The Neighborhoods Eight neighborhoods.
Eight neighborhoods.
One Washington you'll recognize.
Every Keener building sits in a neighborhood with its own history, its own rhythm, and its own reasons to call it home. Each one has a character worth walking — and a block the staff will know your name on.
- Est. 1871 Dupont Circle Federal townhouses, bookshops that know their regulars, and the long afternoons of N Street. View neighborhood
- Est. 1877 Logan Circle Painted Victorians around a green square, and a quiet civic center for a growing block. View neighborhood
- Est. 1887 Kalorama Embassies, Beaux-Arts chanceries, and the capital's quietest hilltop. View neighborhood
- Est. 1751 Georgetown Federal brick, cobbled streets, and the towpath running west along the river. View neighborhood
- 14th Street The city's liveliest corridor, with coffee bars, brasseries, and Le Diplomate's awning a block from home. View neighborhood
- Columbia Heights Streetcar-era row houses, a Metro at the center, and one of the most diverse tables in the city. View neighborhood
- Rosslyn The part of Arlington closest to D.C., across the Key Bridge from Georgetown, with the city minutes away. View neighborhood
- Woodley Park Curved streets above Rock Creek Park, the National Zoo at the door, and Connecticut Avenue's quiet table. View neighborhood