Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also you’ll never see your friends again but it will be because of the kids, not the neighborhood. Having a kid is going to change your life so much that fussing over having a VA address will feel foolish in retrospect.
Also Arlington is closer to some DC stuff than parts of DC are. I moved to Upper NW and depending on the restaurant, the Uber ride for me to meet my friends for dinner is sometimes longer for me than for my friend who moved to Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:I was a former dc snob as well and now I live in Arlington. It is such a great place when you have young kids. You can find a walkable neighborhood in your price range too in Lyon park or Westover. Or you can find someplace with tons of waking trails (since you have dogs) like Donaldson Run or the area near Bluemont Park. And in your situation you greatly eliminate your commute which has a lot of value from a lifestyle perspective.
The majority of the housing stock in dc proper is not SFH with big yards so it seems unlikely you will get what you are looking for there lol. I go to Spring Valley from Arlington once a week to have dinner with a family member who works in that area and it seems pretty quick. But 1.1M doesn’t seem possible so maybe you can stay put a few years and save money and get your budget up.
Anonymous wrote:Also you’ll never see your friends again but it will be because of the kids, not the neighborhood. Having a kid is going to change your life so much that fussing over having a VA address will feel foolish in retrospect.
Anonymous wrote:FWIW, being a young parent on the Hill is so pleasant. Tons of built-in community. Join MOTH, then join whatever Eaters and Sleepers group is running at the time. Those early mom friends are jewels.
Anonymous wrote:Check out fort hunt / waynewood
Anonymous wrote:FWIW, being a young parent on the Hill is so pleasant. Tons of built-in community. Join MOTH, then join whatever Eaters and Sleepers group is running at the time. Those early mom friends are jewels.