Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yet another troll.
I’m really not. I just don’t “get” Fairfax.
Anonymous wrote:Raised the kids in North Arlington and moved to downtown DC as youngish empty nesters. Bought a second home in the country about 90 minutes from the city when Covid started. None of our places is particularly fancy, and we’re well off but I wouldn’t say wealthy.
Was in Fairfax County today having car work done. Spent a couple hours walking around the area (more or less the between Vienna and Merrifield) while I waited.
I found it horrifying. Strip malls followed by town houses and single family homes hugging congested highways, no real sidewalks (mostly asphalt), and all the same in every direction. Walked into what looked like a quiet leafy ‘hood to get away from it and quickly found myself walking into a sound wall for I-66.
I’m sorry, but why does anyone with any other options choose to live in an area like that? It raised my blood pressure!!
Anonymous wrote:Umm, North Arlington also straddles 66, has tons of strip malls (have you driven on 29?), and plenty of neighborhoods have similar houses that are now being torn down and replaced with huge mansions.
If you drive out 29 from DC, you would be hard pressed to know whether you are in North Arlington, the City of Falls Church, or Fairfax County bc they are mostly all the same.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a dumb post. OP you were in like the ugliest part of the county where you were. If you go west and north of where you were it’s not nearly as ugly and industrial. Plenty of nice neighborhoods with lots of green space. For those of us who work outside the beltway there’s no reason to live right near DC. Our commutes would be longer. Plus who wants to live near North Arlington people? Based on what I read here and who I’ve met in real life, you all are insufferable with a completely unjustified superiority complex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How dense can you be? Not all of us are empty nesters who bought houses when they cost $250k for a nice SFH. We would love to live in Arlington but we can't afford it. How many people do you think live somewhere because they love it vs. because it's close to their job and it's what they can afford?
Well, you have a million people on DCUM who won’t even consider fantastic neighborhoods that aren’t nearly as depressing as Fairfax because they’re petrified to send their kids to majority minority schools. Their loss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How dense can you be? Not all of us are empty nesters who bought houses when they cost $250k for a nice SFH. We would love to live in Arlington but we can't afford it. How many people do you think live somewhere because they love it vs. because it's close to their job and it's what they can afford?
Well, you have a million people on DCUM who won’t even consider fantastic neighborhoods that aren’t nearly as depressing as Fairfax because they’re petrified to send their kids to majority minority schools. Their loss.
Are you bitter for some reason?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yet another troll.
I’m really not. I just don’t “get” Fairfax.
Sure you are. You walked around "Merrifield," an industrial/commercial area next to 66, and complained about it looking like strip malls and crap. Yes, that's like walking from Shirlington up the trail to Columbia Pike and not getting the allure of Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How dense can you be? Not all of us are empty nesters who bought houses when they cost $250k for a nice SFH. We would love to live in Arlington but we can't afford it. How many people do you think live somewhere because they love it vs. because it's close to their job and it's what they can afford?
Well, you have a million people on DCUM who won’t even consider fantastic neighborhoods that aren’t nearly as depressing as Fairfax because they’re petrified to send their kids to majority minority schools. Their loss.
Anonymous wrote:How dense can you be? Not all of us are empty nesters who bought houses when they cost $250k for a nice SFH. We would love to live in Arlington but we can't afford it. How many people do you think live somewhere because they love it vs. because it's close to their job and it's what they can afford?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yet another troll.
I’m really not. I just don’t “get” Fairfax.