Anonymous wrote:I’m 100% FOR this kind of addition. They did nothin wrong and is allowed by the zoning in place. We need to eliminate zoning and let people do what they want with their land. Don’t like it? Buy your own land and don’t develop it
Anonymous wrote:I’m 100% FOR this kind of addition. They did nothin wrong and is allowed by the zoning in place. We need to eliminate zoning and let people do what they want with their land. Don’t like it? Buy your own land and don’t develop it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a cautionary tale for why living in a neighborhood with a HOA is better than one without, even if (and because) you cannot indulge in your every idiosyncratic whim with respect to your property.
On some level, I do agree with this. I live in this neighborhood and would have no problem with an HOA. We came down to this house and another in Franklin Farm. The HOA aspect never really crossed my mind while picking. My biggest complaint up to this point is that buying into the members-only pool in this hood is now a $3k upfront payment. I have better things to do with that much money.
The fact that this was allowed by the county is absolutely shocking. I honestly don’t understand how code allows something this ridiculous.
Here is the permit application. https://plus.fairfaxcounty.gov/CitizenAccess/...m_source=chatgpt.com
The question of “is/will there be an Accessory Living Unit or Accessory Dwelling Unit?” Was answered “no”
Anonymous wrote:
I have Vietnamese in-laws. The family and extended relatives are essentially thought of as one large family unit. You do things for family because they're family. For example, my husband sends money to Vietnam for relatives that's he's never met, because that's what his family does (there's a bit of guilt over who got out a generation ago during the War and who didn't and therefore relatives still in Vietnam get a little help from relatives living abroad). If a relative calls us that they're coming to visit DC and needs a place to sleep for a couple of nights, my husband offers the basement bedroom. Our house is too small to accommodate longer stays, but other relatives have welcomed extended family for months at a time.
I am 100% against this monstrous addition. Anyone with any ethics and morals should have known that sometimes the law allows you something that common sense does not (and as it turns out, the setback calculation was off by 6 inches). These people are extremely disrespectful to their neighbors, and they should do not receive the variance allowing them to continue construction. I hope they will be forced to tear it down.
But I just wanted to explain the family culture of many people of Vietnamese extraction, who considers themselves the owner, the desire to live multigenerationally, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a cautionary tale for why living in a neighborhood with a HOA is better than one without, even if (and because) you cannot indulge in your every idiosyncratic whim with respect to your property.
On some level, I do agree with this. I live in this neighborhood and would have no problem with an HOA. We came down to this house and another in Franklin Farm. The HOA aspect never really crossed my mind while picking. My biggest complaint up to this point is that buying into the members-only pool in this hood is now a $3k upfront payment. I have better things to do with that much money.
The fact that this was allowed by the county is absolutely shocking. I honestly don’t understand how code allows something this ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:This is a cautionary tale for why living in a neighborhood with a HOA is better than one without, even if (and because) you cannot indulge in your every idiosyncratic whim with respect to your property.
Anonymous wrote:The story has made the Washington Post and in the comment section someone claims that the addition was planned for kitchens on each floor and the intention is after the extra space is no longer needed (I guess the grandparents perish? Or the kids go off to college or both) that he will be renting the levels out as apartments.