Anonymous wrote:What's bad in Arlington is the exception there but the norm in Pimmit Hills. You seem to have missed that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
North Arlington is full of charming neighborhoods and homes. Pimmit Hills was, is, and will long remain an eyesore that should have been torn down decades ago.
It's also full of nondescript brick boxes. People don't seek out North Arlington for the looks. It's a great area but it's not the beauty that makes people pay $600K for a tiny box on a main road.
I can't quite get why PH's popularity appears to bother you as much as it does.
The reason Arlington is expensive is due to the location near DC and the metro. I see parallels to the Tysons redevelopment and metro.
Anonymous wrote:
It is popular on acount of its looks. Have you been to Country Club Hills, Chain Bridge Forest, Lyon Village or Cherrydale, just to pick a few places? They are full of beautiful homes. Pimmit Hills, on the other hand, is only "popular" because housing is in short supply right now, and the only transition there has been from a run-down dump to a run-down dump mixed with some of the region's tackiest McMansions. There are virtually no distinctive or eye-pleasing houses there. So calling it the next North Arlington is a very big stretch.
Anonymous wrote:What's bad in Arlington is the exception there but the norm in Pimmit Hills. You seem to have missed that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You don't live there - what do you know about what vast majority in PH looks like? If you do, and hate it as much as you do, there's drugs for that.
Older homes are (still) a (shrinking) majority, but hardly a vast one, as one teardown follows another.
I've driven around the area plenty of times. The vast majority of PH consists of tired old houses and poorly kept yards, with random McMansions here and there. No one should buy into the fantasy that it's going to be the next North Arlington or that all the old houses will have been torn down five years from now.
Sorry if it bothers you when the truth is pointed out.
Maybe you should drive around there again, although I do wonder what keeps you coming down not just once but plenty of times - appetite for ugly? Majority of PH is still old homes, but not a vast one; in two years I've been here I can count dozens of new construction sites. Slowly, their numbers are growing. How long it will take, no one can say.
And let's just point out one thing again: North Arlington isn't popular on account of its looks. It's a great area, but that thing called beauty ranks very, very low on the list of its advantages.
It is popular on acount of its looks. Have you been to Country Club Hills, Chain Bridge Forest, Lyon Village or Cherrydale, just to pick a few places? They are full of beautiful homes. Pimmit Hills, on the other hand, is only "popular" because housing is in short supply right now, and the only transition there has been from a run-down dump to a run-down dump mixed with some of the region's tackiest McMansions. There are virtually no distinctive or eye-pleasing houses there. So calling it the next North Arlington is a very big stretch.
Anonymous wrote:
Reserve Poster - thanks for posting, seriously!
I know a lot of women who think that the Reserve is a status symbol. I'm no marriage counselor, but I don't find that quality so attractive. But I definitely appreciate your input as someone who has seen the area take shape.
My friends bought in McLean near the library, and their neighborhood has turned to about 80% new from just 20% 5 years ago. So, change is inevitable.
There is a huge issue with the old homeowners who hate the change, however. You can't please everyone. I think they would be better off cashing in and calling it a day. But then, what would they complain about?!
In the Reserve, you don't have the same anger and animosity, and don't have to deal with the lower brackets; the starting price is higher, for one. I tend to think that those people would be too busy to look for trouble.
I certainly don't understand being so obvious as to try to rip a place apart if you can't even afford it to begin with. "Oh no, my money is in a mattress......" Yeah, right![]()