By midcentury, Washington will be home to 1.7 million new residents and 1.4 million new jobs, not to mention an entire city at Tysons Corner. Where will everyone live? How will people get around? And will we really be swimming in the Anacostia?
For people who run governments and businesses—not to mention those who run households—the key questions about our region’s future are pretty constant: Where will real estate be most in demand? How are residents going to get around? What kind of jobs will they have?
The prevailing predictions might surprise you.
Picture nearly 900,000 people living in the District, for instance. Or the population doubling in no-longer-all-that-distant exurbs like Stafford County. Or urban neighborhoods cropping up in Rockville. These are bullish trend lines, no doubt, and whether they pan out depends on harder-to-predict things such as the future of the federal budget, what will happen to the water level, and the whims of taste. But if a crystal-ball image of Washington in a half century seems hard to imagine, it’s worth recalling just how young the area’s current shape really is: It was just last year, after all, that the Beltway—that defining piece of 20th-century geography—turned 50.
Here’s our look at the forces that will shape the region over the next few decades, and some guesses as to what kind of place they’ll leave behind.
What Washington Will Look Like in 2050
By midcentury, Washington will be home to 1.7 million new residents and 1.4 million new jobs, not to mention an entire city at Tysons Corner. Where will everyone live? How will people get around? And will we really be swimming in the Anacostia?
Edited by Kristen Hinman and Marisa M. Kashino.
For people who run governments and businesses—not to mention those who run households—the key questions about our region’s future are pretty constant: Where will real estate be most in demand? How are residents going to get around? What kind of jobs will they have?
The prevailing predictions might surprise you.
Picture nearly 900,000 people living in the District, for instance. Or the population doubling in no-longer-all-that-distant exurbs like Stafford County. Or urban neighborhoods cropping up in Rockville. These are bullish trend lines, no doubt, and whether they pan out depends on harder-to-predict things such as the future of the federal budget, what will happen to the water level, and the whims of taste. But if a crystal-ball image of Washington in a half century seems hard to imagine, it’s worth recalling just how young the area’s current shape really is: It was just last year, after all, that the Beltway—that defining piece of 20th-century geography—turned 50.
Here’s our look at the forces that will shape the region over the next few decades, and some guesses as to what kind of place they’ll leave behind.
Two Crazy Visions of the National Mall in 2050
5 DC Landmarks That Could Be Affected By Climate Change
4 Projects That Are Going to Change Washington
The Surprising Places Washingtonians Will Live in 2040
These Are Washington’s 4 Fastest-Growing Industries
The Audacious Plan to Turn a Sprawling DC Suburb Into a Big City
The Fastest-Growing Suburbs of Washington Are In Counties You’ve Never Heard Of
6 Transportation Projects That Could Change Washington
These 4 Washington Buildings Will Be Beloved Landmarks Some Day
These 5 Recent Washington Buildings Are Structures We’ll Regret
Unless Washington Makes It Easier to Build, We’re All In Trouble
Planners Think Washingtonians Will Actually Want to Swim in the Anacostia River
Related
This Quirky DC Map Isn’t Like Any You’ve Ever Seen
How Howard University Is Helping Tech Understand Black Speech
Need to Know What Time It Is? 6 Places to Find a Sundial Around DC.
How Would a New DC Stadium Compare to the Last One?
More from News & Politics
DC Officials Push Back as Feds Tighten Screws, Mayor Addresses Crisis From Martha’s Vineyard, and Arlington Says It Won’t Help Trump With Takeover
Guest List: 5 People We’d Love to Hang Out With This August
Here Are Your Rights at an ICE Checkpoint in DC
DC’s Sandwich Guy Isn’t the First to Throw Food in Protest. Here’s a Modern History of Edible Projectiles.
Trump Said He Doesn’t Want to See Tents. Now DC is Clearing Encampments in Earnest.
Will Anyone Save DC’s Non-Citizen Voting Law?
Feds Heckled at DC Checkpoint, Trump Will Emcee Kennedy Center Honors, and Sandwich Guy Got Indicted
Meet the Lobbyist Fighting Against “Perfectly Legal” Corruption in DC
Most Popular
This Artsy Couple Put a Wearable Twist on Traditional Bouquets for Their Wedding Party
27 Things to Do in the DC Area This Week and Weekend
30 Best Burgers to Bite Into in the DC Area
31 Things to Do in the DC Area This Week and Weekend
Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster Spotted at DC’s Bar Angie