Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree. Young Capitol Hill families routinely pay a million plus for houses in the Maury and Brent Districts these days without buying access to by-right middle and high school options that are measurably better than those in Michigan Park. I've never met any family who couldn't lottery into an acceptable 1st-5th grade program after 1-3 years of playing the schools lottery.
Bad information. There are many families who don't "win" the lottery and move out of DC. Also, OP is in a vastly different position than someone living in the Maury or Brent zone, where you can be reasonably assured that you have a good school through 5th grade. That's why the houses are $1 mil!
That's not why the houses are $1m. There are plenty of $1m houses in neighborhoods with no elemenrary options (parts of Columbia Heights, Petworth, Brookland etc).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have a budget that allowed you a $550k house, you could rent west of the park. but the schools are crowded and you will have less than 1600sf.
So here's what I'd do:
- don't worry for a few more years
- play the lottery
- if you don't get a good lottery draw, go to your neighborhood school for PK3 and PK4
- If by K you aren't in a school you like, rent or sell your house and move to a school you do like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree. Young Capitol Hill families routinely pay a million plus for houses in the Maury and Brent Districts these days without buying access to by-right middle and high school options that are measurably better than those in Michigan Park. I've never met any family who couldn't lottery into an acceptable 1st-5th grade program after 1-3 years of playing the schools lottery.
Bad information. There are many families who don't "win" the lottery and move out of DC. Also, OP is in a vastly different position than someone living in the Maury or Brent zone, where you can be reasonably assured that you have a good school through 5th grade. That's why the houses are $1 mil!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have a budget that allowed you a $550k house, you could rent west of the park. but the schools are crowded and you will have less than 1600sf.
So here's what I'd do:
- don't worry for a few more years
- play the lottery
- if you don't get a good lottery draw, go to your neighborhood school for PK3 and PK4
- If by K you aren't in a school you like, rent or sell your house and move to a school you do like.
Anonymous wrote:If you have a budget that allowed you a $550k house, you could rent west of the park. but the schools are crowded and you will have less than 1600sf.
Anonymous wrote:Agree. Young Capitol Hill families routinely pay a million plus for houses in the Maury and Brent Districts these days without buying access to by-right middle and high school options that are measurably better than those in Michigan Park. I've never met any family who couldn't lottery into an acceptable 1st-5th grade program after 1-3 years of playing the schools lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Your wife is a ball of hormones right now. I mean that kindly. She may freak out about schools, also about the potential of pesticide residue on your lawn, or the outgassing in your car. Been there. I would not take this exact second as the time to stress about schools.
Furthermore, you are pretty close to a bunch of charter schools, and the lottery may spin in your favor. In addition, your neighborhood is undergoing a massive demographic shift, and you and she are not alone. Schools will work themselves out. Enjoy your new house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We moved to DC from MA about 3-4 months ago and closed on semi-detached townhomeast August. We are a young professional couple (both 31) expecting our first child next February; which is the reason we purchased where we did because we needed a 3 bedroom.
Long story short we had a budget of 600k and needed 3 bedrooms. So we purchased a Federal tow home in North Michigan Park I believe for 550k, about 1 mile from Fort Totten. The concern : schools. The school ratings basically scares us and might be the main driver behind us living the city in the next 4 year or so (before she starts 1st grade).
The other option would be private school but the costs seems like 10k/year and I wonder if my daughter would not be better served by having this money invested in her college fund vs paying for elementary school. My wife is adamant the only way she will stay here past 4-5 years is if she goes to private school.
Do you think 4 years is good enough for the school system to change for the better? now we are zoneed for Brookland Education Campus at Bunker Hill?
We like our place while we would have wanted to be closer to downtown understood that for our price range (600k) and what we needed (3 bedrooms) was a non starter. We even declutter and sold/gifted most of our stuff (from 3,200 sqft in MA to 1,600 sqft here including basement).
The school system seems to be the other big huddle for us (when I thought downsizing would be)?
Private school is more like 30k/year unless you go to a catholic school.