Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason it is expensive is density which brings walkability.
Density -- and regulations. The (liberal) voters in Arlington have elected County Boards over the past decade that are all in favor of walkability. New building? Pay for the nicer sidewalks and bike paths.
Yes and proximity to DC and Metro, bike share, schools, so few SFHs for demand.
Three is a glut of new SFH in north arlington,
Most jobs aren't in DC and the schools are medicore
#getoverit
Can't afford Arlington? There are plenty of 3/2 split foyers in McLean for 600
WHERE please tell me, I will buy 4 right now.
Cheapest SFH on the market in McLean now is $695K. Cheapest SFH in 22207 is $479K.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really? We saw new houses with the same SF in McLean and Arlington for more or less the same price. The only difference was the size of the yard. Since we're not allergic to grass, and didn't like the way so many houses in Arlington take up almost all the yard, McLean was the easy choice for us.
As far as I can see, In VA, only in Arlington will you pay over $1100/sf for a home and still have $1700/month maintenance fee on top of it.
http://www.ziprealty.com/property/1881-N-NASH-ST-_UNIT_2109-ARLINGTON-VA-22209/85156425/detail
you really think posting a stupid luxury condo strengthens your argument?
Anonymous wrote:
WHO THE FUCK CARES?!??!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason it is expensive is density which brings walkability.
Density -- and regulations. The (liberal) voters in Arlington have elected County Boards over the past decade that are all in favor of walkability. New building? Pay for the nicer sidewalks and bike paths.
Yes and proximity to DC and Metro, bike share, schools, so few SFHs for demand.
Three is a glut of new SFH in north arlington,
Most jobs aren't in DC and the schools are medicore
#getoverit
Can't afford Arlington? There are plenty of 3/2 split foyers in McLean for 600
WHERE please tell me, I will buy 4 right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The highest-income census tracts in each of Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Potomac, McLean and Great Falls are higher than their Arlington counterpart, and the homes in DC are far more elegant. Arlington is basically Silver Spring OD'd on steroids.
And yet, Arlington 22207 has the same average household income as McLean 22101 and higher than McLean 22102.
Facts speak. The census tracts in Arlington alongside McLean are higher income, younger, better educated. All this, despite half the lot sizes.
Feeling a little concerned about the future?
22207 has lower incomes than 22101, and 22101 has census tracts with higher incomes than any census tracts in Arlington, including those adjacent to McLean. Repeating the same lie repeatedly won't make it true.
Lying? According to the last census, 22207 HHI is 201; 22101 is 205....not much difference.
Also according to the census--the Arlington side of the Arlington McLean border has a higher HHI - 225 to 211.
Www.census.com
Give it a rest. 22207 is lower than 22101 so they are not the "same."
Other census tracts in McLean have higher HHI that those in McLean on the "Arlington McLean border" or in any census tracts in Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason it is expensive is density which brings walkability.
Density -- and regulations. The (liberal) voters in Arlington have elected County Boards over the past decade that are all in favor of walkability. New building? Pay for the nicer sidewalks and bike paths.
Yes and proximity to DC and Metro, bike share, schools, so few SFHs for demand.
Three is a glut of new SFH in north arlington,
Most jobs aren't in DC and the schools are medicore
#getoverit
Can't afford Arlington? There are plenty of 3/2 split foyers in McLean for 600
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The highest-income census tracts in each of Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Potomac, McLean and Great Falls are higher than their Arlington counterpart, and the homes in DC are far more elegant. Arlington is basically Silver Spring OD'd on steroids.
And yet, Arlington 22207 has the same average household income as McLean 22101 and higher than McLean 22102.
Facts speak. The census tracts in Arlington alongside McLean are higher income, younger, better educated. All this, despite half the lot sizes.
Feeling a little concerned about the future?
22207 has lower incomes than 22101, and 22101 has census tracts with higher incomes than any census tracts in Arlington, including those adjacent to McLean. Repeating the same lie repeatedly won't make it true.
Lying? According to the last census, 22207 HHI is 201; 22101 is 205....not much difference.
Also according to the census--the Arlington side of the Arlington McLean border has a higher HHI - 225 to 211.
Www.census.com
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really? We saw new houses with the same SF in McLean and Arlington for more or less the same price. The only difference was the size of the yard. Since we're not allergic to grass, and didn't like the way so many houses in Arlington take up almost all the yard, McLean was the easy choice for us.
As far as I can see, In VA, only in Arlington will you pay over $1100/sf for a home and still have $1700/month maintenance fee on top of it.
http://www.ziprealty.com/property/1881-N-NASH-ST-_UNIT_2109-ARLINGTON-VA-22209/85156425/detail
you really think posting a stupid luxury condo strengthens your argument?

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The highest-income census tracts in each of Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Potomac, McLean and Great Falls are higher than their Arlington counterpart, and the homes in DC are far more elegant. Arlington is basically Silver Spring OD'd on steroids.
Not true. The census tract including country club hills and Arlingwood has higher home prices than any 22101 tract.
You must be rather challenged if you don't understand the difference between HHI income and housing prices, but 22101 has higher housing prices than 22207 in any event.
Not by much--930 vs 880 last quarter....and Arlingtons Are much smaller
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason it is expensive is density which brings walkability.
Density -- and regulations. The (liberal) voters in Arlington have elected County Boards over the past decade that are all in favor of walkability. New building? Pay for the nicer sidewalks and bike paths.
Yes and proximity to DC and Metro, bike share, schools, so few SFHs for demand.
Three is a glut of new SFH in north arlington,
Most jobs aren't in DC and the schools are medicore
#getoverit
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:22205 is more desirable than 22207 because of walk ability and semi- normal house prices
That's stupid talk, "semi-normal" prices mean lower prices which in fact means less desirable.
When price is high it is desirable, when price is lower it is less desirable.
Put that in your walkability pipe and smoke that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really? We saw new houses with the same SF in McLean and Arlington for more or less the same price. The only difference was the size of the yard. Since we're not allergic to grass, and didn't like the way so many houses in Arlington take up almost all the yard, McLean was the easy choice for us.
As far as I can see, In VA, only in Arlington will you pay over $1100/sf for a home and still have $1700/month maintenance fee on top of it.
http://www.ziprealty.com/property/1881-N-NASH-ST-_UNIT_2109-ARLINGTON-VA-22209/85156425/detail