this is so ridiculous. FCC’s population has grown over time and the schools will continue to adapt. |
To someone who moved there in the year 2000, YOU increased the density. |
This is true. Everyone knows for example that condos destroyed the UES of Manhattan. |
What? My DH and I moved into a house that had three adults and two children in it. So, no. We did NOT. |
| None of the new projects in FCC are cheap. It's like 3K for a 1 bedroom apartment. I live in the "cheaper" neighborhood called Winter Hill and it's still 2.5-4K for a small townhouse. We get tons of state department and military families that care about education. Compared to FCPS, FCCPS is a breath of fresh air. I know, my child started at TJ and I can't get straight answers about anything from anyone. In FCCPS the staff are much more responsive. |
| They're apartments, not condos, and the primary input to the school district remains single family homes with multiple school-age kids. We've lived here just over 15 years and like it more now than when we first moved in. There are great restaurants (other than a few stalwarts that are still here, it was slim pickings 15 years ago), and we've been very happy with the infrastructure upgrades to the schools, library, parks/playgrounds and city hall. A PP mentioned it was quieter 15 years ago, but that wasn't necessarily a good thing - it was quiet due to a lack of businesses and activity. I'm not a huge fan of high rise development and think we should limit it soon, but in general we're in a good place. |
| Traffic. So much traffic. The past few years have been so much worse than it used to be, especially because people cut through neighborhoods now and it’s so dangerous. |
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Better sign up for those private schools now. You don't want to be forced in to making your child interact with families who can only afford to spend $5,500 per month on a new 2BR condo at The Oak.
https://redf.in/wn2fGP |
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The Good:
Proximity to DC 2 Metro stations Lots of good restaurants/shops It has "character" Load of tear-downs bringing in really high-end homes FCC schools Close to trails, parks, etc. Walkable The Bad: Traffic The Ugly: A lot of the new condos going up are an eye sore Some of the older stuff on Route 7 is an eye sore The car dealerships on Route 7 - those need to move west to Tysons Some of the older retail plazas feel sketchy |
| FCC is great. Virginia is growing and FCC is on fire. New high school is basically a public private with 800 students. 15min drive to DC and great metro access to avoid rush hour. Houses are more set back than in Arlington which creates a better feel imo. |
There’s no such thing as a public private. |
That's right, public schools like Thomas Jefferson are far superior to any private school. |
A 4 year magnet isn’t private school. What are you going to do the other 9 years? |
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We recently moved from just outside FCC (we lived in Fairfax County but basically did everything in FCC) and while my kids didn't go to the schools there, we only ever heard good things about them from preschool friends, sports teammates, camp friends, etc. - the one thing I heard was that the elementary schools, Mt. Daniel especially, were getting very crowded.
We moved because we wanted a larger home and couldn't find one in our price range (we tried!). I would have loved to stay in the area because it really did feel like a small town after a while (we saw the same families out and about, kids did camp with the same kids every year, etc.), but my husband was starting to get really fed up with the traffic and congestion and all the new development is going to make it so much worse. |