Anonymous wrote:I find it odd that a / some PPs believe there is only one person on here who dislikes living by major roads and worries about air pollution.
People make their own decisions about trade offs and risk - and also what bothers them. I don't eat organic and drink soda so am no crazy health fanatic. But I would not have purchased any house at all right along the beltway or one of the other major highways. Part is air pollution worries (one thing for me to drink soda; another for my kids
Developing lungs to have dirty air to breathe on a constant basis).
The biggest piece though was that the road noise stresses me out. I could not imagine tuning it out while outside.
We lived in an apartment that backed to the beltway pre kids. It was a low hmm inside but on the balcony was crazy loud. Fine to rent somewhere like that when you can move but would never have bought the place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live about four streets away from 495 and at times it is silent- weird. Tree cover helps muffle noise. The a-holes with loud motorcycles and cars do standout at times. No air quality issues though.
We're two streets away from 270 and this is our experience as well. Our neighborhood has a ton of old trees and it makes a huge difference. We barely hear anything except for the whiny motorcycles or unless there's a big wreck or something.
Anonymous wrote:We live about four streets away from 495 and at times it is silent- weird. Tree cover helps muffle noise. The a-holes with loud motorcycles and cars do standout at times. No air quality issues though.
Anonymous wrote:I lived in NYC with fire engines, cans honking, garbage trucks banging around early in the morning. You eventually tune it out. When I moved here it was too quiet.
Anonymous wrote:I live in a neighborhood adjacent to 234 in PWC and yes, we hear the noise. It's really noticeable when we are outside and in the front rooms of our house, which affects one of my kids whose room is on the front side. Not so much in the back of the house, so the other bedrooms are not as affected. I don't notice it much unless it's a particularly loud, big truck rumbling by or there's an accident. But, 234 isn't the beltway or 66 so if we can hear what we do here, I can't imagine living that close to a major highway.
Anonymous wrote:let paranoia reign. Do you think people who live in cities have lower life expectancy? How about people who work outside such as gas station attendants? The only concern with living near a busy road or highway is the noise. It makes people feel good for not living near highways, etc. then they need to keep telling themselves about that. And....no we don't living near a busy road but I would not hesitate to purchase if other things like quality of home, schools, yard, neighborhood were acceptable.
Anonymous wrote:let paranoia reign. Do you think people who live in cities have lower life expectancy? How about people who work outside such as gas station attendants? The only concern with living near a busy road or highway is the noise. It makes people feel good for not living near highways, etc. then they need to keep telling themselves about that. And....no we don't living near a busy road but I would not hesitate to purchase if other things like quality of home, schools, yard, neighborhood were acceptable.