I think all this anger is much worse for your health than the noise. Just move if it bothers you so much. You will find a buyer for your house. Dont worry. |
I think the difference is that in Alexandria you have a lot of other noise that drowns out the planes (except in the early morning I guess, as PP suggests). It is the same in Rosslyn or Foggy Bottom. The planes are very loud there too but you do not really notice, because there is a lot of other stuff going on. In a place with a suburban feel like the Palisades though the planes become much more noticeable. |
Looking at the graphic of pre and post 2015, seems the change was outside of the DC line and Palisades was where planes have always flown. Before 2015, it was more dispersed over MoCo but still centralized over the Potomac adjacent to DC. |
Moved in 2016. Not angry. Shocked |
| Palisades gaslighters. Went to the same finishing school as the Death.. sorry, Spring Valley home owners. Nothing to see here, buyers… |
And the people on the ground! |
haha, if that's true, then we are all done for. The whole sky over the entire DC metro is crisscrossed with air jet trails almost every single day. We have 2 major airports here and it "shows" literally in the cloud patterns. |
| Much of DC is a no fly zone. No reason to buy a house in Palisades, Foxhall or Kent. In CA, people worry about sending kids to schools under a flight path for a few hours a day, and in DC we are calling people telling the truth crazy and hypersensitive. |
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This is amazing:
https://www.brusselstimes.com/224012/400-families-challenge-federal-government-over-brussels-flightpath How did DC lose their lawsuit? |
Flight paths change, they did and they will continue changing. It's messed up to have to blame buyers for not anticipating that one day they may end up under a "highway in the sky" where planes will fly every minute over the homes in their neighborhood. Areas that are far removed from the airports and even miles inland from the Potomac still have airline noise even if planes fly high up. It's still noisy if there is a plane flying overhead every minute one af I think they are starting to do some better planning and using different paths on different days. But since this seems to be changing, those of you so smug to have done your research to not be under a flight path today may be under a flight path tomorrow. There is literally nothing that will ensure you won't. You can be many miles from an airport and all the way inland and still get high flying planes in a "bee-line" over your area. |
If you check the monitoring web site that was posted up thread, it looks like the noise level in Alexandria is lower than Palisades. I used to live in Alexandria in Old Town and further down river and was never bothered by the plane noise. I think there are two reasons (1) the DCA traffic usually lands from the South and takes off to the North, so plane traffic over Alexandria is usually landing aircraft. Palisades gets aircraft taking off and the engine noise on take off is greater; and (2) Geography. Old Town is lower and the river is wider there. |
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I agree. Except, this is why Mass Ave
Heights, Woodley Park are the best places to invest — there will never be planes flying over the Naval Observatory |
Most of the sky over the entire DC metro is literally crisscrossed by air-jet fuel trails on partially cloudy days. IDK what you are talking about. I can be in Dupont and see the sky with flight trails remnants and then be in Arlington and see the same, and then drive to MoCo and see the same. |
This is such BS, the planes fly over the National mall and close to the White house. There is a flight path right over the CIA headquarters in Mclean. Please. Don't pat yourself on the back thinking you will forever be immune from airplane noise. Things change. |