Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NCC PP here again. You might want to check out the newer neighborhood at the southeast corner of Connecticut and Jones Bridge - I think it's called Chevy Chase Commons. The top of your budget should get you in there.
(OP) Thanks. We just looked at a house in your neighborhood for the first time this past weekend. We had never driven through there before, and I really liked it.
You mean the neighborhood with the wall around it and all the traffic? Different strokes . . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're looking to move and looking for suggestions. Criteria:
- Lot sizes in the 7,500 - 10,000 sq. ft. range so we can have a bit of a yard
- Streets - Prefer wider streets, at least wide enough for two cars to pass easily, prefer neighborhoods where people have garages and use them rather than park a bunch of cars on the street- Kids and kid-friendly (toddlers and young ES-age) - nearby park is a bonus
- Price - up to about $1.4mm if move-in ready, around $900,000 - $1.1mm if needs work
Bonus - (1) easy/direct commute to DC for work, (2) proximity to shopping, restaurants, etc.
We've considered:
- East Bethesda - I find most of the streets and lots to be claustrophobic - small lots, small streets
- Somerset and Chevy Chase West - not bad but expensive for what you get, some lots are pretty small
- Rollingwood - Not bad, maybe too far east for easy access to shopping, restaurants, etc? proximity to Candy Cane park is great.
- Neighborhood north of Jones Bridge between Conn. and Jones Mill (don't know the name)
thanks
Why are you so weird about the street thing? I can just imagine wanting a garage, though personally I couldn't care less. I cannot fathom why you would care whether other people use their garage or not. What is the deal? Are you such a crappy driver that you are scared of crashing into parked cars?
It looks trashy to park cars on the street. My mother in law also holds this belief.
My husband hates it too. We vetoed Somerset largely because of this.
Anonymous wrote:OP, try the neighborhoods off of Bradley and Wilson, around the Landon School: Landon Woods and Pineview. The streets are fairly wide and depending on the street, many of the houses are new. These are neighborhoods that have been turning over in the last 10 years with lots of tear downs. Lot sizes vary with the smallest being around 7K Sq. ft. and the largest 13K sq. ft. That also determines the price of the house. We live in Pineview and there are lots of kids, great public schools, and lots of new houses. You may be able to get something new for 1.4 on a smaller lot, but the new house range is from maybe 1.4 to up to 2.2 million. Also, many people remodel the older houses and do additions.
We really like the neighborhood and with easy proximity to River Road, the commute into DC is not bad. There are lots of new houses going up right now, with two of the major builders being Castlewood and Cafritz.
The one thing I will say about the wide roads, I live on one of them and people tend to speed a lot. I actually like it when people park on the street because it forces people to slow down. When we (neighbors and I) know that our kids will be running from house to house, we will purposely park on the street to force the cars to slow down. Just another perspective. Most everyone has a garage though!
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:OP, try the neighborhoods off of Bradley and Wilson, around the Landon School: Landon Woods and Pineview.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NCC PP here again. You might want to check out the newer neighborhood at the southeast corner of Connecticut and Jones Bridge - I think it's called Chevy Chase Commons. The top of your budget should get you in there.
(OP) Thanks. We just looked at a house in your neighborhood for the first time this past weekend. We had never driven through there before, and I really liked it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why are you so weird about the street thing? I can just imagine wanting a garage, though personally I couldn't care less. I cannot fathom why you would care whether other people use their garage or not. What is the deal? Are you such a crappy driver that you are scared of crashing into parked cars?
OP Here. Not sure why you care about what I'm looking for in a neighborhood, but it's not about driving through there. It's (a) a safety issue - safer for pedestrians and kids, especially if there aren't sidewalks, and (b) personal preference. When I look out my window, I like to see green yards and my neighbor's houses, not rows of cars. It looks more orderly.
Then don't try to live in a semi-urban setting. I'm not making a moral judgement, just being practical. Close-in, older neighborhoods tend to have small lots and limited parking. The result is that more people park on the street. Wide streets, garages and off-street parking are standard features the further out you go.
Anonymous wrote:- Neighborhood north of Jones Bridge between Conn. and Jones Mill (don't know the name)
This is my neighborhood: North Chevy Chase. We have a third of an acre but most lots are not that large. Some streets are very narrow although most have sidewalks.
I think Kenwood is one place that wouldn't have a lot of cars parked on the streets, because the original houses are large enough that people haven't converted their garages into living space. But it's impossible on your budget.