Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wardour is in West Annapolis, it is a small neighborhood and the two houses on the market right now are 3 mil and 7 mil.
There are other houses in West Annap that are cheaper. If you want a traditional neighborhood close in downtown, Murray Hill would be a good option.
Do you plan on doing privates?
What type of neighborhood do you want, what is your budget?
We have been in Annapolis for the past 13 years. I lived in Alexandria and DC before that. The biggest sacrifice is restaurants. Food in general sucks here. A lot of average, a lot of really bad and a couple of places that are worth it. Biggest benefit outside of COVID is access to BWI.
Let me know if you have specific questions happy to answer.
There are also smaller houses in Wardour that have gone for under 1m though it is certainly a more expensive area. West Annapolis can be great, just be careful to stick in the good elementary school district.
I'm sorry the PP seems to not like the Annapolis dining scene, I think its great--though of course, you're in a much smaller city. The below are slighted dated, but give a good sense of the general vibe:
http://edibledc.com/stories/annapolis-is-a-trip-fit-for-foodies
http://dcrefined.com/eat-drink/guide-to-summer-eating-in-annapolis
Outside of Flament all of the places on both of those list would be run of the mill establishments anywhere else. And Flament is the only where you are going to sit down and have a full portion meal.
Anonymous wrote:We live more on the Edgewater side of the Annapolis metro area. It’s wonderful and we love it. Severna Park is completely different, and more ritzy I think. Admittedly there were some big obnoxious Trump flags around but I found it very easy to find likeminded friends.
Atmospherically, Annapolis is its own “place.” It is not a suburb of DC at all. I probably know more people who commute to Baltimore than DC, but it’s its own center of gravity, which I really like.
We do send our kids to private school, and I think it’s more common here than in the inner ring DC suburbs, but my neighborhood friends are mostly public school parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wardour is in West Annapolis, it is a small neighborhood and the two houses on the market right now are 3 mil and 7 mil.
There are other houses in West Annap that are cheaper. If you want a traditional neighborhood close in downtown, Murray Hill would be a good option.
Do you plan on doing privates?
What type of neighborhood do you want, what is your budget?
We have been in Annapolis for the past 13 years. I lived in Alexandria and DC before that. The biggest sacrifice is restaurants. Food in general sucks here. A lot of average, a lot of really bad and a couple of places that are worth it. Biggest benefit outside of COVID is access to BWI.
Let me know if you have specific questions happy to answer.
There are also smaller houses in Wardour that have gone for under 1m though it is certainly a more expensive area. West Annapolis can be great, just be careful to stick in the good elementary school district.
I'm sorry the PP seems to not like the Annapolis dining scene, I think its great--though of course, you're in a much smaller city. The below are slighted dated, but give a good sense of the general vibe:
http://edibledc.com/stories/annapolis-is-a-trip-fit-for-foodies
http://dcrefined.com/eat-drink/guide-to-summer-eating-in-annapolis
Anonymous wrote:Would living in Annapolis/SP be challenging for a single mother - widow, 40ish with toddler. One thing that keeps me in DC is worrying that I won't make friends out of the DMV where there are many single mothers/professional women.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you moved from DC to Annapolis, can you share your experience? Especially if you moved with young kids? We are thinking of doing this (both will still work in DC, will have to commute in 2x a week). I'm wondering if it was hard to make new friends. What are some neighborhoods to look into for families with young children?
We ended up moving to Ellicott City but almost pulled the trigger on Annapolis and have friends there. Hope some of this is helpful to you:
-It is a very family-friendly area, though the schools are generally not great so a lot use the great privates around Annapolis.
-Wardour is a terrific neighborhood where you can still bike down and, contrary to my last statement, has a WONDERFUL elementary school.
-Commute from Annapolis is much better than from the burbs on the NW side of the state. Yay!
-You should have no trouble making friends and there are a fair amount of folks who move to Annapolis from DC. That said, you'll be in "real" Maryland, and that is a different mindset from DC. Because you'll be in Annapolis, will be around plenty of political-types, though most will have MD-focused careers. It is also a very relaxed town, which I love, but worlds away from DC.
-Super easy to get to DC and Baltimore on the weekends, as well on down the ocean.
