Anonymous wrote:I’ve lived in Baltimore, DC and Boston. DC lacks some of the parts of Boston that Baltimore has. For example, Baltimore has the National Aquarium, Science Center and Children’s Museum, all of which DC families travel for. (DC’s KID museum and children’s museum are small and don’t compare to the ones in Baltimore and Boston).
Baltimore also has the Peabody whereas DC doesn’t have a comparable conservatory. This is good both for music lesson s and concerts.
Baltimore has much better university programming for youth. John’s Hopkins runs the Center for Talented Youth and other youth programs, similar to the way MIT runs youth programming. DC’s universities have summer programs but they’re not nearly as rigorous.
+1 to Ruxton or Roland Park. I would actually choose Roland Park as a first choice.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We’re currently living in a suburb of Boston and really enjoy aspects of city life—exploring different restaurants, museums, and cultural activities.
I might be underestimating the commute. My current commute is around 70 minutes on a typical day and can stretch to 1.5 hours on bad days. From what I’ve heard, commuting between DC and Baltimore can be pretty brutal—is it not considered counter-traffic?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We’re currently living in a suburb of Boston and really enjoy aspects of city life—exploring different restaurants, museums, and cultural activities.
I might be underestimating the commute. My current commute is around 70 minutes on a typical day and can stretch to 1.5 hours on bad days. From what I’ve heard, commuting between DC and Baltimore can be pretty brutal—is it not considered counter-traffic?
Anonymous wrote:If you go to work in Baltimore - choose HoCo. They have good schools and lots of Asian students.