Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's certainly a big selection of large new builds there. They tend to sit for a very long time.
True. House hunters in that price range generally tend to want a more manicured environment, e.g. Sumner. That's definitely not Glen Echo Heights.
I'm pretty sure it's been easier to find land/houses in GEH to tear down, but given the large stock of $1.8M+ new builds there, why would builders keep building them? It would strike me as costly to have a property sit a long time on the market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's certainly a big selection of large new builds there. They tend to sit for a very long time.
True. House hunters in that price range generally tend to want a more manicured environment, e.g. Sumner. That's definitely not Glen Echo Heights.
I'm pretty sure it's been easier to find land/houses in GEH to tear down, but given the large stock of $1.8M+ new builds there, why would builders keep building them? It would strike me as costly to have a property sit a long time on the market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's certainly a big selection of large new builds there. They tend to sit for a very long time.
True. House hunters in that price range generally tend to want a more manicured environment, e.g. Sumner. That's definitely not Glen Echo Heights.
Anonymous wrote:There's certainly a big selection of large new builds there. They tend to sit for a very long time.
Anonymous wrote:Do you hear much from nearby MacArthur and the Clara Barton Pkwy?
Anonymous wrote:Some of the streets are treacherous for pedestrians - watch out if you have dogs or need to walk to bus stops, kids going to friends' houses, etc. We tried to get sidewalks several years back and the county was willing, but a faction of neighbors protested histrionically about the horrors of sidewalks.
Anonymous wrote:Do you hear much from nearby MacArthur and the Clara Barton Pkwy?