The 10 Best Neighborhoods in Seattle

https://www.seattlemet.com/articles/2015/4/24/the-10-best-neighborhoods-in-seattle-may-2015

By Darren Davis  4/24/2015 at 3:00pm  Published in the May 2015 issue of Seattle Met

2413

IMAGE: DOUG CHAYKA

THE CONDO CRAZE

Capitol Hill

27% own  •  73% rent  •  $58,000 median household income

Depending on how you feel about condominiums, Capitol Hill’s decade of precipitous growth inspires either delight or chagrin. But one thing is undeniable: This neighborhood’s hot streak shows no signs of letting up. Its population has shot above 45,000, which doesn’t even include the people who come here in droves for the restaurants and nightlife.

The forthcoming Broadway light rail stop, set to open in 2016, has led to particularly ambitious development, including three multiunit projects between Denny and John. Market-rate apartments and condos make up the majority of proposed buildings, though at least 20 percent are dedicated to affordable housing.

Sarah Lewontin, executive director of Bellwether Housing, a developer that at one point tried to build affordable housing on Broadway, says Capitol Hill offers “more density than people in the Northwest think of in terms of home ownership.” In other words, owning in such a desirable neighborhood likely won’t come with a garage and a yard, but it still comes with a premium price tag. Home prices rose nearly 5 percent over the last year. Hey, when you’re hot, you’re hot.

 

THE BEST-KEPT SECRET

Mount Baker

3,856 total population  •  89 homes sold in 2014

Just as prospective home buyers are opting out of the Ballard and Fremont rat race and settling further north, Capitol Hill–minded house hunters are finding respite from the madness by heading southeast to Mount Baker.

Here, higher-end homes line Lake Washington, but between the water and Martin Luther King Jr. Way, rows of bungalows adorn the tree-lined streets and newer townhomes are peppered among them.

Nate Stott, who recently bought a flipped property in Mount Baker, says he and his partner, Anne, “wanted a home with character, close to an urban center that is somewhat walkable.” The house they decided on was within their price range, but without the 10-plus offers he had encountered in other markets.

Mount Baker has its own light rail station and is close to I-90, making it an appealing commute for people like Stott, who works on the Eastside.

SPONSORED

3 Juicy Joints to Get Your BBQ Fix

The Rockies may not be the obvious setting for Southern barbecue, but meat fiends now have a plethora of BBQ-focused options.

Presented by Aspen Sojourner

So you want to move to the ’Burbs?

Summing up the most popular cities outside Seattle

RENTON  More affordable than surrounding cities, popular with young families

BOTHELL  Quintessential and quaint subdivisions built in the last 10 years

KIRKLAND  A mix of upscale and affordable neighborhoods, easy commute to Bellevue

ISSAQUAH  Newer housing developments full of modern properties

EDMONDS  Quiet communities on the Sound with a small-town vibe

THE FLIPPER’S MARKET

West Seattle

58,179 total population  •  23% households with children

Just four miles southwest of downtown, old homes are purchased, renovated, and sometimes completely rebuilt at an impressive rate. Redfin reports that in 2013, West Seattle saw 98 homes flipped, gaining on average around $143,000 in value in the process. Combine that with a home inventory that’s the envy of other more centrally located areas (278 for sale at the peak of 2014), and you have first-time home buyers flocking to this older neighborhood long considered a family-oriented alternative to the density of urban Seattle. The Junction, a three-block stretch of California Avenue, provides the sort of dining and retail options usually associated with higher-profile family-friendly neighborhoods like Phinney Ridge.

THE URBANITE OASIS

South Lake Union

$50,500 median household income  •  66% residents with college degrees

Perhaps no neighborhood has grown faster than South Lake Union, its population jumping more than 20 percent in just a single year. The reason isn’t exactly a surprise: Amazon, of course, owns significant real estate in the area, while other tech and medicine firms have sprung up around it—a self-contained universe of employees needing places to live.

South Lake Union is addressing this need with a bevy of mixed-use residential projects among a torrent of other construction. Twenty-five buildings have been approved since March 2014 with another 42 in preliminary phases—all of this in an area less than one square mile.

Lori Mason Curran of Vulcan Real Estate, says the rapid growth in a formerly industrial environment has created some unique housing developments. Take the Stack House Apartments, for example: A century-old laundry supply building forms the backbone of two residential structures that pair vintage bones with a ton of high-tech amenities like an indoor winter garden, gaming rooms, and rainwater collection systems.

