Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m in the Chantilly HS district, right on the line between Fairfax and Chantilly. Fair Lakes is right around the corner and has everything you need. Our neighborhood is lovely, has a private pool (but it’s hard to join), parks, walk to all 3 school levels, etc. Really just a nice laid-back place and so much more affordable than closer-in. I don’t feel like we settled at all, and we used to live in Arlington for years.
I can’t speak for further out in Chantilly/Centreville.
Hmm, this sounds like that ugly neighborhood behind Bob's Discount Furniture right off route 50. Glad you have a positive attitude about it. But I would not consider that area "lovely" or "walkable".
Wow, okay. That’s on you then. I live in a perfectly nice neighborhood where the people are very friendly and yes, it is walkable whether or not you enjoy what it’s walkable to. You forgot to mention the Starbucks, Giant, many restaurants, Total Wine, etc. in that same shopping center. But you sound snobby so I’m not surprised you pick the one store you find crappy to deride my neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Burke: where your minivan is one of thousands in a sea of cars at the shoppers food warehouse parking lot. Everything: library, orthodontist, dry cleaner, is just a 5-15 min drive away. Blink and you’ll miss the strip malls because they are all in these sort of pits so they are not visible from the parkways.#suburbanplanning
Curiously the only thing you can walk to is the pool (center of social universe) or or a slug line (“slug lines: we made driving with strangers cool before Uber”). Enjoy a night out with the DH at your choice of strip mall Italian/Thai restaurants. Bask in the warm security of a community where everyone is basically the same.
Burke: 12 miles/15 minutes* from DC and yet, a world away.
*disclaimer: an hour and fifteen minutes in during rush hour, 6 am-9 pm.
+1 about it!![]()
Would add:
- The starbucks, grocery store & seasonal farmers market are walkable from some of the Burke Centre neighborhoods (ours is one) which can be nice but traffic/parking are so little hassle that it's just not a chore to drive either. The Burke Centre area has tons of walking trails winding throughout the various neighborhoods.
- It's very family-focused so if you're in that kid-stage of life it's good; I wouldn't want to live her as a young person though (20s)
- It's very heavy military presence; that has plus's (like tons of great people we've met and many military families tend to be friendlier we've found since they have a limited time to jump into a community; rented houses tend to be to military families so pretty good neighbors) and minus's (more flux in kids' friends as families get restationed). I've never lived somewhere with so many people either actively in the military or retired from it / working as a contractor for it. It's not bad - but it's definitely part of the "vibe" to know of.
- Being a transplant from a non-urban area, it just feels very comfortable and "normal" feeling. People tend not to be pretentious or outwardly uber competitive - just feels sort of "sane".![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Burke: where your minivan is one of thousands in a sea of cars at the shoppers food warehouse parking lot. Everything: library, orthodontist, dry cleaner, is just a 5-15 min drive away. Blink and you’ll miss the strip malls because they are all in these sort of pits so they are not visible from the parkways.#suburbanplanning
Curiously the only thing you can walk to is the pool (center of social universe) or or a slug line (“slug lines: we made driving with strangers cool before Uber”). Enjoy a night out with the DH at your choice of strip mall Italian/Thai restaurants. Bask in the warm security of a community where everyone is basically the same.
Burke: 12 miles/15 minutes* from DC and yet, a world away.
*disclaimer: an hour and fifteen minutes in during rush hour, 6 am-9 pm.
OMG - this describes Burke perfectly
Except the Shoppers Food Warehouse is now a Lidl. And there are many more bus stops than slug lines (plus the VRE), and Burke Centre is criss-crossed with walking and bike trails, but otherwise pretty accurate, sure.
Is there a slug line in Burke area at all? I live in Fairfax and I've never seen one but I guess I don't bother looking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Burke: where your minivan is one of thousands in a sea of cars at the shoppers food warehouse parking lot. Everything: library, orthodontist, dry cleaner, is just a 5-15 min drive away. Blink and you’ll miss the strip malls because they are all in these sort of pits so they are not visible from the parkways.#suburbanplanning
Curiously the only thing you can walk to is the pool (center of social universe) or or a slug line (“slug lines: we made driving with strangers cool before Uber”). Enjoy a night out with the DH at your choice of strip mall Italian/Thai restaurants. Bask in the warm security of a community where everyone is basically the same.
Burke: 12 miles/15 minutes* from DC and yet, a world away.
*disclaimer: an hour and fifteen minutes in during rush hour, 6 am-9 pm.
OMG - this describes Burke perfectly
Except the Shoppers Food Warehouse is now a Lidl. And there are many more bus stops than slug lines (plus the VRE), and Burke Centre is criss-crossed with walking and bike trails, but otherwise pretty accurate, sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Burke: where your minivan is one of thousands in a sea of cars at the shoppers food warehouse parking lot. Everything: library, orthodontist, dry cleaner, is just a 5-15 min drive away. Blink and you’ll miss the strip malls because they are all in these sort of pits so they are not visible from the parkways.#suburbanplanning
Curiously the only thing you can walk to is the pool (center of social universe) or or a slug line (“slug lines: we made driving with strangers cool before Uber”). Enjoy a night out with the DH at your choice of strip mall Italian/Thai restaurants. Bask in the warm security of a community where everyone is basically the same.
Burke: 12 miles/15 minutes* from DC and yet, a world away.
*disclaimer: an hour and fifteen minutes in during rush hour, 6 am-9 pm.
OMG - this describes Burke perfectly
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people still prefer the schools, parks, restaurants, charn of Arlington to Centreville, Burke, etc.
Arlington has 0 charm. It has advantages, but charm isn't one of them.
Anonymous wrote:Most people still prefer the schools, parks, restaurants, charn of Arlington to Centreville, Burke, etc.