Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting question op. I grew up in a close in suburb in westchester county. I think the palisades gives me the closest architectural and layout vibes to where I grew up and I chose to live in glover park because of how much it feels like the small town where I grew up (main difference being palisades style architecture). I also could drive to midtown in 20 min or be at Grand central station in a 23 minute ride so that's comparable to getting to the sights, etc in dc. Could not bear the thought of the VA suburbs (where I actually work) although I think the Maryland side seems more like small towns, which I like.
Yeah, Rockville Pike is so charming.
These threads are stupid.
Did they mention Rockville Pike?
Yeah that was a really strange response to my post. I will caveat by saying that I have very little experience with the Maryland suburbs. Maybe it's all Rockville pikeish. Please strike from the record my uninformed opinion re. the state of Maryland. I stand the the dc comparisons though. The biggest similarity that I see is how we interact with our neighbors. Growing up, I would open a window and yellow my best friend "hey Amy, ya wanna play?" Here in GP, because we are in attached houses, we have to go outside to address our neighbors, but that's an aspect I wants to recreate for my kids. And I'm happy to have done it!
Anonymous wrote:The problem, and I know Virginians aren't going to like this, is that Virginia suburbs are simply too new to be anything like New York suburbs. Virginians pride themselves on their new builds and McMansions- but the New York suburbs are characterized by old houses and neighborhoods planned in the early 1900s. I would say the closest part of the DC area would be Chevy Chase.
Middleburg also comes close, but it's so far away and barely anyone who lives there commutes in. So it's a very different feel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting question op. I grew up in a close in suburb in westchester county. I think the palisades gives me the closest architectural and layout vibes to where I grew up and I chose to live in glover park because of how much it feels like the small town where I grew up (main difference being palisades style architecture). I also could drive to midtown in 20 min or be at Grand central station in a 23 minute ride so that's comparable to getting to the sights, etc in dc. Could not bear the thought of the VA suburbs (where I actually work) although I think the Maryland side seems more like small towns, which I like.
Yeah, Rockville Pike is so charming.
These threads are stupid.
Did they mention Rockville Pike?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting question op. I grew up in a close in suburb in westchester county. I think the palisades gives me the closest architectural and layout vibes to where I grew up and I chose to live in glover park because of how much it feels like the small town where I grew up (main difference being palisades style architecture). I also could drive to midtown in 20 min or be at Grand central station in a 23 minute ride so that's comparable to getting to the sights, etc in dc. Could not bear the thought of the VA suburbs (where I actually work) although I think the Maryland side seems more like small towns, which I like.
Yeah, Rockville Pike is so charming.
These threads are stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting question op. I grew up in a close in suburb in westchester county. I think the palisades gives me the closest architectural and layout vibes to where I grew up and I chose to live in glover park because of how much it feels like the small town where I grew up (main difference being palisades style architecture). I also could drive to midtown in 20 min or be at Grand central station in a 23 minute ride so that's comparable to getting to the sights, etc in dc. Could not bear the thought of the VA suburbs (where I actually work) although I think the Maryland side seems more like small towns, which I like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:McLean/CCMD= Greenwich
No, not nearly monied enough. Potomac, maybe.
Chevy Chase is wealthier than Potomac.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:McLean/CCMD= Greenwich
No, not nearly monied enough. Potomac, maybe.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up on Long Island and lived in Manhattan before moving to the DC area.
I think Mclean is like Manhasset/Great Neck. Potomac may be Greenwich. Arlington may be Brooklyn except with good public schools. I know recently Brooklyn has gotten very expensive and desirable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:McLean/CCMD= Greenwich
No, not nearly monied enough. Potomac, maybe.
The median HHI in McLean is higher than in Potomac, and the median HHI in each of McLean, Potomac and Chevy Chase is higher than in Greenwich. Of course, there are more hedge fund gazillionaires in Greenwich, but they are a small subset of the total population in Greenwich.