Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any recommendations of where to live? We love city living and have lived in Georgetown and Capitol Hill and have loved it due to walkability. Need strong public schools. Any recommendations of where to look? Thanks!
So I take it from this you want a townhouse or apartment? How many sq. feet and how much $$$ are you thinking?
If you want the look and feel of Gtown and Capitol hill, you want to stay in the city - Beacon Hill, back bay, south end. The trouble is those places don't have great schools on the whole (thought there are a few). Get a little further out to Cambridge (where I am from, woo woo!), brookline and the schools get better but it looks and feels more like cleveland park and other NWDC areas. Parts of brookline are even more like Bethesda. I would also recommend looking at Charlestown which has really had a transformation in the last 10+ years. I'm not up to date with the schools there, but I do think you'd like the vibe and the prices aren't as insane.
Anonymous wrote:Any recommendations of where to live? We love city living and have lived in Georgetown and Capitol Hill and have loved it due to walkability. Need strong public schools. Any recommendations of where to look? Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New poster. I'm curious, how do housing prices compare with DC? I'm under the impression Boston is almost as expensive for real estate.
Not the case. While I am sure there are comparable areas, you can buy MUCH more house in tony, close-in suburbs with access to public transport (think Wellesley) than you can in Bethesda or even farther out areas like Potomac, McLean, etc.
This isn't my experience. Although there are more humble houses in the tony towns like Wellesley than there are in Chevy Chase. Of course Chevy Chase is much closer to D.C. than Wellesley is to Boston.
Apples and oranges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New poster. I'm curious, how do housing prices compare with DC? I'm under the impression Boston is almost as expensive for real estate.
Not the case. While I am sure there are comparable areas, you can buy MUCH more house in tony, close-in suburbs with access to public transport (think Wellesley) than you can in Bethesda or even farther out areas like Potomac, McLean, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New poster. I'm curious, how do housing prices compare with DC? I'm under the impression Boston is almost as expensive for real estate.
Not the case. While I am sure there are comparable areas, you can buy MUCH more house in tony, close-in suburbs with access to public transport (think Wellesley) than you can in Bethesda or even farther out areas like Potomac, McLean, etc.
This isn't my experience. Although there are more humble houses in the tony towns like Wellesley than there are in Chevy Chase. Of course Chevy Chase is much closer to D.C. than Wellesley is to Boston.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New poster. I'm curious, how do housing prices compare with DC? I'm under the impression Boston is almost as expensive for real estate.
Not the case. While I am sure there are comparable areas, you can buy MUCH more house in tony, close-in suburbs with access to public transport (think Wellesley) than you can in Bethesda or even farther out areas like Potomac, McLean, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New poster. I'm curious, how do housing prices compare with DC? I'm under the impression Boston is almost as expensive for real estate.
Not the case. While I am sure there are comparable areas, you can buy MUCH more house in tony, close-in suburbs with access to public transport (think Wellesley) than you can in Bethesda or even farther out areas like Potomac, McLean, etc.
Apparently Google is not your friend! Wellesley is, for the most part, much more expensive than McLean. I own homes in each, I know first hand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New poster. I'm curious, how do housing prices compare with DC? I'm under the impression Boston is almost as expensive for real estate.
Not the case. While I am sure there are comparable areas, you can buy MUCH more house in tony, close-in suburbs with access to public transport (think Wellesley) than you can in Bethesda or even farther out areas like Potomac, McLean, etc.
Anonymous wrote:New poster. I'm curious, how do housing prices compare with DC? I'm under the impression Boston is almost as expensive for real estate.
Anonymous wrote:Cambridge would be less expensive than Brookline.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Newton - a city but with excellent public schools
Maybe a city in name, but a boring suburb in practice.
Do you know anything about it, or are you just speaking from Google?
OP, you need solicit educated (!!!) opinions from people who have been legal residents of that area.
Newton is huge.