Anonymous wrote:Go for White flint area about 30 minutes to Farragut north by metro. Lots of Montessori schools around, but also amazing elementary schools private and public. Lots of shopping and grocery stores easy access to Dc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Forget DC - only about 500,000 people live in DC (it's teeny tiny). 4 Million people live around the beltway - you want to live inside the beltway to have a commute under an hour.
Are good public schools important? If so, consider bethesda/chevy chase Maryland, or almost anywhere in Northern virginia except for Arlington, Alexandria, or Annandale (the 3 A's!). McLean is wonderful - that would be my top pick, followed by maybe Bethesda. The commute would be shorter on the metro if living in VA too because the WH is on the orange and blue line - from MD (montgomery county) - that's the red line.
This pp is yanking your chain, OP. Arlington schools are some of the best in the state.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you all so much! Please keep the ideas coming!
Here's some additional info for those who asked:
* prefer SFH instead of townhome
* prefer "suburban" to "urban" feel, though it would be nice to have some places to eat and amenities in walking distance
* really would like yard/outdoor space
* closest Metro stop will be Farragut West
* pools, parks, tennis opportunities all very important to us--private club OK if not too pricey
* will probably choose private schools initially, but would like to be in good public school area in case we stay long-term
Anonymous wrote:Forget DC - only about 500,000 people live in DC (it's teeny tiny). 4 Million people live around the beltway - you want to live inside the beltway to have a commute under an hour.
Are good public schools important? If so, consider bethesda/chevy chase Maryland, or almost anywhere in Northern virginia except for Arlington, Alexandria, or Annandale (the 3 A's!). McLean is wonderful - that would be my top pick, followed by maybe Bethesda. The commute would be shorter on the metro if living in VA too because the WH is on the orange and blue line - from MD (montgomery county) - that's the red line.
Anonymous wrote:why would you spend that much in rent
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you all so much! Please keep the ideas coming!
Here's some additional info for those who asked:
* prefer SFH instead of townhome
* prefer "suburban" to "urban" feel, though it would be nice to have some places to eat and amenities in walking distance
* really would like yard/outdoor space
* closest Metro stop will be Farragut West
* pools, parks, tennis opportunities all very important to us--private club OK if not too pricey
* will probably choose private schools initially, but would like to be in good public school area in case we stay long-term
I'm all about living in DC, personally, but this list screams Arlington, particularly around Clarendon. Orange line to Farragut West; super-easy commute. Great schools (public and Montessori), walkable, lots of parks, pools, etc. The only issue is private school proximity; not that there aren't any in Arlington, but most of the top privates are in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you all so much! Please keep the ideas coming!
Here's some additional info for those who asked:
* prefer SFH instead of townhome
* prefer "suburban" to "urban" feel, though it would be nice to have some places to eat and amenities in walking distance
* really would like yard/outdoor space
* closest Metro stop will be Farragut West
* pools, parks, tennis opportunities all very important to us--private club OK if not too pricey
* will probably choose private schools initially, but would like to be in good public school area in case we stay long-term
Anonymous wrote:Thank you all so much! Please keep the ideas coming!
Here's some additional info for those who asked:
* prefer SFH instead of townhome
* prefer "suburban" to "urban" feel, though it would be nice to have some places to eat and amenities in walking distance
* really would like yard/outdoor space
* closest Metro stop will be Farragut West
* pools, parks, tennis opportunities all very important to us--private club OK if not too pricey
* will probably choose private schools initially, but would like to be in good public school area in case we stay long-term