| Kenwood in Bethesda. |
TBF, the nice parts of McLean are mostly north of 123. The parts down near Arlington are priced similar to North Arlington, and are as desirable. |
| Potomac |
yes- if you are driving, it is much faster to go N-S to/from downtown than E-W. Kalorama & Woodley Park are super convenient to downtown--much more so than Georgetown. Even CCDC is much quicker than you'd think with the lane changes on CT Ave that give you four lanes. |
| Culmore hands down. |
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Why would anyone drive DT from Georgetown? You can bike or scooter there, or just walk to GWU metro, which isn't that far and get there quick. Or take an uber. I walked from East Village Georgetown too DT, it's under 3 miles away and NBD. And if you plug the directions from NWDC vs. Georgetown to DTDC it still will be faster even if by 5 min from Georgetown. How is it possibly less convenient than residential NWDC? |
Kalorama and Georgetown always had been and will have the prestige you are looking for as far as urban areas are concerned, ditto for Dupont although it's more of a newcomer as it used to be run down before. But when it comes to SFH areas of prestige you'd have to open up to the suburbs, as that's where you will find truly sprawling multimillion dollar mansions and estates. When it comes to suburban or residential neighborhoods, there are many in DC area. When it comes to urban areas, the older ones that had been associated with prestige are Georgetown and Kalorama, you could add Dupont to it if you want. These days there are more urban areas of prestige, where price per square ft. is similar. Same is happening to the suburbs where some parts of Arlington are getting more of that reputation due to higher cost per Sq.Ft because of better urban development and metro access people find desirable. Mclean had always been considered more tony than Arlington, but mainly due to large estates and huge lots that can accommodate the homes of the rich. I'd say when it comes to regular SFH areas closer to DC N.Arlington and Mclean are about the same in terms of prestige. Then there is also Potomac, Bethesda and CCMD. I consider NWDC to be residential, but it also had some level of prestige, around Observatory and CCDC parts. These days you would add parts like AU park and Tenleytown too, which weren't associated with prestige before. |
| McLean |
Nope |
| Montgomery County |
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Little to no yard, most prestigious: Kalorama. Period. A couple houses here and there in Georgetown, a half a block or so here and there in Georgetown, but not Georgetown overall. If condos are your thing, west end is actually full of very, very wealthy and prominent people, but it isn’t so much a “neighborhood,” so it just gets a passing mention.
Actual yard, most prestigious: Kent. Chevy Chase Village (less so Chevy Chase). Portions of Wesley Heights—some pockets below cathedral, a couple of areas on the numbered streets rather than the cut-throughs. The more private portions of Woodland/Normanstone Terrace, but that’s a step down because a lot of the houses are pretty isolated. A few areas of the Palisades (below MacArthur), like some of the beautiful homes right on the river. Sherier Street, while family friendly and appealing, is crawling in traffic, as are a lot of the streets close by. Also-rans, but don’t get included: Spring Valley (beautiful homes, beautiful yards, munitions everywhere and construction to “fix” is everywhere—sorry, can’t be on the most prestigious list when tons of people won’t put their families there. They go to Kent, if they can find one of the few houses available there). Cleveland Park (some nice homes, some ok yards, but overall a mixed feel. Primary problem—traffic, traffic, traffic. Every street is a cut-through, hence all the speedbumps). Dupont has some nice streets and some nice houses but isn’t consistent enough to make the list. Anything right off Wisconsin or between Wisconsin and Connecticut—sorry. Cut-through neighborhoods. Also not included: anything outside of DC. You can have another thread for “prestigious in maryland” or “virginia.” But if you’re outside the DC line, you are not in a prestigious washington neighborhood. |
| Kenwood in Bethesda, the Chevy chases, Georgetown, Kalomora, river road of Potomac, Mclean along Georgetown pike |
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Kalorama
Chevy Chase Wesley heights Spring Valley MD: Potomac In VA: McLean Great Falls The SE quadrant of Old Town Belle Haven Rosemont The small portion of N. Arlington that borders McLean |
This is a good list for the 1980s, but a lot has changed since then. |