Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I bought my house in Vienna (1999), a house comparable to mine in the Ballston area of Arlington sold for about 600K. My house was about 250K. Assuming the relative prices are similar, a basic non-updated 1950's - 1960's house in North Arlington will cost north of 1 million.
No, basic non-updated older houses in N. Arlington will run in the mid-500,000s to $650,000.
http://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/4723-24th-Rd-N-22207/home/11227786
http://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/6119-Williamsburg-Blvd-22207/home/11226506
http://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/1024-N-Larrimore-St-22205/home/11241114
Yes--near the Courthouse/Clarendon metros--SFH are around 1 million--esp if you factor in choice elem and middle schools.
The homes listed above are not in walkable area-- metro, etc.
The PP (not the OP) did not say walkable area, she said N. Arlington (Ballston area). Basic, unrenovated homes in N. Arlington/Ballston do not sell for $1 million+.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I bought my house in Vienna (1999), a house comparable to mine in the Ballston area of Arlington sold for about 600K. My house was about 250K. Assuming the relative prices are similar, a basic non-updated 1950's - 1960's house in North Arlington will cost north of 1 million.
No, basic non-updated older houses in N. Arlington will run in the mid-500,000s to $650,000.
http://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/4723-24th-Rd-N-22207/home/11227786
http://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/6119-Williamsburg-Blvd-22207/home/11226506
http://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/1024-N-Larrimore-St-22205/home/11241114
Yes--near the Courthouse/Clarendon metros--SFH are around 1 million--esp if you factor in choice elem and middle schools.
The homes listed above are not in walkable area-- metro, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I bought my house in Vienna (1999), a house comparable to mine in the Ballston area of Arlington sold for about 600K. My house was about 250K. Assuming the relative prices are similar, a basic non-updated 1950's - 1960's house in North Arlington will cost north of 1 million.
No, basic non-updated older houses in N. Arlington will run in the mid-500,000s to $650,000.
http://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/4723-24th-Rd-N-22207/home/11227786
http://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/6119-Williamsburg-Blvd-22207/home/11226506
http://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/1024-N-Larrimore-St-22205/home/11241114
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here: Arlington, she's interested in Arlington, walkable areas, near subway.
This has been discussed many, many times on this site, but basically the most walkable area in Arlington near the metro is Clarendon/Courthouse. It also tends to be the most expensive because it is near the metro. As you go further out the Orange Line, you hit Ballston and East Falls Church - also somewhat walkable (Ballston more than East Falls Church), but not as "hip". There are also walkable areas along Lee Highway (Cherrydale, Lee Heights, Waverly Hills, Country CLub) and Washington Blvd (Westover), but these are not walkable to metro (you could take the bus very easily). Schools this area feed into both Yorktown and Washington-Lee High Schools. IN general, the schools are very good in all of these areas. The main issue in N. Arlingon right now is serious overcrowding in schools so she needs to look into that.
Anonymous wrote:When I bought my house in Vienna (1999), a house comparable to mine in the Ballston area of Arlington sold for about 600K. My house was about 250K. Assuming the relative prices are similar, a basic non-updated 1950's - 1960's house in North Arlington will cost north of 1 million.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here: Arlington, she's interested in Arlington, walkable areas, near subway.
Price range, please.
Anonymous wrote:OP here: Arlington, she's interested in Arlington, walkable areas, near subway.
Anonymous wrote:OP here: Arlington, she's interested in Arlington, walkable areas, near subway.
Anonymous wrote:Many of those schools have Level IV AAP centers attached to them. Hard to believe that having the AAP Center at your school can increase your test scores and skew your numbers to make you look like a more attractive school (*scoff*). There are plenty of great schools throughout Fairfax County. There are also many, many bright children who don't qualify for AAP under the current AAP system and who are doing well at their base school (some of them don't even go to Haycock! Say what?!).
OP, your friend needs to find a house / neighborhood that she's interested in (or a couple). Then she can talk to people and do her research about the schools assigned to those neighborhoods. Picking a home based on a school in a list is just as silly as picking a home based on those dumb GreatSchool.net reviews.