There is a lot of hysteria about commutes on this board, mostly by people that I think have rarely actually done them. I have (perhaps an unfortunate amount of) experience with a bunch of the commutes in DC coming from Maryland, and I think Annapolis strikes a good balance between being reasonable and also having its own great culture, restaurants, etc.
Good luck with the decision!
Edited because I got distracted and hit submit before finishing two lines...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here -thanks for the info, and keep it coming! One question that I'd love to hear your thoughts on: Right now, we live in an apartment in NWDC, which we love but have outgrown. We'll never afford to buy a home in our current neighborhood. Our options are to move out to someplace like Fairfax or Rockville, or even further, like Annapolis. I look at moving to Annapolis as moving *away* from DC. Yes, we would still be close, and would commute in twice a week for work, but we would relocating - new schools, doctors, restaurants, friends, new everything. In my mind, that isn't as true of a move out to NOVA or MOCO, but...isn't it? If we moved to Reston or Rockville or someplace considered part of the DMV, wouldn't it still feel like moving away? I think, because we have a lot of friends here, if we were to move to Rockville, we would still see our DC friends a lot. Am I kidding myself on that?
One of the PPs here. Outside of rush hour it is an easy drive in. DW and I frequently Uber in for Caps/Nats games for work events (and I know more season ticket holders here than I did n DC). We drive or Uber in for dinner frequently. Making friends won't be hard. We kept most of our old doctors and still see them. We aren't going to the dr every week really isn't a big deal. There are a bunch of great urgent care facilities in and around Annapolis. As far as schools, do you plan on going private or public? What type of house do you want, budget? Why not rent an apartment or condo at Annapolis Towne Centre and try it out for a year? You can walk to 3 grocery stores in less than 5 min and there is a Target there, makes thing convenient while you figure out what you want to do and where you really want to be.
By the way I previously lived in Reston, and don't feel Annapolis is any more moving "away" than Reston
Anonymous wrote:Wardour is in West Annapolis, it is a small neighborhood and the two houses on the market right now are 3 mil and 7 mil.
There are other houses in West Annap that are cheaper. If you want a traditional neighborhood close in downtown, Murray Hill would be a good option.
Do you plan on doing privates?
What type of neighborhood do you want, what is your budget?
We have been in Annapolis for the past 13 years. I lived in Alexandria and DC before that. The biggest sacrifice is restaurants. Food in general sucks here. A lot of average, a lot of really bad and a couple of places that are worth it. Biggest benefit outside of COVID is access to BWI.
Let me know if you have specific questions happy to answer.
Anonymous wrote:Would love to hear more about Severna Park ... remote work really opens up some different options.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -thanks for the info, and keep it coming! One question that I'd love to hear your thoughts on: Right now, we live in an apartment in NWDC, which we love but have outgrown. We'll never afford to buy a home in our current neighborhood. Our options are to move out to someplace like Fairfax or Rockville, or even further, like Annapolis. I look at moving to Annapolis as moving *away* from DC. Yes, we would still be close, and would commute in twice a week for work, but we would relocating - new schools, doctors, restaurants, friends, new everything. In my mind, that isn't as true of a move out to NOVA or MOCO, but...isn't it? If we moved to Reston or Rockville or someplace considered part of the DMV, wouldn't it still feel like moving away? I think, because we have a lot of friends here, if we were to move to Rockville, we would still see our DC friends a lot. Am I kidding myself on that?
Anonymous wrote:OP here -thanks for the info, and keep it coming! One question that I'd love to hear your thoughts on: Right now, we live in an apartment in NWDC, which we love but have outgrown. We'll never afford to buy a home in our current neighborhood. Our options are to move out to someplace like Fairfax or Rockville, or even further, like Annapolis. I look at moving to Annapolis as moving *away* from DC. Yes, we would still be close, and would commute in twice a week for work, but we would relocating - new schools, doctors, restaurants, friends, new everything. In my mind, that isn't as true of a move out to NOVA or MOCO, but...isn't it? If we moved to Reston or Rockville or someplace considered part of the DMV, wouldn't it still feel like moving away? I think, because we have a lot of friends here, if we were to move to Rockville, we would still see our DC friends a lot. Am I kidding myself on that?
Anonymous wrote:I would be interested in some neighborhood recommendations, budget between $500-$600k for a single family home. Probably not Severna Park, as one of us would need to commute to DC a few days a week.