Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would consider Del Ray or Rosemont in the City of Alexandria.
Don't listen to those who would suggest Arlington. North Arlington is the whitest part of NoVa and very segregated; South Arlington is seriously unattractive. Coming from a cute town like Maplewood, you would wake up every morning and think you'd moved to a bad neighborhood in Union or Rahway.
Except they want good schools.
Please don't listen to the above poster.
Anonymous wrote:I would consider Del Ray or Rosemont in the City of Alexandria.
Don't listen to those who would suggest Arlington. North Arlington is the whitest part of NoVa and very segregated; South Arlington is seriously unattractive. Coming from a cute town like Maplewood, you would wake up every morning and think you'd moved to a bad neighborhood in Union or Rahway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rent in Capitol Hill near Eastern Market. Coming from Brooklyn this is your best option. The PK3 programs are all good. You may not get into your IB but you will probably get in somewhere when she is 3. That buys you several years to decide whether long-term city living with kids suits you. We love it here but I get families who move in the upper grades. We've been doing a mix of public and private depending on what each kid needs.
This.
Yes, this. If one of you works in Arlington and one near Union Station then this is a no brainer: Capitol Hill. It has the diversity you want, the metro commute, the walkable Brooklyn style lifestyle, and the schools at least for a few years (until grade 5 if you move in boundary for Brent). Charter schools too.
All these other places are very nice and diverse (Crestwood, SP, Rockville, SS) but the commute will destroy your soul, especially if you insist on public transit.
I think the Hill would be good location-wise, but it won't have at least 10% middle/upper SES AAs. Crestwood and Rockville check that box, but won't necessarily be walkable and Metro-accessible. Will be hard to meet all of OP's requirements with any neighborhood, so she'll have to decide what her priorities are.
Are you kidding? Of course it would. Maybe not 30-40% UMC but certainly both some UMC and MC AA families. Many have lived here for generations. It's true some of my UMC AA neighbors send their kids to private though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rent in Capitol Hill near Eastern Market. Coming from Brooklyn this is your best option. The PK3 programs are all good. You may not get into your IB but you will probably get in somewhere when she is 3. That buys you several years to decide whether long-term city living with kids suits you. We love it here but I get families who move in the upper grades. We've been doing a mix of public and private depending on what each kid needs.
This.
Yes, this. If one of you works in Arlington and one near Union Station then this is a no brainer: Capitol Hill. It has the diversity you want, the metro commute, the walkable Brooklyn style lifestyle, and the schools at least for a few years (until grade 5 if you move in boundary for Brent). Charter schools too.
All these other places are very nice and diverse (Crestwood, SP, Rockville, SS) but the commute will destroy your soul, especially if you insist on public transit.
I think the Hill would be good location-wise, but it won't have at least 10% middle/upper SES AAs. Crestwood and Rockville check that box, but won't necessarily be walkable and Metro-accessible. Will be hard to meet all of OP's requirements with any neighborhood, so she'll have to decide what her priorities are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rent in Capitol Hill near Eastern Market. Coming from Brooklyn this is your best option. The PK3 programs are all good. You may not get into your IB but you will probably get in somewhere when she is 3. That buys you several years to decide whether long-term city living with kids suits you. We love it here but I get families who move in the upper grades. We've been doing a mix of public and private depending on what each kid needs.
This.
Yes, this. If one of you works in Arlington and one near Union Station then this is a no brainer: Capitol Hill. It has the diversity you want, the metro commute, the walkable Brooklyn style lifestyle, and the schools at least for a few years (until grade 5 if you move in boundary for Brent). Charter schools too.
All these other places are very nice and diverse (Crestwood, SP, Rockville, SS) but the commute will destroy your soul, especially if you insist on public transit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rent in Capitol Hill near Eastern Market. Coming from Brooklyn this is your best option. The PK3 programs are all good. You may not get into your IB but you will probably get in somewhere when she is 3. That buys you several years to decide whether long-term city living with kids suits you. We love it here but I get families who move in the upper grades. We've been doing a mix of public and private depending on what each kid needs.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe Shepherd Park (DC)?
Rockville MD would be a utopia for your family, but sadly that's too far for your commute (only posting it in case it would work for other readers)
I agree that Shepherd Park and Rockville would meet OP's requirements (we are a multiracial family in Shepherd Park, and there are tons more like us here), but sadly I think both are too far for an Arlington commute.
Crestwood is very similar to Shepherd Park in DC and is a beautiful neighborhood nestled into Rock Creek Park, but not as far from Arlington. This gets my vote.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe Shepherd Park (DC)?
Rockville MD would be a utopia for your family, but sadly that's too far for your commute (only posting it in case it would work for other readers)
Anonymous wrote:Rent in Capitol Hill near Eastern Market. Coming from Brooklyn this is your best option. The PK3 programs are all good. You may not get into your IB but you will probably get in somewhere when she is 3. That buys you several years to decide whether long-term city living with kids suits you. We love it here but I get families who move in the upper grades. We've been doing a mix of public and private depending on what each kid needs.
Anonymous wrote:Don't live in MD if you will work in Arlington. Live in DC (although unless you're in Capital Hill, that commute will suck too). Check out the Kent Gardens neighborhood and school in Mean. Lots of diversity including AA/white biracial kids.