hopes of getting it out of the logjam in the Senate.
Tim Eigo, president of the Arizona chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, has testified at the Arizona Legislature in support of the bill to allow a Bolles memorial.
Eigo said it was unfortunate that the bill was caught up in the swirl of current political feelings about journalism.
“I think people can get confused about whether dogged coverage is also advocacy. It’s not,” he said. “Some people get confused by that. So, they hesitate to honor a remarkable journalist like Don Bolles because there are other journalists they don’t like.”
Commemorating reporters who were targeted specifically because of their work like Bolles sends a signal, Eigo said.
“When we are honoring their accomplishments and commitment,” he said, “we are also defeating those who feel they can commit crimes against the press with impunity. … We are speaking truth to that cynical power.”
Shooting that killed journalists in Maryland inspired push for memorial
The idea for the DC memorial came after the June 2018 mass shooting at the Capital Gazette newsroom in Annapolis, Maryland. Five people were killed in the incident, four of them journalists.
The convicted gunman had filed a defamation suit against the newspaper after it reported on his legal troubles. He reportedly sent letters threatening to attack the newspaper’s journalists before he stormed the newsroom with a shotgun.
Retired U.S. Congressman David Dreier sat on the board of Tribune Publishing, the corporate owner of the sister newspapers, The Capital and the Maryland Gazette. Dreier, a Republican from California, worried that by 2019 the memory of the shooting was already fading.
He wanted a public memorial on the National Mall. The idea gained urgency, Cochran said, when the Newseum announced in 2019 that it was closing. That museum had an exhibition honoring slain journalists. Its centerpiece was the blown-out car from the 1976 Bolles bombing.
“There is nothing in Washington that talks about the sacrifices of journalists or that talks about the First Amendment, which is such a unique contribution to freedom and free expression for people everywhere,” Cochran said.
The location cited for it is a triangular plot of land about three blocks from the U.S. Capitol. The site, about a quarter-acre, was formed by the intersection of Independence Avenue and Maryland Avenue, which runs on a diagonal to the U.S. Capitol.
“The site has a clear view of the Capitol Dome,” Cochran said. “It’s a connection to journalism and a symbol of democracy. It reinforces the idea that journalism is a pilar of democracy.”
The memorial will not carry the names of any of the fallen journalists.
Cochran said a federal regulation governing memorials on the National Mall has a rule about those being honored in a group needing to have been deceased for more than 25 years.
“This is a memorial for which there would never be an end time,” she said.
Threats to press freedom are on the rise across the globe
The anniversary of Bolles’ death and the memorial underway come as journalists around the world face increased threats.
Reporters Without Borders, a global nonprofit advocating for independent journalism, has tracked press freedom around the world since 2002. The organization scores countries based on how free journalists are to report, evaluating the legal, political, economic and cultural constraints. It also looks at journalists’ safety working in the countries.
The organization’s 2026 World Press Freedom Index returned the lowest average score among all countries in 25 years.
The United States ranked as the 64th freest country in the world, dropping seven places from its ranking in 2025. The organization cited Trump’s continued attacks on journalists who cover him, as well as his administration’s pressure on networks and news outlets as part of the ranking.
Trump has made attacking the press and sowing distrust in traditional news media a hallmark of his agenda since his first run for higher office in 2015. He has threatened to ease libel laws to make it easier to sue news outlets.
Trump himself sued the CBS and ABC networks based on their journalists’ work. The networks settled despite legal experts saying the cases were weak.
U.S. presidents have long had an antogonistic relationship with the press.
George Washington, the first president of the United States, referred to journalists as “infamous scribblers.” Vice President Spiro Agnew called the press “nattering naybobs of negativism.” President Barack Obama used the Espionage Act to plug what he perceived were leaks from his administration to the press, according to the Cato Institute.
The Freedom of the Press Foundation, a nonprofit news advocacy group, has tracked more than 2,500 anti-press incidents in the United States since 2017, with nearly 1,400 assaults making up the majority. The tracker records non-physically violent threats, too, such as subpoenas and legal interventions, or chilling statements.
The Committee to Protect Journalists has recorded 17 journalists and reporters killed in the United States since 1992.
In Arizona, 28 anti-press incidents were recorded since 2017, including arresting reporters and denying them access to government events.
The Arizona incidents over the past decade include an interview subject who pushed and shoved an Arizona Republic reporter before stealing her cell phone during the interview, the detention by Phoenix police of a Wall Street Journal reporter who was talking to customers outside a bank, and the detention of an Arizona Republic photographer who was covering protests outside the state Capitol in 2024.
Taylor Seely is a First Amendment Reporting Fellow at The Arizona Republic / azcentral.com. Do you have a story about the government infringing on your First Amendment rights? Reach her at tseely@arizonarepublic.com or by phone at 480-476-6116.
Reach Richard Ruelas at richard.ruelas@arizonarepublic.com or at 602-444-8473.
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