Anonymous wrote:We have friends who live in that neighborhood. It is a gorgeous, stately neighborhood where most houses have 1 acre lots. I still think the house is overpriced by maybe 50k. The public schools there are wildly mismatched with the neighborhood (why spend 800k to send your kid to a Title I school?). I'm not being snobby, I lie in Silver Spring too, but our kids are not at a Title I school. But my friends do love the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:4/15 19:15 poster here. Our friends send their kids to public too. I wouldn't pay that kind of money for that school choice, but they seem ok with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not overpriced for that small neighborhood, it's kind of like an odd refuge of huge homes on incredible lots among some so-so areas. Heavily historic Jewish population. Pretty sure no one who lives in that neighborhood sends their kids to public schools.
+1000, maybe 20 years ago they would of gone public.
Anonymous wrote:It's not overpriced for that small neighborhood, it's kind of like an odd refuge of huge homes on incredible lots among some so-so areas. Heavily historic Jewish population. Pretty sure no one who lives in that neighborhood sends their kids to public schools.
Anonymous wrote:i wouldn't spend that kind of coin to live in burnt mills and havinf been built in 1942 but looks like it was renovated recently, WTH does it still have radiators?
Anonymous wrote:We have friends who live in that neighborhood. It is a gorgeous, stately neighborhood where most houses have 1 acre lots. I still think the house is overpriced by maybe 50k. The public schools there are wildly mismatched with the neighborhood (why spend 800k to send your kid to a Title I school?). I'm not being snobby, I lie in Silver Spring too, but our kids are not at a Title I school. But my friends do love the neighborhood.