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Beyond the famous monuments and federal buildings, Washington, DC is a city of neighborhoods. From trendy Adams Morgan to the revitalized Penn Quarter, each pocket of DC has its own unique flavor and style:

ADAMS MORGAN:
One of Washington DC's most colorful neighborhoods, centered on 18th Street and Columbia Road, NW, Adams Morgan features an array of ethnic restaurants, boutiques, hip specialty stores and late-night entertainment.

ANAC
OSTIA:
Across the Anacostia River at the end of the 11th Street Bridge, this neighborhood began as the first suburb of Washington City. The great 19th-century abolitionist Frederick Douglass made his home here at Cedar Hill. His residence is now a National Park Service site open to the public. The Smithsonian's Anacostia Museum also resides in this historic community.

BROOKLAND:

In addition to a charming diversity of residential architecture, this Northeast Washington neighborhood features the largest concentration of Catholic institutions outside the Vatican. Catholic University, the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, the Pope John Paul II Cultural Center and the Franciscan Monastery with their offerings of beautiful gardens, architecture and art, call this community home.

CAPITOL HIL
L:
East of the U.S. Capitol Building lies a neighborhood of fine Victorian row houses, diverse restaurant fare, and specialty boutiques. In addition to the U.S. Capitol, the Supreme Court and the Library of Congress, this community boasts the Folger Shakespeare Library, Union Station, the Sewall-Belmont House and Eastern Market, the oldest working public market in the city.




DOWNTOWN:
This neighborhood east of the White House is experiencing a renaissance and boasts the new $778 million Washington Convention Center, new and refurbished hotels, smart shops, wonderful restaurants, art galleries, and bookstores. Downtown is also home to the National Museum of Women in the Arts, the Old Post Office Pavilion, the Warner Theatre, and the National Theatre.

CHINATOWN:
Surrounding the world's largest single-span Chinese arch at 7th and F Streets, NW, Chinatown boasts numerous restaurants, the U.S. Mint Museum, the MCI Center, and the annual Chinese New Year's Day Parade.


DUPONT CIRCLE/KALORAMA:
Dupont Circle at Connecticut and P Streets, NW is the hub of a lively neighborhood of Victorian row houses and Beaux-Arts mansions, many of which have been restored to house embassies, international restaurants, art galleries and boutiques. The area features many museums including The Phillips Collection, Woodrow Wilson House, Textile Museum, Heurich House, and the National Museum of American Jewish Military History as well as the largest collection of private art galleries in the city.


EMBASSY ROW:
Just west of Dupont Circle, along Massachusetts Avenue, lie the biggest concentration of the city's 150 international embassies, many of them housed in grand Beaux-Arts mansions of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

FOGGY BOTTOM:
This riverfront neighborhood east of Georgetown is now home to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, George Washington University, and the Watergate complex. A cluster of charming 19th century houses remains to remind the visitor of its early history as a working class community.

GEORGETOWN:
Once a thriving colonial port, this charming historic neighborhood, centered on Wisconsin and M Streets, NW, features specialty stores, nightclubs, and intriguing restaurants. Dumbarton House, Tudor Place, the C&O Canal, Old Stone House and Dumbarton Oaks represent the history of this unique community.

 

LAFAYETTE SQUARE:
Surrounding the White House is a neighborhood of historic elegance, refinement, and power. Its story and the tales of the Square's notable residents, are told through many nearby museums and institutions, includin