Lately, my GPS heading to the Brookland Park area might as well just say “home: but with more clay and better sandwiches.” I started taking pottery at Hand/Thrown a few weeks ago, and I’m sure it seems like that may have fully become my personality. (If we’ve talked in the last month, you definitely know this.) My Fridays are now packed with wet clay and a fingernail brush (plus a few towels that I owe it to my plumbing to figure out before washing.)
A quick history, because places have stories 
Brookland Park started life as a classic early-20th-century Richmond streetcar suburb, a little village just north of the river where people could live in solid, handsome houses and ride the line downtown to work. Over time, like a lot of Northside, it went through disinvestment, neglect, and all the usual “we’ll fix it later” stories that cities like to tell themselves.
The good news? Later is now. You can feel the energy shifting on Brookland Park Boulevard—historic storefronts getting new life, long-time businesses holding their ground, neighbors who know each other’s dogs by name. It’s not glossy and filled with chains (thank goodness), and it’s not done (lots of works in progress), but that’s part of what makes it exciting. It’s a neighborhood in motion, not a finished product.
What the market is actually doing
On the real estate side, Brookland Park has quietly graduated from “up-and-coming” whisper to “you’re way too late if you wanted 2015 prices.” Most of the housing stock is early-1900s— think American Foursquares, brick two-stories, and bungalows with deep porches that make you want to sit down with a book and a glass of something cold.
In the past year or so, we’ve seen renovated three-bed, two-bath homes hover in that sweet spot where they’re more affordable than many Fan or Museum District options, but not exactly “starter-home cheap” anymore. Think: multiple offers on the good ones, especially if they’ve kept the original trim and added a kitchen that doesn’t look like a total afterthought. Investors are here, yes. But so are first-time buyers, artists, young families, and people who’ve been in Northside for decades and are finally seeing businesses arrive that actually serve them.
If you’re someone who loves a neighborhood with character, walkability, and the chance to be part of its next chapter—not just consume it once it’s finished—Brookland Park deserves a visit.
Hand/Thrown: Where I Remember How to be a Beginner
Back to the clay. Hand/Thrown is one of those studios that makes you feel both inspired and deeply humbled within five minutes of sitting at the wheel. The space is bright, full of people in aprons, and everyone is very kind about the fact that your mug looks like bowl and that you clearly don’t know what you’re doing.
You wedge clay, you center, you fail, you try again. It’s not that different from renovating a hundred-year-old house—everything leans a little, nothing is perfectly square, and that’s half the charm.
Scrap Creative Reuse: The Treasure Hunt
A couple of blocks away, Scrap RVA is my version of a grown-up candy store. Imagine a creative reuse center where you can find vintage fabric, random office supplies, art materials, and the exact weird little thing you didn’t know you needed until you saw it in a bin (A jar of vintage buttons? Of course I need that!). It’s part thrift, part art closet, part community hub. Sometimes they get really unique and amazing things, and they always post them on their social media. If you want to follow and see what they’ve got in (or get tempted to maybe really commit to weaving when they suddenly have an amazing loom) go give them a follow on Instagram.
Morty’s: My New Favorite Lunch Spot
Then there’s Morty’s, where I met my friend Michelle for lunch a couple of weeks ago. It’s really kind of hard to describe- part market, part food shop, part restaurant and bar. The easy part is that it’s delicious. You know how you have a sandwich and you literally can’t stop thinking about it for days? (Tell me you do this too?) That’s how that was. I had the Bear Bianco- roast beef, onion, horseradish cream, marinated zucchini, all piled on their delicious, crusty bread. They do have loads of other things, so I’ll work my way through, but first, I’ll be getting that one again.
Ruby Scoops: The Long-Term Love Affair
And then, of course, Ruby Scoops. I’ve been in love with their ice cream for years. They flavor like an art form—creative but not gimmicky, seasonal without making a fuss about it.
Ruby Scoops is more than just dessert; it’s a third place. Kids with sticky hands, couples sharing a cone, friends catching up at the counter. In a neighborhood context, a shop like that signals something: this is a place where people linger. Where you don’t just run errands—you make memories. (And occasionally, you make very bad decisions about how many scoops you “need.”)
Next up: Julio’s Bagels and The Smoky Mug
On my list for the next Brookland Park field trip: Julio’s Bagels. I have been in a long term relationship with good bread as long as I can remember, and I’m always excited when a neighborhood gets a true, from-scratch bagel shop. Breakfast is one of the most underrated measures of quality-of-life in a neighborhood—can you walk to coffee? To a bagel? To a place that knows your order by the third visit? (This is something that I think RVA has gotten better and better about over time.)
I will also be checking out the Smoky Mug soon- I’ve heard great things about both. Don’t worry. I’ll report back!
Why Brookland Park matters (and not just to the MLS)
Here’s what I love most: Brookland Park is a reminder that “desirable” isn’t just granite and a subway tile backsplash. It’s walkable blocks and small businesses and neighbors who look out for each other. It’s a creative studio where you can be a beginner, a reuse center that keeps good stuff out of landfills, a lunch spot where they know your name, and an ice cream shop that makes you show up even in January.
As a real estate agent, I can tell you what’s sold, what’s pending, and what’s sitting. As a person who likes a good meal, a good coffee (and yes, some good ice cream), and a good neighborhood story, I can also tell you this: Brookland Park is one of the places in RVA where the story is getting more interesting nearly every day.
Have you checked out Brookland Park lately—gotten some Ruby Scoops, wandered through Scrap RVA, or tried a class at Hand/Thrown? And, more importantly, who’s coming with me for bagels at Julio’s?

