Mt Prospect in North Potomac

Anonymous
This thread turned ridiculous. There’s no danger of living or being near power lines lmao.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Who bought lot 1? i know it didnt show up on the website but apparently sold. I work for the in the medical field and i can assure you most likely you will get cancer from living too close to the power lines. The government and other companies are trying to cover up the impact of living near strong electromagnetic and electric fields by only pushing studies focusing on short term effects (vs long term = various medical problems and cancer). Good luck to you! I personally would steer clear from all lots within 1300 feet of the power lines
What about Travilah Elementary? It's close to the power lines as well. There are many schools out there in the country built around power lines.


I live in mp and thats why my kids are in private school.

WHY would you move to MP if you were that concerned with power lines?!?
Anonymous
The power lines don’t go through the community. Only a few houses are within 1000 feet of the lines. This conversation is nuts.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The power lines don’t go through the community. Only a few houses are within 1000 feet of the lines. This conversation is nuts.


I agree that the power lines are not a health problem. However, they spook away a lot of buyers especially when they see the power lines and cell towers near the elementary school. It’s something to be aware of for future resale.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The power lines don’t go through the community. Only a few houses are within 1000 feet of the lines. This conversation is nuts.


I agree that the power lines are not a health problem. However, they spook away a lot of buyers especially when they see the power lines and cell towers near the elementary school. It’s something to be aware of for future resale.


Many of the most expensive neighborhoods zoned to Wootton, Churchill, and Whitman have visible, above-ground power lines, so obviously they do not spook away "a lot of buyers".
Anonymous
The community is almost sold out.

Obviously, the current buyers weren’t spooked. This idea that it’s going to hurt resale is silly. It didn’t hurt any sales. It’s a non-issue.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The community is almost sold out.

Obviously, the current buyers weren’t spooked. This idea that it’s going to hurt resale is silly. It didn’t hurt any sales. It’s a non-issue.


They will be sorely disappointed when the SJWs redraw the school attendance zones and then the houses lose 20% of their value.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Who bought lot 1? i know it didnt show up on the website but apparently sold. I work for the in the medical field and i can assure you most likely you will get cancer from living too close to the power lines. The government and other companies are trying to cover up the impact of living near strong electromagnetic and electric fields by only pushing studies focusing on short term effects (vs long term = various medical problems and cancer). Good luck to you! I personally would steer clear from all lots within 1300 feet of the power lines


You are nuts.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Who bought lot 1? i know it didnt show up on the website but apparently sold. I work for the in the medical field and i can assure you most likely you will get cancer from living too close to the power lines. The government and other companies are trying to cover up the impact of living near strong electromagnetic and electric fields by only pushing studies focusing on short term effects (vs long term = various medical problems and cancer). Good luck to you! I personally would steer clear from all lots within 1300 feet of the power lines


You are nuts.


says the person who bought lot 1...
Anonymous
My High School was literally on 495. I used to watch cars in front steps all the time. And we had above ground power lines!!

You don’t catch stuff just be being near it.

And even then my 78 year neighbor died of asbestos related cancer who worked 40 years in a factory that produced a series.

It killed him but he was in factory breathing it in 40 years
Anonymous
I was trying to buy a home here, but I am not sure anymore.

My contract itself is going to be over 2.9 million for the Kalorama (2 million base, 125k+ lot premium, 500k structural options, 300k design options). After I move in, I would finish the media room, and gym and do built-ins in the study, loft, etc. + moldings along with the backyard like the model and a pool. That's 400k right there (3.3 million total) + furnishing the home.

Idk, I think that is quite expensive for a modern yet very nice McMansion (I am buying this house so I have the right to call it what it is lol) just for the community (which is my main motive for purchasing here).

I have recently toured 3+ million dollar homes, and they are generally far prettier in Mclean, Great Falls, Bethesda, and Potomac.

These houses in mp with the backyard, built-ins, molding, model home finishes, etc, at 2.7 makes sense. But a 500-600k premium? Idk if it is worth it anymore. The value, regardless, will drop (so if I buy it at 3.3, maybe in 10-15+ years, I will be able to sell at 3ish), and if it is rezoned, maybe 2.8ish. That seems like a bad investment compared to other homes I see on Zillow or building my own home with another builder on a lot I buy.

I don't care about the price that much, but I feel I can get better value elsewhere.

I am not saying it was always a bad investment, as people who bought early on did not spend more than 2.5-2.7 on the home itself (all palatines where under that number and had the floating stairs and more outdoor living, stuff the kalorama lacks). Even the Parkhurst is probably fine as the house wont cost THAT much as they never upped the price and those lot premiums tend to be less.

