Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know if there is an official answer, but I grew up in a row house near Dupont, and I would assume all older, attached homes near downtown are generally called row houses. i think of "townhouses" more as the marketing name for newly built attached homes in developments -- 1970s-onwards --either the more entry-level homes in the burbs in Silver Spring and Rockville, or more recent developments in the city, like on the edge of Georgetown, on Unicorn Place near Rock Creek Park, or up Connecticut Ave. (Which can often be significantly cheaper than SFH neighbors, mostly because of little/no land/yard I would assume.)
That said, I have also heard the term townhouse used for larger, more stately attached homes in DC, in the way the term is used in New York
So is a townhouse "looked down upon" compared to a single family home?
Anonymous wrote:I don't know if there is an official answer, but I grew up in a row house near Dupont, and I would assume all older, attached homes near downtown are generally called row houses. i think of "townhouses" more as the marketing name for newly built attached homes in developments -- 1970s-onwards --either the more entry-level homes in the burbs in Silver Spring and Rockville, or more recent developments in the city, like on the edge of Georgetown, on Unicorn Place near Rock Creek Park, or up Connecticut Ave. (Which can often be significantly cheaper than SFH neighbors, mostly because of little/no land/yard I would assume.)
That said, I have also heard the term townhouse used for larger, more stately attached homes in DC, in the way the term is used in New York
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try Ellen Abrams and Anne-Marie Finnell with Evers & CO - We used and loved them.
http://www.abramsfinnell.com/
+1. We also used Ellen Abrams and had a great experience. She sells a lot in Chevy Chase, but covers all of NW. You won't get much in Geogetown, Cleveland Park or Wesley Heights for that budget. I'd focus on Chevy Chase, DC & MD and close-in Bethesda. Those areas satisfy all of your criteria and are close to most of the private schools you've mentioned.
Anonymous wrote:Have not read all the previous responses, but a couple of thoughts.
Spring Valley has beautiful houses in your price range. It also used to be a military munitions dump, google that before you consider there.
Palisades can be really nice and you are right next to Georgetown and also right there by the River School and St. Patricks. Another nice little area is right around the intersection of Foxhall and Reservoir Road. To the east is Foxhall Village (row houses of varying sizes in a little community) and to the west is a small enclave of SFHs. You can walk to Georgetown University from there but into the commercial district is a bit of a hike on foot.
Anonymous wrote:That budget won't get you far in Gtown. Are you opposed to WofP neighborhoods besides Gtown? What about Cleveland Park, glover Park, Spring Valley, McLean Gardens etc.. ? You can find stuff for around 900k, but it may need some updating.
Anonymous wrote:Try Ellen Abrams and Anne-Marie Finnell with Evers & CO - We used and loved them.
http://www.abramsfinnell.com/