SPONSORED

Mud Season Deals to Please Your Mind, Body, and Wallet

With the seasonal mix/mud comes the deals; from staycations to getaways to spa experiences to fine dining specials, we’ve mapped out the best rates at some of the Vail Valley’s premier hotels.

Presented by Vail Magazine

THE REASONABLE WATERFRONT

Leschi

65% own  •  35% rent  •  122 home solds in 2014

Listen, buying a house within view of Seattle’s many bodies of water is going to be pricey. That doesn’t mean some homes near the water aren’t more affordable than others. Just east of the Central District, facing Lake Washington, the mix of older and newer homes on Leschi’s lakeside slope enjoy the same stunning views as communities like Madrona and Denny-Blaine at more reasonable prices. There’s also quick access to the parks and docks along the lake.

The median home value in Leschi is $541,000. Compared to Madison Park’s average of just over $1 million, that’s a steal. While home prices clearly rise closer to the water, Coldwell Banker Bain agent Michael Ackerman has seen multiple clients start inland and buy a more affordable house with a partial lake view, then make their next home purchase closer to the water. “It’s almost like the Leschi neighborhood on the hill is a stepping stone.”

Leschi also boasts a more diverse community than many of its lake-facing neighbors, with 45 percent nonwhite residents, in a neighborhood populated largely by homeowners.

IMAGE: DOUG CHAYKA

THE CROWN JEWEL

Ravenna

34 median resident age  •  10,386 total population

Not only was Ravenna the most competitive Seattle housing market in 2014, it was one of the top 10 hottest neighborhoods in the country, according to a Redfin report. Homes stayed on the market for an average of just seven days, with an overall 11 percent increase in home value from the previous year. Not Capitol Hill. Not Ballard. Placid little Ravenna.

SPONSORED

3 Juicy Joints to Get Your BBQ Fix

The Rockies may not be the obvious setting for Southern barbecue, but meat fiends now have a plethora of BBQ-focused options.

Presented by Aspen Sojourner

Its old age in part makes the neighborhood so desirable, with its Craftsman and Tudor homes built mostly before 1940. Close proximity to the University District doesn’t hurt either, nor do the parks and highly ranked schools.

“Multiple offers are pretty much a given,” says Redfin agent Christy Kim. She regularly receives an astonishing number of interested parties per house, and the highest bidder may ultimately buy at 20 percent above list price. “People love it here, and they are willing to pay for it.”

 

THE GREAT BALLARD EXODUS

Greenwood

52% own  •  48% rent  •  $74,000 median household income

Young families and tech transplants looking to buy their first home often start their search in Ballard…where inventory is down 7 percent from last year. With such a competitive market and minimal homes to choose from, many would-be homeowners migrate north, where Greenwood’s 20 percent increase in home sales since 2014 makes it a new hot spot.

“There are a lot of younger people looking for their first house who need more space to start a family,” says Redfin agent Adam Heater; his clients are finding the median price of $322 per square foot more affordable than elsewhere.

Greenwood also enjoys the same sort of self-contained neighborhood feel Ballard likes to boast, only with much less condo development. The 85th and Greenwood block has a real main-street vibe, from the French bistro Gainsbourg to the newly opened (and instantly popular) Coyle’s Bakeshop. Throw in the easy commuting routes via I-5 and Aurora Avenue and the influx of young people looking to purchase home, and we might as well start calling it Ballard North.

 

THE HOT TICKET

SPONSORED

The Top Five Reasons to Visit Park City This Summer

Festivals, food, and music are just a slice of what’s on tap in Park City during the summer months.

Presented by Park City Magazine

Ballard

8,314 total population  •  $541,000 median home value

Between 2013 and 2014, Ballard saw a nearly 50 percent increase in listings of single-family houses, townhomes, and condos. And yet, home prices rose 10 percent. People are buying properties faster than developers can build them.

Which isn’t surprising: The neighborhood is an ideal hybrid between urban and neighborhood living. A thicket of condominium projects have been completed or are currently under construction on and around Ballard Avenue, near some of the city’s most popular restaurants.

Head north to 65th, however, and suddenly there are whole neighborhoods of bungalows, caravans of strollers, pickup basketball games, and four esteemed public schools. “Families move here because the school districts are great no matter what neighborhood you’re in,” says Robin Sheridan at Windermere. “And I also find a lot of young professionals who work in Pioneer Square and South Lake Union.”

