• Photo: AgnosticPreachersKid (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Adams Morgan

To the urban and hip, Adams Morgan is like a beacon in an otherwise stuffy landscape. D.C. may have a reputation for being staid and traditional, but drab suits, classical tastes, and bland food make no appearance here.

Adams Morgan takes its name from two elementary schools that came together in 1958 after desegregation. It remains an ethnically diverse neighborhood with a blend of cuisines, offbeat shops, and funky bars and clubs.

Adams Morgan and its neighboring Columbia Heights comprise the city's Latin Quarter. The area wakes up as the sun goes down, and young Washingtonians in their weekend best congregate along the sidewalks, crowding the doors of this week's hot bar or nightclub. Typical tourist attractions are sparse, but the scene on a Saturday night has its own appeal. If you're here on the second Saturday in September, sample the vibrant neighborhood culture at the Adams Morgan Day Festival, which happens to be D.C.'s largest neighborhood festival.

Read More

Advertisement

Find a Hotel

Guidebooks

Fodor's Washington, D.C.: with Mount Vernon and Alexandria

View Details

Plan Your Next Trip