Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You will be on a preferred power grid in case of weather related power outtages.
Holy Cross poster here and this is not true either. Hospitals have their own system. We had no power for eight days after the derecho.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I could AirBnB to patient families and doctors, yes. To live in, no.
Can you clarify why? DH isn't really concerned but I'm worried for resale value.
Your concerns about the noise from ambulances and fire trucks also concern me. Also increased pedestrian, outpatient, and visitor traffic. I mean - that's also the reason I wouldn't live on top of a school either. To each their own.
There’s no increased pedestrian traffic in the neighborhood and people can’t turn into or out of the neighborhood going to/from the hospital.
It’s permit parking only too so no visitor or employee parking happens.
That being said shouldn’t a doctor working there buy in that neighborhood? Eliminating the commute and being able to go home for lunch seems great and should keep the property values up.
Ha ha ha! This is the pp who wrote the long post about living next to Holy Cross. You clearly have no idea of Mo Co's inability to enforce permit parking. Mo Co will install, in some neighborhoods, signs saying permit parking is in effect 24/7 when there are only ticket writers available M-F, 9-5. Ticket writers do not have radios in their cars and cannot be dispatched when violations occur if someone wants to call in to report violators. Ticket writers have a large swath of area they have to cover, all across the county on their shifts. You are lucky if your neighborhood gets one pass. Some of you people are naive.
And for all of your people saying doctors want to live near the hospital--not true. My neighborhood had a doctor who worked at another hospital far away. No doctor wants it know that they can just called over because they happen to live close, not to mention that most doctors also have a private practice and stop in at the hospital as necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Suburban H neighbor again. People writing about their experiences living near other hospitals are not applicable here.
Visit neighbors on the street you are potentially interested in living on.
We've bought here twice (and to the "cheap mcmansion" pp, please post a photo of your $1.5-1.8 million dollar house for us to critique)
Anonymous wrote:You will be on a preferred power grid in case of weather related power outtages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I could AirBnB to patient families and doctors, yes. To live in, no.
Can you clarify why? DH isn't really concerned but I'm worried for resale value.
Your concerns about the noise from ambulances and fire trucks also concern me. Also increased pedestrian, outpatient, and visitor traffic. I mean - that's also the reason I wouldn't live on top of a school either. To each their own.
There’s no increased pedestrian traffic in the neighborhood and people can’t turn into or out of the neighborhood going to/from the hospital.
It’s permit parking only too so no visitor or employee parking happens.
That being said shouldn’t a doctor working there buy in that neighborhood? Eliminating the commute and being able to go home for lunch seems great and should keep the property values up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I could AirBnB to patient families and doctors, yes. To live in, no.
Can you clarify why? DH isn't really concerned but I'm worried for resale value.
Your concerns about the noise from ambulances and fire trucks also concern me. Also increased pedestrian, outpatient, and visitor traffic. I mean - that's also the reason I wouldn't live on top of a school either. To each their own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most trafic for the Sububan Hosp are on OldG rd. The streets behind the hospital are very quiet. Helicopters landing is rare, a few times a month.
This article says 400-500 landings at suburban per year. You must not be noticing is all.
https://nihrecord.nih.gov/newsletters/2008/07_11_2008/story1.htm