Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find everywhere in that area excessively crowded during the day - and small chaotic parking lots - and then desolate at night. I just don’t get the appeal and prefer VA.
I really don’t understand the rugged terrain of the roads.
Driving up Seven Locks at night is basically pitch black and the trees hover over and basically touch each other so you can’t see the sky! The houses seem all dark even if it’s early? Idk
Sure, the 16-lane roads in Tysons/McLean, where every traffic light takes five minutes to change, are so appealing and not at all chaotic :)
Speaking of Tysons, go to Patsy’s back bar to watch a nighttime football game and then go to Quincy’s and report back with your findings.
Maybe go to the Boro to go grocery shopping and get a meal at North Italia or go the Capital One Center and go grocery shopping and get a beer at Starr Hill or a meal at Wren. Then go to Park Potomac to compare and contrast. The differences are incredibly stark, let’s just say. And Park Potomac is supposed to be a nice town center with $900,000 condos and $1M+ townhomes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find everywhere in that area excessively crowded during the day - and small chaotic parking lots - and then desolate at night. I just don’t get the appeal and prefer VA.
I really don’t understand the rugged terrain of the roads.
Driving up Seven Locks at night is basically pitch black and the trees hover over and basically touch each other so you can’t see the sky! The houses seem all dark even if it’s early? Idk
Sure, the 16-lane roads in Tysons/McLean, where every traffic light takes five minutes to change, are so appealing and not at all chaotic :)
Speaking of Tysons, go to Patsy’s back bar to watch a nighttime football game and then go to Quincy’s and report back with your findings.
Maybe go to the Boro to go grocery shopping and get a meal at North Italia or go the Capital One Center and go grocery shopping and get a beer at Starr Hill or a meal at Wren. Then go to Park Potomac to compare and contrast. The differences are incredibly stark, let’s just say. And Park Potomac is supposed to be a nice town center with $900,000 condos and $1M+ townhomes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find everywhere in that area excessively crowded during the day - and small chaotic parking lots - and then desolate at night. I just don’t get the appeal and prefer VA.
I really don’t understand the rugged terrain of the roads.
Driving up Seven Locks at night is basically pitch black and the trees hover over and basically touch each other so you can’t see the sky! The houses seem all dark even if it’s early? Idk
Sure, the 16-lane roads in Tysons/McLean, where every traffic light takes five minutes to change, are so appealing and not at all chaotic :)
Anonymous wrote:I find everywhere in that area excessively crowded during the day - and small chaotic parking lots - and then desolate at night. I just don’t get the appeal and prefer VA.
I really don’t understand the rugged terrain of the roads.
Driving up Seven Locks at night is basically pitch black and the trees hover over and basically touch each other so you can’t see the sky! The houses seem all dark even if it’s early? Idk

Anonymous wrote:What are you expecting from a shopping center?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are people from the Northeast or from abroad (eg asian, Indian diaspora) so obsessed with things being “prestigious”?
Park Potomac is a perfectly nice, affluent shopping area. The deli spots are packed with retirees every day during lunch time. The Quincy’s bar is where divorcees go flirt. The residences around it are definitely pricey, given they’re mostly condos and townhomes
The only knock against it is that it’s next to the highway. But you dont really “hang out” there, you go to a shop and leave
Somebody should tell you in case nobody in your social circle does not: you are being weird!
Let me reframe. Why is Park Potomac so low class? I thought Potomac was supposed to be nice but the socio economic demographic makeup of Quincy’s for MNF is something I’d expect in Germantown. I’ve seen more upscale crowds in sports bars in Columbia Heights.
I feel like somebody told you Potomac is high class and you’re showing some kind of Paris syndrome. It’s just a grocery store and some shops, man. It’s kept clean and there’s no hobos, an everybody looks put together: it’s standard for the neighborhood. Venture out just west of Seven Locks and it’s your standard upper middle class suburbia of people walking their golden retrievers and moms going to the Lifetime Gym. I truly don’t see the “low class” aspect. I think you’re just trolling.
You should go to that Harris Teeter on a weekday night after 7 and to that Quincy’s bar on a weekend night or for Sunday night or Monday night football and get back to the thread with how “put together” everyone looks. It is a depressing s show.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are people from the Northeast or from abroad (eg asian, Indian diaspora) so obsessed with things being “prestigious”?
Park Potomac is a perfectly nice, affluent shopping area. The deli spots are packed with retirees every day during lunch time. The Quincy’s bar is where divorcees go flirt. The residences around it are definitely pricey, given they’re mostly condos and townhomes
The only knock against it is that it’s next to the highway. But you dont really “hang out” there, you go to a shop and leave
Somebody should tell you in case nobody in your social circle does not: you are being weird!
Let me reframe. Why is Park Potomac so low class? I thought Potomac was supposed to be nice but the socio economic demographic makeup of Quincy’s for MNF is something I’d expect in Germantown. I’ve seen more upscale crowds in sports bars in Columbia Heights.
I feel like somebody told you Potomac is high class and you’re showing some kind of Paris syndrome. It’s just a grocery store and some shops, man. It’s kept clean and there’s no hobos, an everybody looks put together: it’s standard for the neighborhood. Venture out just west of Seven Locks and it’s your standard upper middle class suburbia of people walking their golden retrievers and moms going to the Lifetime Gym. I truly don’t see the “low class” aspect. I think you’re just trolling.
Anonymous wrote:The shopping center you're describing is actually in Rockville. Well actually, the city limit cuts through the larger development: the townhouses and Harris Teeter and Founding Farmers are on the edge of Potomac. The Quincy's shopping center is entirely in Rockville (also on the edge).
I think of this area as no-mans-land 270 between the two.
The only two shopping centers with actual "Potomac vibes" are Potomac Falls (Falls and River) and Cabin John (Seven Locks and Tuckerman). The former is "old Potomac" where you'll find more old guard and the later is more busy-family. But both are decidedly upper middle class to rich feeling Potomac experiences. The shopping center with Quincys and Walgreens and the UPS and liquor stores is...not. It's fine though! Perfectly nice!
Anonymous wrote:They sent out a notice to residence that they may have noticed mentally unstable ‘unhoused’ individuals around and not to approach them and call 911 immediately