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Summer Muggin’

columbia-heights-night.jpg

Let’s play a little word association game here. I say “Summer in D.C.,” you say…

humidity…

outside…

tourists…

hot…

school’s out…

hooligans…

crime.

Ahhh yes, summer crime, a D.C. classic. I was thinking about this last night while walking towards the Adams Morgan/Columbia Heights area. Now, I know many a person, who lives north of U Street and often walks home several hours after dark. Some of us are more cautious than others. And this has caused a bit of debate. Late at night, do you take the Metro through the “sketchy” zones between commercial strips, or do you just go full steam ahead up those hills? (My personal approach: always make eye contact.) For the record, the Third District crime stats show that robberies jump significantly over the summer: In March of 2007, there were 59; In July that same year, there were 104. But, if you’re inclined to not spend an extra three to four dollars round trip using the Metro, which route do you take? Is tranquil 13th Street with its steep slant–nothing but a little quad workout to end the day!–and its phenomenally gorgeous city views best? Or is 14th Street with its relatively well-lit, busy streets better? What about quiet 15th? Or traffic-heavy 16th? Well, I did some research, and 15th appears to be the winner. Here are last month’s robbery stats*:

13th and W Streets: 9
14th and W Streets: 9
15th and W Streets: 4
16th and W Streets: 7

*Robberies with and without guns within 1500 ft of the intersection of W and number streets. W is two blocks north of U Street, and the 1500 radius stretches east and west to touch the closest number streets in some parts.

8 Responses to “Summer Muggin’”

  1. Jamie Says:

    1500 feet? that’s 1/3 of a mile. Most of these crimes are probably the same crimes. And 15th is likely lower because a big chunk of that area is Meridian Hill Park. There just aren’t as many residences on 15th, hence, fewer walkers. If you could analyze crimes per pedestrian, I bet 15th would be just as bad if not worse.

    Personally, I always walk on 13th. Late at night, it consistently has the most foot traffic between U street and Columbia Heights, and it’s got wide sidewalks and good visibility.

  2. Mr. T in DC Says:

    I tend to alternate between 13th and 16th. I definitely feel most comfortable swinging over to 16th, but it does add more distance to the walk, and as your statistics may show, it only offers the illusion of more safety.

  3. urban pioneer Says:

    i would be curious about the times and days of the week.

  4. jeff Says:

    I think 14th is the sketchiest of the options here, it is the only one I might deliberately avoid.

    If we have more choices, I find 11th to be ok, not super safe but good enough. over towards adams morgan those back streets like ontario are a little on the dark and empty side.

    But like the other commenters, I would recommend 13th most of all, not that it is so great. it is also worth trying to catch a 50-bus up 14th Street too, while you are still close to U Street.

  5. Michael Says:

    I would recommend learning how to use a gun, and carrying it, and shooting would-be robbers in the face, rather than worrying about which street you can make the victim trek on and hope you aren’t the one targeted.

    Oh wait, guns are bad.

  6. Jon Says:

    Those stats are pretty meaningless, both with the tiny sample size, and no information about total number of pedestrians - I mean, 9 muggings in 10,000 walkers is not as bad as 3 muggings in 100 walkers. And of course the rates go up in the summer - who wants to walk anywhere when it’s really cold out?

    So what people should really do is walk with friends when possible, pay attention to their surroundings, and just generally be careful.

    Or we could all stay in our homes 24/7, cowering under the bed.

  7. james Says:

    i usually take 13th, i find it to be most plesant and quiet. there’s usually shady characters loitering on 14th at W and at Flordia, so I try to avoid that night if possible (well if im sober enough to be thinking that carefully).

    It’s true that 15th does seem the most quiet and safe, I just hate that bitch of a hill after Florida and that crazy 3-way intersection where W, Florida and New Hampshire meet. The stoplights are terrible and I always feel like frogger about to get hit by a car.

  8. Ryan Says:

    I would have to agree that the per-pedestrian rate is something to look at. Despite these numbers, I would never recommend 15th Street for the walk up. Belmont between 14 and 15 is a hot-spot for crime. My bet’s still on 16th street - it’s well lit and has high foot- and car-traffic.



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