Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to be able to walk or metro to work (I walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to my childs school (my husband metros).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to playground (we walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to entertainment (we walk to dining, museums, etc.) We walk to grocery store.
We do all of that in our VA neighborhood.
For those of you who "have this in your VA neighborhoods" we no longer have a car, because we don't need one. So, obviously you have managed to get by without a car because you can metro and walk everywhere?
You do what works for you, but I doubt that this manner of grocery shopping is a selling point in the eyes of anyone but a small majority. It's basically what people do when they have to make do. Most people want to spend as little time grocery shopping as possible and to expend as little physical effort doing it as possible. I don't want to shop every evening and carrying home a week's worth of groceries would be a form of torture to me. No thanks.
Not having a car is nothing to be proud of. Some families, like ours, live in walking distance to metro, schools and amenities AND have a car for the freedom it affords. I don't covet the dubious glory of dragging bags of groceries home, either.
I don't do my shopping at Costco or Whole Foods.
The Farmers Market and the grocery store are both on my walk home. I can stop at either.
You do what works for you, but I doubt that this manner of grocery shopping is a selling point in the eyes of anyone but a small majority. It's basically what people do when they have to make do. Most people want to spend as little time grocery shopping as possible and to expend as little physical effort doing it as possible. I don't want to shop every evening and carrying home a week's worth of groceries would be a form of torture to me. No thanks. All I'm saying is if that works for you, fine, but it has zero appeal to most people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to be able to walk or metro to work (I walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to my childs school (my husband metros).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to playground (we walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to entertainment (we walk to dining, museums, etc.) We walk to grocery store.
Yeah right you walk to museums. Which museums are those, exactly?
P.S. I walk to all that stuff from my N Arlington house and I'm probably closer to the Smithsonian that you![]()
I live in the Penn Quarter, I doubt it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to be able to walk or metro to work (I walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to my childs school (my husband metros).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to playground (we walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to entertainment (we walk to dining, museums, etc.) We walk to grocery store.
Yeah right you walk to museums. Which museums are those, exactly?
P.S. I walk to all that stuff from my N Arlington house and I'm probably closer to the Smithsonian that you![]()
then say manhattan and not nyc. nyc is vast and more suburb than sitc.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread needs to be posted on "stuff white people like"............its almost comical
"Oh, no judgement for YOU but WE want our child to be blah blah blah"
DC is not NYC, a lot of it is pretty damn suburban. Here's a novel idea, have diverse friends- the kids will be exposed from birth.
I hate this stupid comment. NYC is not all Manhattan and Brooklyn Heights. It too has a lot of pretty damn suburban. Have you been to Queens, Far Rockaway, Staten Island, etc. They are all parts of NYC and suburban.
Not getting your point here. No one aspires to live in Far Rockaway!! Queens and Staten Island are the places you go when you either can't afford Manhattan or you move out there when you have kids.
Let me break it down for you, I think what the folks on here are trying to say is that the "pro DC" group acts like DC is this great metropolitan city and they have disdain for the NoVa burbs, this then has DC getting compared to a real city like NYC-mostly Manhattan. Then it is stated that DC is very suburban so the point is, why trade suburban NoVa life for suburban DC life?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to be able to walk or metro to work (I walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to my childs school (my husband metros).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to playground (we walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to entertainment (we walk to dining, museums, etc.) We walk to grocery store.
Yeah right you walk to museums. Which museums are those, exactly?
P.S. I walk to all that stuff from my N Arlington house and I'm probably closer to the Smithsonian that you![]()
Walkable museums from DC neighborhoods:
Hillwood Museum near Van Ness
Phillips Collection - Dupont
Nat Geographic Museum - Dupont
Dumbarton House - Georgetown
I bet there are a few more near Dupont. The PP didn't say Smithsonian. But all of those are walkable DC museums depending on where you live. But other than the Phillips (which I have been to many times) the others I have only been to once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to be able to walk or metro to work (I walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to my childs school (my husband metros).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to playground (we walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to entertainment (we walk to dining, museums, etc.) We walk to grocery store.
Yeah right you walk to museums. Which museums are those, exactly?
P.S. I walk to all that stuff from my N Arlington house and I'm probably closer to the Smithsonian that you![]()
Walkable museums from DC neighborhoods:
Hillwood Museum near Van Ness
Phillips Collection - Dupont
Nat Geographic Museum - Dupont
Dumbarton House - Georgetown
I bet there are a few more near Dupont. The PP didn't say Smithsonian. But all of those are walkable DC museums depending on where you live. But other than the Phillips (which I have been to many times) the others I have only been to once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to be able to walk or metro to work (I walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to my childs school (my husband metros).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to playground (we walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to entertainment (we walk to dining, museums, etc.) We walk to grocery store.
Yeah right you walk to museums. Which museums are those, exactly?
P.S. I walk to all that stuff from my N Arlington house and I'm probably closer to the Smithsonian that you![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to be able to walk or metro to work (I walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to my childs school (my husband metros).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to playground (we walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to entertainment (we walk to dining, museums, etc.) We walk to grocery store.
We do all of that in our VA neighborhood.
For those of you who "have this in your VA neighborhoods" we no longer have a car, because we don't need one. So, obviously you have managed to get by without a car because you can metro and walk everywhere?
You do what works for you, but I doubt that this manner of grocery shopping is a selling point in the eyes of anyone but a small majority. It's basically what people do when they have to make do. Most people want to spend as little time grocery shopping as possible and to expend as little physical effort doing it as possible. I don't want to shop every evening and carrying home a week's worth of groceries would be a form of torture to me. No thanks.
Not having a car is nothing to be proud of. Some families, like ours, live in walking distance to metro, schools and amenities AND have a car for the freedom it affords. I don't covet the dubious glory of dragging bags of groceries home, either.
I don't do my shopping at Costco or Whole Foods.
The Farmers Market and the grocery store are both on my walk home. I can stop at either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to be able to walk or metro to work (I walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to my childs school (my husband metros).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to playground (we walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to entertainment (we walk to dining, museums, etc.) We walk to grocery store.
We do all of that in our VA neighborhood.
For those of you who "have this in your VA neighborhoods" we no longer have a car, because we don't need one. So, obviously you have managed to get by without a car because you can metro and walk everywhere?
I am guessing you haven't been to the SFH neighborhoods adjacent to Clarendon Metro. We sold a car this summer. The other one is a 2006 with ~20k miles used mainly for beach and ski trips.
Whole Foods, Trader Joes, Giant, Walgreens, etc and Metro are 2 blocks way. Kids walk to local elementary. We walk to movies, gym, drycleaners, banks, bars and restaurants. Bike more than Metro, actually.
Any more ?s. we als have a yard and driveway which we didn't in the city. We also didn't have a metro nearby in our old DC hood.
Sounds great! So, why are you posting in a thread called "Has anyone w/ kids chosen to leave NoVA for DC" if you love your house in NoVA so much?
Anonymous wrote:I wanted to be able to walk or metro to work (I walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to my childs school (my husband metros).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to playground (we walk).
I wanted to be able to walk or metro to entertainment (we walk to dining, museums, etc.) We walk to grocery store.