Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bye, guys! Enjoy South Arlington!
Oh don't worry----we already are. Welcome to those coming to join us--the community, ammenities and schools are great.
But how are the amenities?
And you are Exhibit A of why many people leave. A complete and total jerk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once you get married and have kids, the 800K gentrifying row house with the crackhead or stabbing out front doesn't seem that great.
Not always the case. People saying this probably have never lived in DC! I have lived in DC 20 years and most of those years in a row house: we have never had that happen in our neighborhood.
To be fair I think that 20 years a go a gentrifying neighborhood would be in NW which is great now but millions of dollars.
Even 40 years ago NW was an elite neighborhood.[/quote]
Not true, people forget that a lot of NW east of 16th St was affordable. My brother purchased a 3 level row house at 12 and O NW for about $188K 18 years ago! It needed work but it shows you how things change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bye, guys! Enjoy South Arlington!
Oh don't worry----we already are. Welcome to those coming to join us--the community, ammenities and schools are great.
But how are the amenities?
Is that different than prior years?
Lots of people with families are getting priced out and/or not getting into the charters they want. What else is new?
Not sure what accounts for the under-25 set taking off, however.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once you get married and have kids, the 800K gentrifying row house with the crackhead or stabbing out front doesn't seem that great.
Not always the case. People saying this probably have never lived in DC! I have lived in DC 20 years and most of those years in a row house: we have never had that happen in our neighborhood.
To be fair I think that 20 years a go a gentrifying neighborhood would be in NW which is great now but millions of dollars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every time I hear someone talking about how they "can't afford anything" in DC it makes me wonder if they've only looked on U Street, in Tenleytown, Cleveland Park, etc. Sure there are lots of houses for sale in DC in that range, but there are houses in nice parts of NE (not talking about H Street) for under $300k, and friends have bought in Shaw for under $450k. It's not nothing, and yeah, you're still taking the charter school gamble but houses in the burbs aren't going for much less. If you really want to live in the city, you probably can. If you just want to live in the super hip area, then good luck.
What nice parts of NE?
I own a condo near H St and wouldn't dream of raising my son there.
What property did your friends buy in Shaw for 450K?
I don't think anyone argues that if you really want to live in the city, you can; it's just that the way you will live without a huge budget (cramped place, marginal neighborhood, school anxiety) is not appealing.
Again, not H street. Brookland, Riggs Park, parts of Michigan Park, Takoma (DC, not Takoma Park, MD). All of which have nice houses at reasonable prices close to the metro.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every time I hear someone talking about how they "can't afford anything" in DC it makes me wonder if they've only looked on U Street, in Tenleytown, Cleveland Park, etc. Sure there are lots of houses for sale in DC in that range, but there are houses in nice parts of NE (not talking about H Street) for under $300k, and friends have bought in Shaw for under $450k. It's not nothing, and yeah, you're still taking the charter school gamble but houses in the burbs aren't going for much less. If you really want to live in the city, you probably can. If you just want to live in the super hip area, then good luck.
What nice parts of NE?
I own a condo near H St and wouldn't dream of raising my son there.
What property did your friends buy in Shaw for 450K?
I don't think anyone argues that if you really want to live in the city, you can; it's just that the way you will live without a huge budget (cramped place, marginal neighborhood, school anxiety) is not appealing.
Anonymous wrote:Every time I hear someone talking about how they "can't afford anything" in DC it makes me wonder if they've only looked on U Street, in Tenleytown, Cleveland Park, etc. Sure there are lots of houses for sale in DC in that range, but there are houses in nice parts of NE (not talking about H Street) for under $300k, and friends have bought in Shaw for under $450k. It's not nothing, and yeah, you're still taking the charter school gamble but houses in the burbs aren't going for much less. If you really want to live in the city, you probably can. If you just want to live in the super hip area, then good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're millennials (on the older end, 29-31) and we can't afford anything in DC other than a 1-bedroom and that's a total non-starter for us so off to the suburbs it is.
Agreed. We can afford more than that, but not much. We have a $200K ish HHI. The real estate in DC is the only thing I really hate about it- I have a solid group of friends that don't fall into the DCUM- like foibles of hyper competition, etc- just normal, happy people. But the real estate is priced as if this were a much bigger, more exciting city than it is. DC isn't all that urban, yet prices start approaching cost-of-living in places around the world that are!
DC is the capital of the US.
Lots of activities, international and national happen here.
Everybody knows it but tends to forgot. It is not your average American city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once you get married and have kids, the 800K gentrifying row house with the crackhead or stabbing out front doesn't seem that great.
I'm married with two kids and a row house in a "gentrifying" neighborhood, and it is a great life. I sometimes wish for another bathroom, but I think the trade-off is worth it.
mmmm...I keep hearing about amenities, but what I really want to know is: what about the schools?