No surprise, this dichotomy has prompted a real estate gold rush in the area, with 245 homes sold in 2014 alone, easily placing it among the highest volume of home sales in all of Seattle and surrounding municipalities.

IMAGE: DOUG CHAYKA

THE NEXT HOT TICKET

Columbia City

44% own  •  56% rent  •  $52,528 household income

This southern Seattle neighborhood has seen a particularly steep increase in home sale price, up nearly 12 percent from this time last year. “Columbia City is much more hip than it used to be,” says agent Michael Ackerman. “People buy there because they like the flavor and diversity of the neighborhood.” This includes newer million-dollar properties built on the hills above older communities of bungalows and Craftsman homes.

Not as remote as West Seattle, but far enough south to be considered a sort of sovereign community, Columbia City has a cozy, walkable main drag, cultural happenings at the Columbia City Theater, elite brunching at Geraldine’s, and a convenient light rail stop. Last year saw 144 homes sold here, and as interest continues to grow, buying and renting get more competitive with each passing year.

THE OLD AND THE NEW

SoDo/Pioneer Square

1,402 households  •  $458,282 houshold income

Nearly 30,000 people work in the conjoined communities of Pioneer Square, one of Seattle’s oldest neighborhoods, and SoDo, one of the up-and-comers. Yet the combined residential population is just over 3,000, the smallest pocket of city dwellers in Seattle’s greater downtown area.

That population is set to grow with the addition of the Stadium Place apartments, a massive 740-unit complex beginning the second phase of construction this year. One new waterfront building is currently in development off Occidental Park, and two new complexes on Fourth Avenue will add a combined 261 units to the area.

“There’s been a huge migration down there for all the new and existing tech companies,” says Kevin Lisota at Findwell.  “Pioneer Square is the hip place to work, and these big complexes are being built to house all the newcomers.”

IMAGE: DOUG CHAYKA

THE CONDO CRAZE

Capitol Hill

27% own  •  73% rent  •  $58,000 median household income

Depending on how you feel about condominiums, Capitol Hill’s decade of precipitous growth inspires either delight or chagrin. But one thing is undeniable: This neighborhood’s hot streak shows no signs of letting up. Its population has shot above 45,000, which doesn’t even include the people who come here in droves for the restaurants and nightlife.

The forthcoming Broadway light rail stop, set to open in 2016, has led to particularly ambitious development, including three multiunit projects between Denny and John. Market-rate apartments and condos make up the majority of proposed buildings, though at least 20 percent are dedicated to affordable housing.

Sarah Lewontin, executive director of Bellwether Housing, a developer that at one point tried to build affordable housing on Broadway, says Capitol Hill offers “more density than people in the Northwest think of in terms of home ownership.” In other words, owning in such a desirable neighborhood likely won’t come with a garage and a yard, but it still comes with a premium price tag. Home prices rose nearly 5 percent over the last year. Hey, when you’re hot, you’re hot.

 

THE BEST-KEPT SECRET

Mount Baker

3,856 total population  •  89 homes sold in 2014

Just as prospective home buyers are opting out of the Ballard and Fremont rat race and settling further north, Capitol Hill–minded house hunters are finding respite from the madness by heading southeast to Mount Baker.

Here, higher-end homes line Lake Washington, but between the water and Martin Luther King Jr. Way, rows of bungalows adorn the tree-lined streets and newer townhomes are peppered among them.

Nate Stott, who recently bought a flipped property in Mount Baker, says he and his partner, Anne, “wanted a home with character, close to an urban center that is somewhat walkable.” The house they decided on was within their price range, but without the 10-plus offers he had encountered in other markets.

Mount Baker has its own light rail station and is close to I-90, making it an appealing commute for people like Stott, who works on the Eastside.

SPONSORED

3 Juicy Joints to Get Your BBQ Fix

The Rockies may not be the obvious setting for Southern barbecue, but meat fiends now have a plethora of BBQ-focused options.

Presented by Aspen Sojourner

So you want to move to the ’Burbs?

