|
Lots of trails for walking in Reston. A few of the village centers are worth walking to.
What is your budget? What type (size) home are you looking for? What are your school needs? |
If I may add my experience, I live off of Park Street and see people walking all the time in all kinds of weather. I don't understand the ones walking in the heavy rain but they are always there doing so. |
| My husband keeps trying to get me out of Old Town. If you want walkability- it's where you live. |
|
I worked in old town fairfax for a while- there is actually a lot of foot traffic on weekends just getting out and about.
What is your budget OP? People on this board hate on it but I've lived in Lyon Park and Lyon Village and loved both- very chill, suburb type feel but lots and lots to walk to- granted Clarendon and Courthouse can be a little "one note" but I liked it when I lived there. Liked being right there to the district and to the falls church/ fairfax area burbs with better international options |
Westover is small but offers a lot right there. Good restaurants, ice cream, post office, coffee shop, Italian Store, outdoor beer garden w/live music, library, playgrounds, bank, barber shops, etc. It reminds of a little downtown area of a small town. At least you don't have to walk down busy Maple Ave. |
| We drive to the grocery in Vienna but walk to Caboose, Bazin's, pizza, Walgreen's, library, my boy's Taikwondo lessons, Amouri for coffee. |
|
Leesburg is very charming and walkable from near its old town but a long commute to either spot.
Op, do you simply want to be able to access things on foot or do you want a picturesque town feeling? If the former, parts of Burke centre are surprisingly walkable for a number of things (coffee, groceries, hair cut, flowers are at grocer, ice cream, casual lunch options, etc. You don't list your budget or schools needs unless I missed it. |
| Pimmit hills, the parts close to McLean metro is somewhat walkable now and will be more in the future. |
well, we lived in Reston and now live near Chantilly HS and library, and we like being able to walk places. Before that, we lived in Shirlington and walked to the restaurants and the library (before redevelopment) Yes, we need a car for some things, but when we can walk, we do. It isn't small town charming stuff we're walking to, but we walk to get groceries, we walk to starbucks and a couple other places to eat. We walk to the schools and we walk to the library. I feel silly getting in my car to go down the street. |
I walked all the time in Clarendon. I had a little shopping cart thing, and I even walked to the grocery store. Of course, I worked in DC, so I metro-ed since driving would be crazy. I think if I worked in Tyson's, I would drive from Clarendon. But I was not unusual in walking to buy groceries there. |
Downtown McLean |
There is nothing worth walking to in downtown McLean. |
| Thanks, all! Budget is up to $1M but ideally I'd much rather stay under $850K. Kids are 2 and 1YO and schools are definitely important, but if I've learned anything from DCUM I know not to put all my faith just in Great Schools ratings. We looked at a few open houses in Vienna last weekend and I would be absolutely content in a smaller, older house that either has been redone or is "cheaper" and we could do some renovations as time goes. I think most important to me at this point is TIME. I waste so much time in traffic commuting and I'm just over it. |
LOL. |
|
Technically, you could walk to a lot of stuff if you live near a decent strip mall anywhere in the suburbs. But I assume you're looking for an area that has a wide variety of amenities that's linked in one area. Since you're commuting to Tysons and Springfield, I would limit it to Falls Church City, Mosaic, Vienna, and Old town Fairfax.
I think you would get the best bang for your buck in Old Town FFX. If you can afford what you're looking for in Falls Church City or Vienna, then that's great. But you're paying a premium for those areas because it's more convenient for people who commute to DC or want to be close to the orange line. If you're not going to do either of those, it might not be worth it for you. Old Town FFX has a good library, a wide variety of restaurants that are both local as well as chains, a few bars, some local coffee/dessert places , a small town square with a splash park that hosts summer concerts, a farmers' market, and parks nearby. You can still buy smaller, older SFHs from the 500s or you can buy newer nicer ones for $1 million. There's also a wide range of townhomes from the $600s to $800k. |