Anonymous wrote:Try Woodhaven and also Kenwood Park. The entire Burning a Tree neighborhood too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And the lovely CCsupermarket across the street is going away one of these days- that area will be like Friendship Hts soon enough. (check out the county's Chevy Chase Lake sector plan.)
FYI, the family who runs Chevy Chase Supermarket has first right of refusal for the grocery store space in the upcoming development.
That's a positive sign, but all the developer needs to do is jack up the rent on the new space and price out the family. Apparently that's what happened to Bruce Variety in Bethesda. The developer may want a "big name" tenant like Whole Foods or something.
Then the family may just be ready to retire and move on anyway. Unfortunate, but not uncommon.
Anonymous wrote:And the lovely CCsupermarket across the street is going away one of these days- that area will be like Friendship Hts soon enough. (check out the county's Chevy Chase Lake sector plan.)
FYI, the family who runs Chevy Chase Supermarket has first right of refusal for the grocery store space in the upcoming development.
Anonymous wrote:What about the area north of East-West highway and just east of CT ave - behind the library? Seems like that might fit the bill.
But, also sounds like OP wants to live in McMansion land, so Chevy Chase Commons is probably the best bet.
Why are you so weird about the street thing? I can just imagine wanting a garage, though personally I couldn't care less. I cannot fathom why you would care whether other people use their garage or not. What is the deal? Are you such a crappy driver that you are scared of crashing into parked cars?
PP who cannot imagine wanting a garage: Where do you keep your tools, bikes and lawnmowers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're looking to move and looking for suggestions. Criteria:
- Lot sizes in the 7,500 - 10,000 sq. ft. range so we can have a bit of a yard
- Streets - Prefer wider streets, at least wide enough for two cars to pass easily, prefer neighborhoods where people have garages and use them rather than park a bunch of cars on the street- Kids and kid-friendly (toddlers and young ES-age) - nearby park is a bonus
- Price - up to about $1.4mm if move-in ready, around $900,000 - $1.1mm if needs work
Bonus - (1) easy/direct commute to DC for work, (2) proximity to shopping, restaurants, etc.
We've considered:
- East Bethesda - I find most of the streets and lots to be claustrophobic - small lots, small streets
- Somerset and Chevy Chase West - not bad but expensive for what you get, some lots are pretty small
- Rollingwood - Not bad, maybe too far east for easy access to shopping, restaurants, etc? proximity to Candy Cane park is great.
- Neighborhood north of Jones Bridge between Conn. and Jones Mill (don't know the name)
thanks
Why are you so weird about the street thing? I can just imagine wanting a garage, though personally I couldn't care less. I cannot fathom why you would care whether other people use their garage or not. What is the deal? Are you such a crappy driver that you are scared of crashing into parked cars?
Anonymous wrote:And the lovely CCsupermarket across the street is going away one of these days- that area will be like Friendship Hts soon enough. (check out the county's Chevy Chase Lake sector plan.)
FYI, the family who runs Chevy Chase Supermarket has first right of refusal for the grocery store space in the upcoming development.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My god, how snobby do people get? Parked cars on the street is "trashy?"
+1. These are people who don't know what's important in life.
And the lovely CCsupermarket across the street is going away one of these days- that area will be like Friendship Hts soon enough. (check out the county's Chevy Chase Lake sector plan.)
Anonymous wrote:My god, how snobby do people get? Parked cars on the street is "trashy?"