It is entirely a residential community. Travaille Gateway aside (which I think is in 20850 anyway) is not very large. NP lacks any of the lower income housing or even apartments that you can find in Gaithersburg. It lacks the bling of Potomac. The house on this thread is on the large extreme end of the spectrum. NP is filled with mid-sized SFH on medium lots. It has some larger houses on 2 acre lots but nut the 4,000 sq ft + type. It has a few very big houses on Glen and Travilah. It has townhouses in StoneMill.
Its kid friendly. There is some diversity beyond the basic WASP with a good sized Jewish, Indian, and Chinese community. There seem to be lots of PHds, science types, doctors, etc but not too many big firm lawyers or lobbyists. No one dresses flashy. You can wear Target to the PTA meeting and fit in just fine.
The schools are good. Swimming is the big teenager sport.
I have no problem with North Potomac and don't think any ill of the people who live there. It is too far out for me, but a perfectly nice community and seems like a great place for a family. But, PP, you just pointed out why the Bethesda crowd hates on NP and likes to play the elitist game.
Anonymous wrote:I actually went to an open house at this home. It is actually pretty private and on the very end of the street. It's a very roomy home. What turned us off at the time was the price for the amount of work we would have had to do. I did not like the kitchen at all and would have had to put all hardwoods upstairs. Most of the acreage is in the front of the house. While the back yard is quiet and peaceful, there was not space for us to have put a pool in later on if we wanted to. There was a nice big pond, but it needed a lot of work and we did not want to have to deal with the upkeep.
We ended up buying a home close in price to this one, but with all the acreage in the back of the house. It is also move in ready and it is a much newer home.
Anonymous wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Potomac,_Maryland
NP is a census designated place formed in 1988. I live living here and find it interesting how people view it differently. We are on the western edge of Potomac and a street over from the Darnestown line and a few streets from the Potomac school cluster area (so I assuming it is Potomac or at least my neighbors over there have a 20854 zip). I have to drive through Darnestown and pass by the Welcome to Darnestown sign from the other direction to get into the Kentlands and Gaithersburg. I always thought that NP was really Darnestown just not zoned for the Darnestown schools. I have friends who live over toward Travilah right before the Rockville line. They think NP is really Rockville.
So...NP is not Gaithersburg. Its not Potomac. Its not Darnestown. Its not Rockville. It is North Potomac.
It is entirely a residential community. Travaille Gateway aside (which I think is in 20850 anyway) is not very large. NP lacks any of the lower income housing or even apartments that you can find in Gaithersburg. It lacks the bling of Potomac. The house on this thread is on the large extreme end of the spectrum. NP is filled with mid-sized SFH on medium lots. It has some larger houses on 2 acre lots but nut the 4,000 sq ft + type. It has a few very big houses on Glen and Travilah. It has townhouses in StoneMill.
Its kid friendly. There is some diversity beyond the basic WASP with a good sized Jewish, Indian, and Chinese community. There seem to be lots of PHds, science types, doctors, etc but not too many big firm lawyers or lobbyists. No one dresses flashy. You can wear Target to the PTA meeting and fit in just fine.
The schools are good. Swimming is the big teenager sport.
Anonymous wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Potomac,_Maryland
NP is a census designated place formed in 1988. I live living here and find it interesting how people view it differently. We are on the western edge of Potomac and a street over from the Darnestown line and a few streets from the Potomac school cluster area (so I assuming it is Potomac or at least my neighbors over there have a 20854 zip). I have to drive through Darnestown and pass by the Welcome to Darnestown sign from the other direction to get into the Kentlands and Gaithersburg. I always thought that NP was really Darnestown just not zoned for the Darnestown schools. I have friends who live over toward Travilah right before the Rockville line. They think NP is really Rockville.
So...NP is not Gaithersburg. Its not Potomac. Its not Darnestown. Its not Rockville. It is North Potomac.
It is entirely a residential community. Travaille Gateway aside (which I think is in 20850 anyway) is not very large. NP lacks any of the lower income housing or even apartments that you can find in Gaithersburg. It lacks the bling of Potomac. The house on this thread is on the large extreme end of the spectrum. NP is filled with mid-sized SFH on medium lots. It has some larger houses on 2 acre lots but nut the 4,000 sq ft + type. It has a few very big houses on Glen and Travilah. It has townhouses in StoneMill.
Its kid friendly. There is some diversity beyond the basic WASP with a good sized Jewish, Indian, and Chinese community. There seem to be lots of PHds, science types, doctors, etc but not too many big firm lawyers or lobbyists. No one dresses flashy. You can wear Target to the PTA meeting and fit in just fine.
The schools are good. Swimming is the big teenager sport.
Anonymous wrote:North Potomac is not incorporated...it is no-mans land between Potomac, Rockville, and Gaithersburg, created by enterprising developers seeking to get higher prices in what had been mostly Gaithersburg zip codes. Schools feed into Quince Orchard (some feed into Rockville schools too I believe).
Granted, most of NoPo is nicer than Gburg, but let's call a spade a spade.
1. It's far - as others have said, "North Potomac" is developer-speak (or developer-fraud) for Gaithersburg.
I think the issue may be the commute. It's not really in North Potomac/G'burg, which I think of as closer to 270. It is closer to Darnestown, which means you've got a ways to go to get to a major road. If you dont need to commute to DC that would be less of an issue. But I live in Bethesda and when we have to go out that way for some sports activity it is a looong drive.