Summing up the most popular cities outside Seattle

RENTON  More affordable than surrounding cities, popular with young families

BOTHELL  Quintessential and quaint subdivisions built in the last 10 years

KIRKLAND  A mix of upscale and affordable neighborhoods, easy commute to Bellevue

ISSAQUAH  Newer housing developments full of modern properties

EDMONDS  Quiet communities on the Sound with a small-town vibe

THE FLIPPER’S MARKET

West Seattle

58,179 total population  •  23% households with children

Just four miles southwest of downtown, old homes are purchased, renovated, and sometimes completely rebuilt at an impressive rate. Redfin reports that in 2013, West Seattle saw 98 homes flipped, gaining on average around $143,000 in value in the process. Combine that with a home inventory that’s the envy of other more centrally located areas (278 for sale at the peak of 2014), and you have first-time home buyers flocking to this older neighborhood long considered a family-oriented alternative to the density of urban Seattle. The Junction, a three-block stretch of California Avenue, provides the sort of dining and retail options usually associated with higher-profile family-friendly neighborhoods like Phinney Ridge.

THE URBANITE OASIS

South Lake Union

$50,500 median household income  •  66% residents with college degrees

Perhaps no neighborhood has grown faster than South Lake Union, its population jumping more than 20 percent in just a single year. The reason isn’t exactly a surprise: Amazon, of course, owns significant real estate in the area, while other tech and medicine firms have sprung up around it—a self-contained universe of employees needing places to live.

South Lake Union is addressing this need with a bevy of mixed-use residential projects among a torrent of other construction. Twenty-five buildings have been approved since March 2014 with another 42 in preliminary phases—all of this in an area less than one square mile.

Lori Mason Curran of Vulcan Real Estate, says the rapid growth in a formerly industrial environment has created some unique housing developments. Take the Stack House Apartments, for example: A century-old laundry supply building forms the backbone of two residential structures that pair vintage bones with a ton of high-tech amenities like an indoor winter garden, gaming rooms, and rainwater collection systems.

SPONSORED

Mud Season Deals to Please Your Mind, Body, and Wallet

With the seasonal mix/mud comes the deals; from staycations to getaways to spa experiences to fine dining specials, we’ve mapped out the best rates at some of the Vail Valley’s premier hotels.

Presented by Vail Magazine

THE REASONABLE WATERFRONT

Leschi

65% own  •  35% rent  •  122 home solds in 2014

Listen, buying a house within view of Seattle’s many bodies of water is going to be pricey. That doesn’t mean some homes near the water aren’t more affordable than others. Just east of the Central District, facing Lake Washington, the mix of older and newer homes on Leschi’s lakeside slope enjoy the same stunning views as communities like Madrona and Denny-Blaine at more reasonable prices. There’s also quick access to the parks and docks along the lake.

The median home value in Leschi is $541,000. Compared to Madison Park’s average of just over $1 million, that’s a steal. While home prices clearly rise closer to the water, Coldwell Banker Bain agent Michael Ackerman has seen multiple clients start inland and buy a more affordable house with a partial lake view, then make their next home purchase closer to the water. “It’s almost like the Leschi neighborhood on the hill is a stepping stone.”

Leschi also boasts a more diverse community than many of its lake-facing neighbors, with 45 percent nonwhite residents, in a neighborhood populated largely by homeowners.

IMAGE: DOUG CHAYKA

THE CROWN JEWEL

Ravenna

34 median resident age  •  10,386 total population

Not only was Ravenna the most competitive Seattle housing market in 2014, it was one of the top 10 hottest neighborhoods in the country, according to a Redfin report. Homes stayed on the market for an average of just seven days, with an overall 11 percent increase in home value from the previous year. Not Capitol Hill. Not Ballard. Placid little Ravenna.

SPONSORED

3 Juicy Joints to Get Your BBQ Fix

The Rockies may not be the obvious setting for Southern barbecue, but meat fiends now have a plethora of BBQ-focused options.

Presented by Aspen Sojourner

Its old age in part makes the neighborhood so desirable, with its Craftsman and Tudor homes built mostly before 1940. Close proximity to the University District doesn’t hurt either, nor do the parks and highly ranked schools.

“Multiple offers are pretty much a given,” says Redfin agent Christy Kim. She regularly receives an astonishing number of interested parties per house, and the highest bidder may ultimately buy at 20 percent above list price. “People love it here, and they are willing to pay for it.”

 

THE GREAT BALLARD EXODUS

Greenwood

52% own  •  48% rent  •  $74,000 median household income

Young families and tech transplants looking to buy their first home often start their search in Ballard…where inventory is down 7 percent from last year. With such a competitive market and minimal homes to choose from, many would-be homeowners migrate north, where Greenwood’s 20 percent increase in home sales since 2014 makes it a new hot spot.

