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H Street NE, a dynamic one-and-a-half mile stretch in Northeast Washington, DC, is known for its nightlife, restaurants, festivals and communal atmosphere.
The 21 Best Spots to Eat and Drink on H Street. Discover birria cheesesteaks, Neapolitan pizzas, Taiwanese fried chicken, and much more along the Northeast strip. by Emily Venezky and Mekita...
Restaurants, events, shops, bars, the arts – there’s something for everyone on H Street NE. Anchored by the Atlas since 1938, the neighborhood has recently returned to its roots as an arts and cultural center.
Washington, DC’s H Street NE corridor was built in 1849. Streetcars followed 23 years later, creating a successful business center and encouraging development in the neighborhood. They ran up and down the street for exactly 100 years until buses replaced them in 1949.
H Street is a set of east–west streets in several of the quadrants of Washington, D.C. It is also used as an alternate name for the Near Northeast neighborhood, as H Street NW/NE is the neighborhood's main commercial strip.
H Street, NE has a free, newly opened streetcar that leaves from the back of Union Station (Red Line on the Metro). The entire neighbourhood is also close enough to downtown to make it a quick and affordable taxi, Uber or Lyft ride.
H Street, NE, is a place where creative ideas for new businesses are being greeted by significant opportunity and a welcoming community. Many businesses and new developments have already found a place on this one and one-half mile commercial district just north of the US Capitol.
A city-led revitalization plan, the return of streetcars in 2016, and an influx of trendy bars, restaurants, and music venues transformed H Street into one of DC's hottest nightlife and cultural destinations. Today, H Street NE stands as a vibrant mix of old and new.
There is a certain grit to the H Street corridor, within Northeast Washington, that’s comforting and charming.
Mornings call for the cafe’s Vigilante coffee drinks and pastries, while the shaded courtyard is our preferred spot for Cambodian sandwiches or dim sum brunch on sunny afternoons. Dinner—and that duck bao platter—is a knockout. 1351 H St., NE; 202-838-9972.