The Difference a Quadrant Makes: Folding the Map in the District
✉️ Want to forward this article? Click here.
From redlining and urban renewal to gentrification and displacement, the prejudicial impact of housing policy and city planning is hidden in plain sight. In order to illustrate disparities in urban investment, Chicago artist/activist Tonika Lewis Johnson created the "Folded Map" project, where she contrasted similar addresses on the North and South sides of Chicago to draw attention to the socioeconomic variation between those areas.
UrbanTurf wanted to pay homage to that project and examine how it may look to "fold the map" in Washington, D.C., where the quadrant layout lends itself to several like addresses miles away from each other. Below are examples we found, some of which illustrate disparate investment, and others which illustrate just how much some areas of the city are perhaps overlooked or undervalued:
19th Street SE and 19th Street NW
16th Street SE and 16th Street NW
Q Street SE and Q Street NW
Massachusetts Avenue SE and Massachusetts Avenue NW
Although there are plenty of streets that are found in more than one quadrant, in many cases, there are no corresponding street addresses for easy comparison (eg. Yuma Street NW vs. Yuma Street SE, Brandywine Street NW vs. Brandywine Street SE, and Chesapeake Street NW vs. Chesapeake Street SE). Are there any particularly interesting instances of same-address disparities you have noticed, readers?
Note: Some addresses are approximate because either there are no houses with clear pictures on the corresponding block in the opposite quadrant, or a closer address could not be verified.
This article originally published at https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/folding-the-map-in-the-district/14964.
Most Popular... This Week • Last 30 Days • Ever

One of the more architecturally interesting homes to hit the market in the DC region ... read »

Virginia's homebuyer assistance programs can seem complex. This edition of First-Time... read »

A Georgetown office-to-residential conversion that has been working its way through t... read »

Plans have been pitched to DC to convert a Methodist church in Columbia Heights into ... read »

This week’s Best New Listings includes a three-bedroom Friendship Heights farmhouse... read »
- A Robert Gurney–Designed Home on the Potomac Asks $12.5 Million
- First-Timer Primer: Virginia's Home Buyer Assistance Programs
- 30-Unit Georgetown Conversion Along K Street Gets Green Light
- The Bell Tower Stays: 87 Apartments Pitched for Columbia Heights Church Conversion
- Best New Listings: A Friendship Heights Farmhouse; A Bright Kalorama Two-Bedroom
DC Real Estate Guides
Short guides to navigating the DC-area real estate market
We've collected all our helpful guides for buying, selling and renting in and around Washington, DC in one place. Start browsing below!
First-Timer Primers
Intro guides for first-time home buyers
Unique Spaces
Awesome and unusual real estate from across the DC Metro