“There are a lot of younger people looking for their first house who need more space to start a family,” says Redfin agent Adam Heater; his clients are finding the median price of $322 per square foot more affordable than elsewhere.

Greenwood also enjoys the same sort of self-contained neighborhood feel Ballard likes to boast, only with much less condo development. The 85th and Greenwood block has a real main-street vibe, from the French bistro Gainsbourg to the newly opened (and instantly popular) Coyle’s Bakeshop. Throw in the easy commuting routes via I-5 and Aurora Avenue and the influx of young people looking to purchase home, and we might as well start calling it Ballard North.

 

THE HOT TICKET

SPONSORED

The Top Five Reasons to Visit Park City This Summer

Festivals, food, and music are just a slice of what’s on tap in Park City during the summer months.

Presented by Park City Magazine

Ballard

8,314 total population  •  $541,000 median home value

Between 2013 and 2014, Ballard saw a nearly 50 percent increase in listings of single-family houses, townhomes, and condos. And yet, home prices rose 10 percent. People are buying properties faster than developers can build them.

Which isn’t surprising: The neighborhood is an ideal hybrid between urban and neighborhood living. A thicket of condominium projects have been completed or are currently under construction on and around Ballard Avenue, near some of the city’s most popular restaurants.

Head north to 65th, however, and suddenly there are whole neighborhoods of bungalows, caravans of strollers, pickup basketball games, and four esteemed public schools. “Families move here because the school districts are great no matter what neighborhood you’re in,” says Robin Sheridan at Windermere. “And I also find a lot of young professionals who work in Pioneer Square and South Lake Union.”

No surprise, this dichotomy has prompted a real estate gold rush in the area, with 245 homes sold in 2014 alone, easily placing it among the highest volume of home sales in all of Seattle and surrounding municipalities.

IMAGE: DOUG CHAYKA

THE NEXT HOT TICKET

Columbia City

44% own  •  56% rent  •  $52,528 household income

This southern Seattle neighborhood has seen a particularly steep increase in home sale price, up nearly 12 percent from this time last year. “Columbia City is much more hip than it used to be,” says agent Michael Ackerman. “People buy there because they like the flavor and diversity of the neighborhood.” This includes newer million-dollar properties built on the hills above older communities of bungalows and Craftsman homes.

Not as remote as West Seattle, but far enough south to be considered a sort of sovereign community, Columbia City has a cozy, walkable main drag, cultural happenings at the Columbia City Theater, elite brunching at Geraldine’s, and a convenient light rail stop. Last year saw 144 homes sold here, and as interest continues to grow, buying and renting get more competitive with each passing year.

THE OLD AND THE NEW

SoDo/Pioneer Square

1,402 households  •  $458,282 houshold income

Nearly 30,000 people work in the conjoined communities of Pioneer Square, one of Seattle’s oldest neighborhoods, and SoDo, one of the up-and-comers. Yet the combined residential population is just over 3,000, the smallest pocket of city dwellers in Seattle’s greater downtown area.

That population is set to grow with the addition of the Stadium Place apartments, a massive 740-unit complex beginning the second phase of construction this year. One new waterfront building is currently in development off Occidental Park, and two new complexes on Fourth Avenue will add a combined 261 units to the area.

“There’s been a huge migration down there for all the new and existing tech companies,” says Kevin Lisota at Findwell.  “Pioneer Square is the hip place to work, and these big complexes are being built to house all the newcomers.”

Courtesy Chris Peterson/ZGF Architects

 

This feature appeared in the May 2015 issue of Seattle Met magazine.

Filed under

NeighborhoodsHousingReal EstateHome Buying,

时间: 2024-11-05 20:24:53

The 10 Best Neighborhoods in Seattle的相关文章

百度粉红色风科技上来看积分

http://www.ebay.com/cln/508gua_gvqjq/-/167266747010/2015.02.10 http://www.ebay.com/cln/jhu2290/-/167423283013/2015.02.10 http://www.ebay.com/cln/cha.m22/-/167166250017/2015.02.10 http://www.ebay.com/cln/fenyu56/-/167382503016/2015.02.10 http://www.eb

