Pelham. (Which posters from Scarsdale (or bronxville!) may shit on. But it was beautiful! Apologies for all the typos in my previous post. |
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Spring Valley in DC
Lyon Village in Arlington Some parts of Bethesda Kenwood Potomac is most like Northern NJ Nothing here is like Fairfield County. |
This. |
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Bethesda is nothing like the close-in suburbs of Westchester. It was built mostly in the 1940s-1960s - not in the early 20th century.
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+ 1 I would say the " city" of DC is somewhat similar to NYC suburbs. |
Maybe a Mexican Village. |
NOT. |
+1 |
Happy to live somewhere where the average household is more prosperous but we aren't defined by a few Wall Street robber barons and hedge fund titans. |
^^^ what does that even mean? No- north Arlington is nothing like the village, but it is also nothing like a Mexican village. Seriously are people posting from Iowa or something? Have you been to these places? I'm guessing not. |
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You guys are talking about NYC like it is only Manhattan. Parts of upper northwest have similar population density to Staten Island, Riverdale and Ditmas Park. DC is not the only city with areas where people have yards and are more than a couple blocks to the train.
I grew up in Fairfield County CT and what I think makes the suburbs here so different is that it is rare to find true towns with their own character and downtowns. First, school districts and most local governance here is not at the town-level, they are at the county level. That is a huge difference! Also, most of the nice suburbs near where I grew up had much better local recreation facilities for town residents. That means not having to join a pool club because the entire town was a pool club! Of course some joined country clubs - but most did not. |
Oh I've been to Arlington many times. It may not be Mexico.... but it's probably closer to that than it is to Greenwich, in feel. |
Just stop already with your nonsensical racist comments. So you've driven by a taco place in Arlington and you want to be an ass about it. We get it. |
Racist? This is not about race. It's more about the feel of a place and class level. |
Another NJ native and I agree that there really aren't easy comparisons. Here in DC the suburbs all sort of bleed into the city of DC without a lot of distinction. NJ and NY suburbs are much more distinct, with older established downtowns. Also, NYC suburbs typically have their own schools and local government, whereas most of the suburbs around DC are just unincorporated sections of Fairfax or Montgomery County. I'm originally from Montclair, NJ and there's really nothing like that here, for better or for worse. |