You may have heard the name Harry Wardman (as in Wardman Park hotel), and I know you recognize this classic D.C. rowhome style.
In the early 20th century, real estate developer Harry Wardman built 3,000 residential homes across the district. The vast majority of them were rowhomes like the ones above, built to accommodate D.C.’s rapidly growing population of middle-income government employees. Wardman was said to have housed 10% of D.C.’s population by 1925.
These were the first “semi-suburban” homes in D.C., and they let families have a yard and porch while still being close to work. Wardman insisted on quality and longevity of the homes and would usually make less than $200 per home built.
Many of these homes still exist in Columbia Heights, Bloomingdale, and Brightwood, although many inferior “copycat Wardman’s” now exist as well. Thankfully, there’s a way to check.
Get to Know D.C. Architecture

Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

Classic Wardman homes in Columbia Heights. (Kaela Cote-Stemmermann/City Cast DC)
Share article
DC, Explained
The Summer of EDM is About To Hit D.C.
Fueled by new venues and social media, EDM is having a resurgence in D.C.
The Obama musical returns Washingtonians to an old, hopeful DC
This raunchy love letter to 2008 D.C. by a former Obama campaign staffer left us weeping with laughter and nostalgia.
A missing part of the teen takeover conversation
D.C. can’t stop talking about curfews. But what do teens have to say about them?
How Adams Morgan Got Its Name
How community members gave Adams Morgan a uniting cause.
Inside the Story of Elon Musk’s Failed DC Hyperloop
Before Elon Musk's DOGE there was his fantastical hyperloop. But, it went down as one of the biggest transport flops in D.C. history. We...
Mosh Madness: DC’s Next Big Music Festival Is Also a Basketball Tournament
Mosh Madness, D.C.’s premier music festival slash basketball tournament is back for its second iteration this spring. On April 11 the DMV...
Is Trump Destroying DC’s Architecture?
Between the East Wing of the White House, the proposed Arc de Trump, and whatever’s going to happen to the Kennedy Center, how will Presi...
DC Dating Off the Apps: Darts Are Flying
I’m deleting the apps and sacrificing myself as a social experiment to try D.C.’s in-person dating options so that you don’t have to. Thi...
The latest in DC
The Reflecting Pool Is Drawing Crowds of Gawkers
According to Donald Trump’s government, the Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool is a “crystal clear” basin of water.
D.C. Pride For Every Type of Washingtonian
Washington D.C.’s best 2026 Pride events, from fashion shows and film fests to block parties and raves.
McDuffie Concedes in Mayor's Race
Democratic socialist JLG is all but guaranteed to be the next D.C. mayor.
NOTUS Scraps ‘The Star’ Rebrand, Ends Trademark Dispute
The Washington Star will keep the name.
Column: D.C.’s Disastrous Election Wait
It amps up frustration and wrecks trust.
Janeese Lewis George Looks Very Likely to Win D.C. Mayoral Primary
As of early Wednesday morning, she led her main rival, Kenyan McDuffie, in seven of the District’s eight wards, trailing only in wealthy...
Ben Brasch Joins City Cast DC as Politics Reporter
City Cast DC is undergoing an unprecedented expansion of its local newsroom, hiring a team of journalists to create original reporting ab...
D.C. Heads to the Polls in High-Stakes Primary
This is the first time in over a decade that Muriel Bowser and Eleanor Holmes Norton are not on the ballot.