百度附件是分开就爱死了开发了

http://www.ebay.com/cln/m_m3154/-/167249028014/2015.02.10 http://www.ebay.com/cln/zhsu412/-/167238372018/2015.02.10 http://www.ebay.com/cln/mi.han5/-/167545028015/2015.02.10 http://www.ebay.com/cln/lij5252/-/167389481016/2015.02.10 http://www.ebay.co

Delphi 10 Seattle Update 1 修复 iOS HTTP 协定需求

在 iOS 9 Apple 加入了 HTTP 协议,还好有 TMS 提供快速修复工具,得以能顺利上架到 App Store. 现在 Delphi 10 Seattle Update 1 提供了这个设定功能,无需再使用 TMS 修复工具了,见下图:

发布 Victor 串口控件, 版本 1.5.0.6 VCL/FMX for C++ Builder 10.2 Tokyo, 10.1 Berlin, 10.0 Seattle, XE8, XE7, XE6 包括源码、演示程序

本次发布的 Victor 串口控件 1.5.0.6 包括 VCL 和 FMX (Firemonkey), 支持 C++ Builder 10.2 Tokyo, 10.1 Berlin, 10.0 Seattle, XE8, XE7, XE6 - Win32/Win64 支持其他版本 C++ Builder 的控件的发布和更新进度请关注网站主页的内容. Victor 串口控件 1.5.0.6 VCL/FMX 更新内容: ? 增加支持 FMX (Firemonkey) Win32/Win64,控件包

delphi 10 seattle 安卓服务开发(一)

从delphi 开始支持安卓的开发开始, 安卓service 开发一直都是delphier 绕不过去的坎, 以前也有开发service  的方法,但是都是手工处理启动文件,而且要修改很多东西,基本上成功 的概率很低. delphi 10 seattle(这个名字很特殊,与win10 一样,直接跳过了9) 终于官方支持安卓service 开发了, 不知道现在现在开发安卓service 是不是很简单?那么就让我们一探究竟. 首先,我们开启已经扁平的不能再扁平delphi 10, 选择建立一个其他项目

Delphi 10 Seattle 发布到 iOS 6~8 闪退问题之解决方案

问题一:iOS 9 于 2015/09/16 开放下载了,但之前使用 Delphi 开发上架的 App 皆会闪退,无法运行在 iOS 9. 问题二:使用 Delphi 10 Seattle + Xcode 7.0 + iOS SDK 9.0 发布到 iOS 9 的真机没有问题,但发布到 iOS 6~8 的机子会闪退. 为了解决以上问题,可以参考下列方法(仅供参考,希望 EMB 能尽快提供 Delphi 10 Seattle 的 Hot Fix): 开发环境: 换回 Delphi XE8 upda

Victor 串口控件 1.5.0.6 VCL/FMX for C++ Builder 10.2 Tokyo, 10.1 Berlin, 10.0 Seattle, XE8, XE7, XE6 已经发布

Victor 串口控件 1.5.0.6 更新内容: ? 增加支持 FMX (Firemonkey) Win32/Win64,控件包含 VCL 和 FMX 两个框架版本的,可以同时安装  ? 增加 FSM (Finite State Machine) 控件,包括 TVictorFSM 控件和 TVictorFsmStateT 模板,用于结构化处理跳转多而复杂的程序  ? 重新整理和编写例子程序,包括接收和发送二进制数据.收发字符串或文本.收发文件.通过调制解调器拨号和收发数据.枚举串口  ? 新版

Delphi 10 Seattle plus 新特性——System.JSON.Builders

1 { 2 全能中间件 -- 简单.高效.稳定.安全的三层中间件 3 4 1.支持 多账套多数据库,包括SQLite, MySQL, SQL Server, Oracle, PostgreSQL, DB2, SQL Anywhere,Firebird等多种数据库. 5 2.支持 快速开发,封装了 TRFConnection 和 TRFDataSet 控件供客户端使用,传统两层应用轻松升级为三层应用. 6 3.支持 数据压缩.加密传输,效率和安全有保障. 7 4.支持 数据连接池,提高并发响应速度

Delphi 10.1 Berlin 与 Delphi 10 Seattle 共存

以下安装环境是win7 64位 1. 安装Delphi10.1 Berlin 版本. 2.修改C:\Program Files (x86)\Embarcadero\Studio\18.0\cglm.ini文件 [Embarcadero License Management]RootDir=${MODULE_DIR}\..LicenseDir=${ROOTDIR}\LicenseInfoDir=${COMMON_APPDATA}\Embarcadero\18\.licensesSlipDir=${