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Real Estate
Reply to "American Focus on Suburbs Leading to Large Houses"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I mean yeah OP- the problem is usually cost. We paid a fortune for our tiny rowhome in DC to avoid the suburbs for all the reasons you mention. But others can’t afford it. Or they’re worried about the schools. We are fortunate to be in a stronger school area but many of us still send our kids to private. That of course also requires money. There is an American fixation on size, too. I know people who could afford to stay in the city but they absolutely needed a 9 bedroom home with a 4 car garage in the middle of nowhere. That personally is a nightmare to me but to each his own.[/quote] Oh no I get it, if cost is an issue of course you have to do what you have to do. If you can only afford say a two bedroom condo in town, but further out can afford a TH or SFH that is much larger for your family, then yeah completely get it. What I don't get is those that can afford a decently sized (which I define as 2000sq ft) SFH/TH in walkable areas, but choose to go further out to massive properties. But I do see some of the other points people are trying to make, with the increase in crime, homelesness and etc in DC, that they would rather be in a suburb where it's quiet and safe for their kids (hell tbh, and not to sound like a hypocrite, but we partially made that choice when buying, rather than staying directly in DC we chose to move to the Clarendon area). But that's still a walkable area and of course compromises had to be made size wise (ie TH vs SFH). But to each their own and yeah I completely get (since partially that's what we did) why you chose to get a townhouse in DC. It's not just DC as well though, traveling through some of the US and seeing just suburbs, feels quiet "alien" to me compared to Europe and Asia. [/quote]
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