Anonymous wrote:I don't know, I think MD is just prettier, calmer compared to NoVa. Due to our jobs we moved to McLean, would have loved staying in Potomac. There is appreciation and then there is quality of life, both matter and second one matters a lot.
Signed -
A former Moco resident who can't seem to get over Moco.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, on my street in Chevy Chase, the exodus is occurring. All families have left for greener pastures and the foreclosure rate is spiking. Thieves are running rampant in order to steal copper from the abandoned homes.
I don't go out at night for fear of being mugged or being mistaken for a rival gang member. Corner boys selling H have replaced crossing guards and soccer moms.
The decay is only accelerating. They've renamed the once tony enclaves.
Chevy Chase Sections 8, 8, and 8
Rolling'Hood
Murder's Additions
Chevy Chase'in the Dragon
To be fair there has always (since the 80s at least) been a Chevy Chase Section 8, the “something isn’t quite like the rest” parts on the eastern stretches near silver spring. Kids at BCC have been making fun of that area for decades
Parts of Silver Spring that fed into BCC like Summit Hills was really bad when I grew up. We were not allowed to visit friends there.
Anonymous wrote:
I do not doubt 2004 was a different time, it was the middle of the housing bubble. People were waiving every contingency, even inspections, it was a crazy time.
These areas - Rockville, Potomac, Bethesda - will be just fine. In and of themselves they are not big economic engines, but they are close enough to others - DC, parts of NOVA, that they will have a floor under them.
If you are looking for more significant appreciation in percentage terms, then you need to go around the beltway towards Takoma Park. You can get more value there.
Not true at all. We were looking at houses in 2005 and looked at a few in TP. Prices were way higher and inventory was in bad shape back in 2004-2007 in TP. We looked at two houses in the 900K range that needed massive work. Not just cosmetic but serious structural problems, major water damage and wood rot. TP and SS prices dropped much more after the crash. If you picked up a fixer upper after the crash or even a few years after the crash and sunk 100K into it then you may think you made some $$ in appreciation. TP and SS just started recovering now with DC exploding. Its risky to assume that they will hold their value.
I don't think Potomac is going to turn into a slum anytime soon but people are trying to sell before they lose more money. It will simply attract people who can no longer afford VA.
Not surprising that prices were higher and people were trying to sell less for more during the real estate bubble, is it?
Anonymous wrote:I do not doubt 2004 was a different time, it was the middle of the housing bubble. People were waiving every contingency, even inspections, it was a crazy time.
These areas - Rockville, Potomac, Bethesda - will be just fine. In and of themselves they are not big economic engines, but they are close enough to others - DC, parts of NOVA, that they will have a floor under them.
If you are looking for more significant appreciation in percentage terms, then you need to go around the beltway towards Takoma Park. You can get more value there.
Not true at all. We were looking at houses in 2005 and looked at a few in TP. Prices were way higher and inventory was in bad shape back in 2004-2007 in TP. We looked at two houses in the 900K range that needed massive work. Not just cosmetic but serious structural problems, major water damage and wood rot. TP and SS prices dropped much more after the crash. If you picked up a fixer upper after the crash or even a few years after the crash and sunk 100K into it then you may think you made some $$ in appreciation. TP and SS just started recovering now with DC exploding. Its risky to assume that they will hold their value.
I don't think Potomac is going to turn into a slum anytime soon but people are trying to sell before they lose more money. It will simply attract people who can no longer afford VA.
I do not doubt 2004 was a different time, it was the middle of the housing bubble. People were waiving every contingency, even inspections, it was a crazy time.
These areas - Rockville, Potomac, Bethesda - will be just fine. In and of themselves they are not big economic engines, but they are close enough to others - DC, parts of NOVA, that they will have a floor under them.
If you are looking for more significant appreciation in percentage terms, then you need to go around the beltway towards Takoma Park. You can get more value there.
Anonymous wrote:Yes it does look like an exodus. We were buying/house hunting throughout MoCo in 2004. Prices everywhere, except maybe very close in Bethesda are much lower than they were back then. There is much more inventory sitting around too.
It seems like every empty nester in Silver Spring, Potomac, Rockville, North Bethesda and North Potomac decided to put their house on the market this spring. Houses that are below 700K-750K in high ranking school clusters seem to be selling. Houses below 600K in mediocre clusters seem to be selling. The more expensive houses for each neighborhood market are all sitting and price dropping. I could point to 1-2 houses that sold quickly in the spring for each area but there are 5 others that have been sitting. The houses that did sell did so under long contingencies for the buyer to sell their house too which is generally a sign of a very slow market. It is dicey to accept an offer that is contingent on the buyer selling their house.
My guess is that Potomac, Rockville and North Bethesda are being hit by people who can afford 1M choosing VA over MoCo. Silver Spring is still held back by low scoring schools and higher crime. All the inventory is coming from the age demographics and people retiring, concern over MoCo financial position, declining reputation of MCPS and general fear of a future recession. It seems to be sort of a get out while you can seller mentality. I have heard that Asians are leaving but they have been slowly leaving or choosing VA and Howard for the schools over the past several years. Maybe this is increasing now because of all the other negative factors for MoCo and MCPS actions discriminating against asians.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, on my street in Chevy Chase, the exodus is occurring. All families have left for greener pastures and the foreclosure rate is spiking. Thieves are running rampant in order to steal copper from the abandoned homes.
I don't go out at night for fear of being mugged or being mistaken for a rival gang member. Corner boys selling H have replaced crossing guards and soccer moms.
The decay is only accelerating. They've renamed the once tony enclaves.
Chevy Chase Sections 8, 8, and 8
Rolling'Hood
Murder's Additions
Chevy Chase'in the Dragon