What's Hot: 702,000: DC Sees Population Rise Again In 2024
Best Local Real Estate Idea (That Went Nowhere): Inauguration Rentals
✉️ Want to forward this article? Click here.
This week UrbanTurf is taking a look back at the best that DC’s residential real estate market had to offer in 2009. From the best deals to the best trends to, of course, the best listings, we believe we have sussed out the cream of the crop.
It seemed like such a good idea and such easy money at the time. Just vacate your apartment for a week during Barack Obama’s historic inauguration, and collect enough money to pay your rent for two months and maybe have a little left over to take a quick vacation.
However, if there was ever an idea that was too good to be true, it would be this one. While the comment section for our post announcing this trend turned into a virtual classifieds section for DC residents wanting to cash in, the scheme failed miserably. While there were certainly people out there who were able to cash in on the phenomenon, most of these spontaneous entrepreneurs learned that supply significantly outstripped demand when it came to out-of-towners willing to pay big bucks for lodging. From our post in December:
A 26-year-old professional and his two roommates told UrbanTurf that their three-bedroom in the U Street Corridor has been listed for about a month at $1,500 a night and they have gotten no responses. Carol Simms listed her Capitol Hill one-bedroom on November 10th for $1,200 a night and has not gotten any bites. Local real estate agent Jen Angotti offered to help one of her clients rent out his place in Columbia Heights, but he balked at her proposed rental price of $2,000 a night, saying he could get much more, and decided to rent it on his own. So far, there have not been any takers.
In fact, in all the research that UrbanTurf did, we were only able to find one person who was successful in renting his place. The man, a lobbyist who wished to remain anonymous, rented his one-bedroom on Massachusetts Avenue and 10th Street to a business associate for three nights at $1,000 a night. He is taking the money and heading to Colorado for the week of the inauguration.
In addition, to these factors, it didn’t help that 4,500 additional hotel rooms were opened up in the DC area soon after this trend gained some momentum. The bottom line: Don’t bank on this trend returning in 2012.
Next Up: Best Record Set This Year: Mortgage Rates Hit All-Time Low
Previous Best Of 2009 entries:
See other articles related to: best of 2009, inauguration, renting in dc
This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/best_local_real_estate_idea_that_went_nowhere_inauguration_rentals/1599.
Most Popular... This Week • Last 30 Days • Ever
The federal government could be shut down by the end of today, and that shutdown coul... read »
The 16,250 square-foot home along Foxhall Road NW owned by Fox News anchor Bret Baier... read »
Right on the heels of a $29 million home along Foxhall Road going under contract to T... read »
New data shows that DC continues to make up for population losses experienced during ... read »
Built almost a century ago, the five-bedroom estate will hit the market in Chevy Chas... read »
- How a Government Shutdown Could Affect Home Loans
- At $25 Million, This Is The Most Expensive Home Ever Sold In DC
- The Trump Effect Continues: $10 Million Georgetown Condo Goes Under Contract
- 702,000: DC Sees Population Rise Again In 2024
- The Most Expensive Home In Chevy Chase Will Hit The Market For Just South Of $10 Million
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