Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want public schools then Arlington seems like the best urbanized suburb in terms of proximity. We prefer Alexandria, but my child attends private school.
Arlington schools have declined significantly. And current school board and superintendent believe equity means a race to the bottom.
Thats what you get with open borders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're moving long-distance and don't know the DC area well, but have done a lot of online research.
For someone who wants the traditional 4-bedroom house, walk to school and playgrounds, but also an urban feel, not all strip malls and developments, and close enough to DC to go in and enjoy the city most weekends, Arlington seems by far the best place to live...maybe even the only place.
Bethesda is the only other one that seems to be in that range, but feels more suburban and more snobby. In Silver Spring, the nice single-family homes seem to be further out from downtown and the big downtown complex feels kind of manufactured/too commercial (Dave & Busters, burgers, pizza). I've always lived in big cities and really love the full experience of world-class museums, historical sites, parks, restaurants, at my doorstep. Arlington seems to offer easy access to that.
Am I missing something or is Arlington really the best? And is that why all the homes are like $1.3-$1.8 million dollars, because it's so wonderful and everyone wants to live there?
Are there any other suburbs I should be looking at? We looked at DC too, but prices don't seem much better there.
We need your budget. You can get the bolded in DC. Cleveland Park, AU Park, Chevy Chase, Palisades, etc. If you can afford private school, then no need to live in Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:We're moving long-distance and don't know the DC area well, but have done a lot of online research.
For someone who wants the traditional 4-bedroom house, walk to school and playgrounds, but also an urban feel, not all strip malls and developments, and close enough to DC to go in and enjoy the city most weekends, Arlington seems by far the best place to live...maybe even the only place.
Bethesda is the only other one that seems to be in that range, but feels more suburban and more snobby. In Silver Spring, the nice single-family homes seem to be further out from downtown and the big downtown complex feels kind of manufactured/too commercial (Dave & Busters, burgers, pizza). I've always lived in big cities and really love the full experience of world-class museums, historical sites, parks, restaurants, at my doorstep. Arlington seems to offer easy access to that.
Am I missing something or is Arlington really the best? And is that why all the homes are like $1.3-$1.8 million dollars, because it's so wonderful and everyone wants to live there?
Are there any other suburbs I should be looking at? We looked at DC too, but prices don't seem much better there.
Anonymous wrote:We're moving long-distance and don't know the DC area well, but have done a lot of online research.
For someone who wants the traditional 4-bedroom house, walk to school and playgrounds, but also an urban feel, not all strip malls and developments, and close enough to DC to go in and enjoy the city most weekends, Arlington seems by far the best place to live...maybe even the only place.
Bethesda is the only other one that seems to be in that range, but feels more suburban and more snobby. In Silver Spring, the nice single-family homes seem to be further out from downtown and the big downtown complex feels kind of manufactured/too commercial (Dave & Busters, burgers, pizza). I've always lived in big cities and really love the full experience of world-class museums, historical sites, parks, restaurants, at my doorstep. Arlington seems to offer easy access to that.
Am I missing something or is Arlington really the best? And is that why all the homes are like $1.3-$1.8 million dollars, because it's so wonderful and everyone wants to live there?
Are there any other suburbs I should be looking at? We looked at DC too, but prices don't seem much better there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want public schools then Arlington seems like the best urbanized suburb in terms of proximity. We prefer Alexandria, but my child attends private school.
Arlington schools have declined significantly. And current school board and superintendent believe equity means a race to the bottom.