Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We lived in downtown SS for many years and hated it, for similar reasons: large blocks, ugly buildings, wind corridors in winter in between high rises, heat radiation in summer through the pavement and buildings, lack of green spaces. We saved enough to move close to downtown Bethesda, and much prefer it. It took SERIOUS belt-tightening saving, and we bought the cheapest house we could find. But it was so worth it![]()
Aren’t you worried Bethesda will become more like SS with the high buildings and dense construction?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Sorry, didn’t mean to offend anyone. I like the diversity in SS and some of the neighbourhoods are nice. People seem friendly.
It’s just that I have been to downtown SS many times now and it is a bit depressing. I’m fine with urban grit but there is something about the SS downtown that I find jarring. It is not designed well and many of the buildings are ugly and rundown. I love ethnic food. It’s just that the area feels utterly charmless. The WF is nice but the parking lot there gets crazy on the weekends. I was surprised at the traffic and congestion in downtown on Friday evenings. I just feel it would add to my stress level if I had to go there a lot. The farmers market is very nice. Maybe it is fine to live there but avoid downtown and instead frequent Takoma Park, Bethesda and Rockville instead. Even the metro station looks imposing and uninviting. Good to hear there are nice parks around. We are also looking at Kensington. I’m not a huge Bethesda fan but I would say the Bethesda downtown beats SS by a mile. I guess that visual aesthetics are important to me. I could never live in an ugly house even if the inside was very nice.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Sorry, didn’t mean to offend anyone. I like the diversity in SS and some of the neighbourhoods are nice. People seem friendly.
It’s just that I have been to downtown SS many times now and it is a bit depressing. I’m fine with urban grit but there is something about the SS downtown that I find jarring. It is not designed well and many of the buildings are ugly and rundown. I love ethnic food. It’s just that the area feels utterly charmless. The WF is nice but the parking lot there gets crazy on the weekends. I was surprised at the traffic and congestion in downtown on Friday evenings. I just feel it would add to my stress level if I had to go there a lot. The farmers market is very nice. Maybe it is fine to live there but avoid downtown and instead frequent Takoma Park, Bethesda and Rockville instead. Even the metro station looks imposing and uninviting. Good to hear there are nice parks around. We are also looking at Kensington. I’m not a huge Bethesda fan but I would say the Bethesda downtown beats SS by a mile. I guess that visual aesthetics are important to me. I could never live in an ugly house even if the inside was very nice.
Anonymous wrote:I technically live in "silver spring" but remember that it is an enormous area. There is not incorporated silver spring, but there is a downtown area and then a huge suburban area called "silver spring."
I'm pretty happy living in our affordable area off Layhill with half an acre lots, a ten minute or less drive to Glenmont metro. We rarely go to "downtown silver spring" and instead go to Rockville or Kensington or Bethesda if we go out to eat etc... I mean we go if we want to go to AFI...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We lived in downtown SS for many years and hated it, for similar reasons: large blocks, ugly buildings, wind corridors in winter in between high rises, heat radiation in summer through the pavement and buildings, lack of green spaces. We saved enough to move close to downtown Bethesda, and much prefer it. It took SERIOUS belt-tightening saving, and we bought the cheapest house we could find. But it was so worth it![]()
Aren’t you worried Bethesda will become more like SS with the high buildings and dense construction?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We lived in downtown SS for many years and hated it, for similar reasons: large blocks, ugly buildings, wind corridors in winter in between high rises, heat radiation in summer through the pavement and buildings, lack of green spaces. We saved enough to move close to downtown Bethesda, and much prefer it. It took SERIOUS belt-tightening saving, and we bought the cheapest house we could find. But it was so worth it![]()
Now this is the funniest thing ever: "We hated downtown Silver Spring ...so we moved to BETHESDA!"![]()
Anonymous wrote:
We lived in downtown SS for many years and hated it, for similar reasons: large blocks, ugly buildings, wind corridors in winter in between high rises, heat radiation in summer through the pavement and buildings, lack of green spaces. We saved enough to move close to downtown Bethesda, and much prefer it. It took SERIOUS belt-tightening saving, and we bought the cheapest house we could find. But it was so worth it![]()
Anonymous wrote:What’s your budget? Can you afford Kensington. We bought an older original home there and like it very much. I can walk to the wine bar and farmers market which is really all one needs right.
Anonymous wrote:Bethesda is the only good place in MoCo. Takoma Park is fine too. The rest is suffering from a total lack of jobs and just being in MoCo, one of the most poorly run counties in the US.