Maybe the issue is I am wanting something like the model house after paying so much. Maybe people are only taking 50-250k in the design center or not taking the grand multigen and 4 car garage and other upgrades to keep the cost down.

And there is still bidding on all the homesites, which I think is wild. Maybe the reviews of toll brothers are right haha
Anonymous
I totally agree with the previous comment. If they do a bid on those 3 lots near the end of the cul de sac i am out. I dont want a bad, stressful experience like this when buying a house. I am spending 3 million, i deserve better. I will simply buy in potomac or bethesda. I an eying a few homes right now. Everyone should stop participating this madness.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I was trying to buy a home here, but I am not sure anymore.

My contract itself is going to be over 2.9 million for the Kalorama (2 million base, 125k+ lot premium, 500k structural options, 300k design options). After I move in, I would finish the media room, and gym and do built-ins in the study, loft, etc. + moldings along with the backyard like the model and a pool. That's 400k right there (3.3 million total) + furnishing the home.

Idk, I think that is quite expensive for a modern yet very nice McMansion (I am buying this house so I have the right to call it what it is lol) just for the community (which is my main motive for purchasing here).

I have recently toured 3+ million dollar homes, and they are generally far prettier in Mclean, Great Falls, Bethesda, and Potomac.

These houses in mp with the backyard, built-ins, molding, model home finishes, etc, at 2.7 makes sense. But a 500-600k premium? Idk if it is worth it anymore. The value, regardless, will drop (so if I buy it at 3.3, maybe in 10-15+ years, I will be able to sell at 3ish), and if it is rezoned, maybe 2.8ish. That seems like a bad investment compared to other homes I see on Zillow or building my own home with another builder on a lot I buy.

I don't care about the price that much, but I feel I can get better value elsewhere.

I am not saying it was always a bad investment, as people who bought early on did not spend more than 2.5-2.7 on the home itself (all palatines where under that number and had the floating stairs and more outdoor living, stuff the kalorama lacks). Even the Parkhurst is probably fine as the house wont cost THAT much as they never upped the price and those lot premiums tend to be less.

Maybe the issue is I am wanting something like the model house after paying so much. Maybe people are only taking 50-250k in the design center or not taking the grand multigen and 4 car garage and other upgrades to keep the cost down.

And there is still bidding on all the homesites, which I think is wild. Maybe the reviews of toll brothers are right haha

Holy s&*$! That price is crazy.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The community is almost sold out.

Obviously, the current buyers weren’t spooked. This idea that it’s going to hurt resale is silly. It didn’t hurt any sales. It’s a non-issue.


They will be sorely disappointed when the SJWs redraw the school attendance zones and then the houses lose 20% of their value.

And you will be sorely disappointed when that doesn’t happen.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I was trying to buy a home here, but I am not sure anymore.

My contract itself is going to be over 2.9 million for the Kalorama (2 million base, 125k+ lot premium, 500k structural options, 300k design options). After I move in, I would finish the media room, and gym and do built-ins in the study, loft, etc. + moldings along with the backyard like the model and a pool. That's 400k right there (3.3 million total) + furnishing the home.

Idk, I think that is quite expensive for a modern yet very nice McMansion (I am buying this house so I have the right to call it what it is lol) just for the community (which is my main motive for purchasing here).

I have recently toured 3+ million dollar homes, and they are generally far prettier in Mclean, Great Falls, Bethesda, and Potomac.

These houses in mp with the backyard, built-ins, molding, model home finishes, etc, at 2.7 makes sense. But a 500-600k premium? Idk if it is worth it anymore. The value, regardless, will drop (so if I buy it at 3.3, maybe in 10-15+ years, I will be able to sell at 3ish), and if it is rezoned, maybe 2.8ish. That seems like a bad investment compared to other homes I see on Zillow or building my own home with another builder on a lot I buy.

I don't care about the price that much, but I feel I can get better value elsewhere.

I am not saying it was always a bad investment, as people who bought early on did not spend more than 2.5-2.7 on the home itself (all palatines where under that number and had the floating stairs and more outdoor living, stuff the kalorama lacks). Even the Parkhurst is probably fine as the house wont cost THAT much as they never upped the price and those lot premiums tend to be less.

Maybe the issue is I am wanting something like the model house after paying so much. Maybe people are only taking 50-250k in the design center or not taking the grand multigen and 4 car garage and other upgrades to keep the cost down.

And there is still bidding on all the homesites, which I think is wild. Maybe the reviews of toll brothers are right haha

Who would spend $3M here when you could buy in Bethesda or Potomac?
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