Anonymous wrote:Look at SF. They can definitely go higher, there are enough people here with salaries to afford them - those that can't will be priced out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well I'm priced out and won't be buying.
--130K HHI
nonsense there is a place for everyone's price point.
I have a family and cannot afford a townhouse or a home on my income. 30K above the mean and median income in this area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about the value of land close in, say an acre in Arlington, Alexandria?
Will it dramatically rise too?
Never hear anyone discuss the land part, just the house etc.
An acre in Arlington? LOL - that'd be an estate!
LAND is way more valuable than any of the crappy houses that are built on it here. That's why there are so many tear downs. An acre could have 4 houses built on it at least!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well I'm priced out and won't be buying.
--130K HHI
nonsense there is a place for everyone's price point.
Anonymous wrote:Well I'm priced out and won't be buying.
--130K HHI
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The prices in the great neighborhoods will continue to go up, not so much in the not great neighborhoods. The DC area is still stratified. There are a few areas with awesome schools and amenities, and everyone wants to get into these, to avoid the horrible areas. Where I grew up there were lots of regular ol' middle class towns, here there are rich areas, and ghetto areas.
Sounds like you are just describing DC, not the surrounding areas.
True, what I described does sound like DC, but while including DC in any discussion of the DC area, the statement still stands. Some parts of northern virginia are more wildly popular than other parts of Northern Virginia. There are only a few "great" places to live in the DC area, some live there, the rest (including me) settle. I think that in other places, there are a lot more "great" places to live within the same metro area.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, 100% of posters here so far believe we're not in a housing bubble here in DC. That's often the exact sign of a bubble..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The prices in the great neighborhoods will continue to go up, not so much in the not great neighborhoods. The DC area is still stratified. There are a few areas with awesome schools and amenities, and everyone wants to get into these, to avoid the horrible areas. Where I grew up there were lots of regular ol' middle class towns, here there are rich areas, and ghetto areas.
Sounds like you are just describing DC, not the surrounding areas.
Anonymous wrote:The prices in the great neighborhoods will continue to go up, not so much in the not great neighborhoods. The DC area is still stratified. There are a few areas with awesome schools and amenities, and everyone wants to get into these, to avoid the horrible areas. Where I grew up there were lots of regular ol' middle class towns, here there are rich areas, and ghetto areas.