Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pending million-plus sales contracts in Langley/McLean/Marshall districts: 88
Pending million-plus sales contracts in Yorktown/W-L/Wakefield districts: 48
Point: McLean
# of $1 M homes sold last three months Arl 22207: 53
# of $1 M homes sold last three months Mcl 22101: 76
Point: McLean
# of $1.5 M+ homes sold last three months Arl 22207: 23
# of $1.5 M+ homes sold last three months Mcl 22101: 33
# of $2 M+ homes sold last three months Arl 22207: 6
# of $2 M+ homes sold last three months Mcl 22101: 12
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pending million-plus sales contracts in Langley/McLean/Marshall districts: 88
Pending million-plus sales contracts in Yorktown/W-L/Wakefield districts: 48
Point: McLean
# of $1 M homes sold last three months Arl 22207: 53
# of $1 M homes sold last three months Mcl 22101: 76
Point: McLean
# of $1.5 M+ homes sold last three months Arl 22207: 23
# of $1.5 M+ homes sold last three months Mcl 22101: 33
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pending million-plus sales contracts in Langley/McLean/Marshall districts: 88
Pending million-plus sales contracts in Yorktown/W-L/Wakefield districts: 48
Point: McLean
# of $1 M homes sold last three months Arl 22207: 53
# of $1 M homes sold last three months Mcl 22101: 76
Point: McLean
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything about Arlington has always seemed completely mediocre to me, and I lived there before moving to DC. At least McLean has nice houses and good schools. Arlington seems like the worst of both worlds: it's not a real city, and it has absolutely no edge or urban energy, yet it's not an attractive suburb, either. It's just purgatory for people who want to have it both ways and end up with a pale imitation (no pun intended) that lacks character or prestige. Sorry if that seems harsh, but some people in Arlington have no clue how people who've actually lived in real cities or more upscale suburbs perceive Arlington and its oddly boastful (and clueless) residents.
+1000. This is exactly how Arlington strikes me too.
Do you often respond to your own posts?
Different posters. Do you always make false assumptions, or only where Arlington's charms or lack thereof are at issue?
Anonymous wrote:Pending million-plus sales contracts in Langley/McLean/Marshall districts: 88
Pending million-plus sales contracts in Yorktown/W-L/Wakefield districts: 48
Point: McLean
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything about Arlington has always seemed completely mediocre to me, and I lived there before moving to DC. At least McLean has nice houses and good schools. Arlington seems like the worst of both worlds: it's not a real city, and it has absolutely no edge or urban energy, yet it's not an attractive suburb, either. It's just purgatory for people who want to have it both ways and end up with a pale imitation (no pun intended) that lacks character or prestige. Sorry if that seems harsh, but some people in Arlington have no clue how people who've actually lived in real cities or more upscale suburbs perceive Arlington and its oddly boastful (and clueless) residents.
+1000. This is exactly how Arlington strikes me too.
Do you often respond to your own posts?
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything about Arlington has always seemed completely mediocre to me, and I lived there before moving to DC. At least McLean has nice houses and good schools. Arlington seems like the worst of both worlds: it's not a real city, and it has absolutely no edge or urban energy, yet it's not an attractive suburb, either. It's just purgatory for people who want to have it both ways and end up with a pale imitation (no pun intended) that lacks character or prestige. Sorry if that seems harsh, but some people in Arlington have no clue how people who've actually lived in real cities or more upscale suburbs perceive Arlington and its oddly boastful (and clueless) residents.
Arlington: jealous
McLean: haters
Point: Arlington
Weird because I live in Kent Gradens McLean, and envy my friends who have just bought nice new 1.6 M new-build in Arlington
Of course I have a bigger yard in my McLean house, which while a 50s rambler, sits on a 15000 sq foot lot, about twice the size of theirs....
Plus we have new buds of comparable price but bigger lots than Arlington for 1.6....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's chat. What do you like about each and why?
Wouldn't it make more sense to compare Arlington 22207 to McLean 22101 since they both have the same typical household income and demographic?
Or Fairfax County vs Arlington County.
Or Arlington 22205 to McLean 22102 (although I think that part of Arlington is more affluent than McLean 22102)
Or South Arlington 22204 to Pimmit Hills 22043/22102?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything about Arlington has always seemed completely mediocre to me, and I lived there before moving to DC. At least McLean has nice houses and good schools. Arlington seems like the worst of both worlds: it's not a real city, and it has absolutely no edge or urban energy, yet it's not an attractive suburb, either. It's just purgatory for people who want to have it both ways and end up with a pale imitation (no pun intended) that lacks character or prestige. Sorry if that seems harsh, but some people in Arlington have no clue how people who've actually lived in real cities or more upscale suburbs perceive Arlington and its oddly boastful (and clueless) residents.
Arlington: jealous
McLean: haters
Point: Arlington
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything about Arlington has always seemed completely mediocre to me, and I lived there before moving to DC. At least McLean has nice houses and good schools. Arlington seems like the worst of both worlds: it's not a real city, and it has absolutely no edge or urban energy, yet it's not an attractive suburb, either. It's just purgatory for people who want to have it both ways and end up with a pale imitation (no pun intended) that lacks character or prestige. Sorry if that seems harsh, but some people in Arlington have no clue how people who've actually lived in real cities or more upscale suburbs perceive Arlington and its oddly boastful (and clueless) residents.
+1000. This is exactly how Arlington strikes me too.
Anonymous wrote:Everything about Arlington has always seemed completely mediocre to me, and I lived there before moving to DC. At least McLean has nice houses and good schools. Arlington seems like the worst of both worlds: it's not a real city, and it has absolutely no edge or urban energy, yet it's not an attractive suburb, either. It's just purgatory for people who want to have it both ways and end up with a pale imitation (no pun intended) that lacks character or prestige. Sorry if that seems harsh, but some people in Arlington have no clue how people who've actually lived in real cities or more upscale suburbs perceive Arlington and its oddly boastful (and clueless) residents.
Anonymous wrote:Everything about Arlington has always seemed completely mediocre to me, and I lived there before moving to DC. At least McLean has nice houses and good schools. Arlington seems like the worst of both worlds: it's not a real city, and it has absolutely no edge or urban energy, yet it's not an attractive suburb, either. It's just purgatory for people who want to have it both ways and end up with a pale imitation (no pun intended) that lacks character or prestige. Sorry if that seems harsh, but some people in Arlington have no clue how people who've actually lived in real cities or more upscale suburbs perceive Arlington and its oddly boastful (and clueless) residents.