Anonymous wrote:22043 - hands down the best combination at that price point.
Anonymous wrote:22043 - hands down the best combination at that price point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Move to N. Arlington. End of thread.
Meh.
This is why I feel like these sorts of questions are rough on boards like this. There is immense personal preference involved here and you don't know who is behind each "meh" or "yay!" opinion. Some people will be very happy living in Arlington, some will not. Some people are extremely happy living farther out and having a longer commute, some are not. A million factors play into that. OP will have to check things out for himself/herself.
Given OP's criteria--in Virginia, walkable to a metro, has good public schools, and wouldn't be a crazy commute--Arlington seems the most logical choice. Now, if she doesn't like Arlington, that's fair, but then she's likely going to have to make allowances on walkable to metro and not a crazy commute.....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Virginia didn’t do as good of a job as Maryland in planning and building around Metro stops. They were mostly planned like a regular train station.
Wut? https://www.smartergrowth.net/virginia/arlington/
Winner of the first EPA Smart Growth Award and the Coalition for Smarter Growth’s Capital Region Visionary Award, Arlington County is a national leader in transit-oriented development, affordable housing, transit, and street design.
Arlington’s journey began when it decided to construct Metro’s Orange Line under the Rosslyn-Ballston (R-B) corridor, rather than aboveground in the middle of I-66, and created their “bullseye” plan for the Metro stations.
Today, Arlington boasts 50 million square feet of transit-oriented development in the R-B corridor alone and has done so without increasing traffic. The land in their two Metro corridors (their other one is Pentagon City/Crystal City) occupies just 11 percent of the county, but provides 50 percent of the tax base. 39 percent of trips in the R-B corridor are made by transit, walking, and bicycling.
Anonymous wrote:Virginia didn’t do as good of a job as Maryland in planning and building around Metro stops. They were mostly planned like a regular train station.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Move to N. Arlington. End of thread.
Meh.
This is why I feel like these sorts of questions are rough on boards like this. There is immense personal preference involved here and you don't know who is behind each "meh" or "yay!" opinion. Some people will be very happy living in Arlington, some will not. Some people are extremely happy living farther out and having a longer commute, some are not. A million factors play into that. OP will have to check things out for himself/herself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Move to N. Arlington. End of thread.
Meh.
Anonymous wrote:Move to N. Arlington. End of thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vienna
Thanks, but Vienna is like 10 miles away from dc. Is there anything closer with good schools. looking for a 3 or 4 bedroom house. I mean like is there anything like this in Clarendon?
I mean good public schools. 7 or 8 or higher on a good schools scale? is it worth it more to look for houses in NW DC near a metro (with a daily work commute to Capitol Hill) than to try to find this in Virginia?
Same pp as above who lives in arlington. Yes, Washington and Lee and the schools in the neighborhoods I see you mentioning are all very good from the standpoint I think you're looking at. Washington and Lee has better diversity than Yorktown if that's important to you just so you know while comparing. Seeing your commute IS to cap hill - see my comment on my husband's commute to cap hill from Westover. I think you're smart to look for walking distance to metro and the closer in metro stations since cap hill is pretty far in there so that you can reduce that second leg that adds to my husband's commute. If you lived in Colonial Village like you mention and had a short walk to the courthouse metro, that should be a very easy commute. About 25 min metro time?
I think OP was referring to Colonial Village in DC, not the condos in Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vienna
Thanks, but Vienna is like 10 miles away from dc. Is there anything closer with good schools. looking for a 3 or 4 bedroom house. I mean like is there anything like this in Clarendon?
I mean good public schools. 7 or 8 or higher on a good schools scale? is it worth it more to look for houses in NW DC near a metro (with a daily work commute to Capitol Hill) than to try to find this in Virginia?
Same pp as above who lives in arlington. Yes, Washington and Lee and the schools in the neighborhoods I see you mentioning are all very good from the standpoint I think you're looking at. Washington and Lee has better diversity than Yorktown if that's important to you just so you know while comparing. Seeing your commute IS to cap hill - see my comment on my husband's commute to cap hill from Westover. I think you're smart to look for walking distance to metro and the closer in metro stations since cap hill is pretty far in there so that you can reduce that second leg that adds to my husband's commute. If you lived in Colonial Village like you mention and had a short walk to the courthouse metro, that should be a very easy commute. About 25 min metro time?