| Christina |
Nov 9th, 2000 10:15 AM |
I live near Silver Spring, so I'll tell you, there are only TWO decent hotels within walking distance of the SS metro--a Holiday Inn on Georgia Ave and a hotel called Town Center on Colesville Rd. There are a couple other very cheap cruddy hotels/motels in Silver Spring--do NOT stay at them, they are beyond horrific (a Days Inn, Ramada Inn, etc). The Hoiday Inn and Town Center are perfectly fine and there is a decent Italian restaurant in the bottom of one. However, they are about 4-5 blocks from the metro and they are rather long blocks. There is a good Mexican restaurant and jazz club near the metro station, as well as cheap Indian restaurants and a VERY good Chinese restaurant (Quality Chef -- don't ask about the name, it is authentic and very good Chinese and they thought that sounded very American and classy) on Ga Ave near the metro station. There is nothing wrong with SS if you don't mind that walk to the metro and do not want to do anything there but go to your hotel room. SS is mainly just boring and without a lot of good businesses or restaurants, I would not say it is disgusting and unsafe. The revitalization has to do with business development. Anyway, if you do have someone with physicial limitations, then I would think it is out as it is a ways to the metro stop. It is about 15 minutes exactly to Union Stn from the SS metro, only a few stops direct; it is probably about 25-30 minutes from the King St station in Old Town to Union Stn (and one transfer). Personally I would not recommend Silver Spring as a good place to find budget lodging because there are only a couple hotels and I don't think they are much, if any, cheaper than hotels in the District, so what's the point. Old Town is certainly better for walking around and ambience than Silver Spring, I would definitely agree. But you have to really think about this physical limitation thing as many parts of Old Town are much farther from the metro than the Silver Spring Holiday Inn; I also doubt if you can find that many bargains there, either. Many DC hotels offer special discounts and packages to attract tourist business, I would bet they are as cheap or cheaper than these suburbs. Also, if you do have someone with physical limitations, then I think that potential transfers from line to line is a big deal and should be considered; transferring at Metro Center, for example, involves considerable walking and going up and down stairs. Perhaps you should specify your budget, maybe you think hotels in DC are more expensive than they are, or that ones in these suburbs are cheaper than they are. You don't mention dates, either, which affects hotel rates a lot--they are often lowered in a lot of DC hotels during winter season and on weekends, also. Maybe you aren't even around any more.
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