Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is a pipe dream that people are all of a sudden going to stop moving to the outer burbs because of the walkability factor. One, developers understand the walkabality factor and hence are building new developments, even in far out ones that address this desire. Second- people are moving into this county year after year, NOT out. You don't think they're all moving to Bethesda and SS, do you? FYI-here's the most populated High Schools from largest to smallest:
Blair 3083
Northwest 2508
WJ 2475
RM 2428
Gaithersburg 2388
Clarksburg 2148
Wootton 2134
Churchill 2123
BCC 2102
Whitman 2085
QO 2031
Paintbrach 2000
Sherwood 1967
Wheaton 1958
Einstein 1803
Northwood 1731
Kennedy 1720
Blake 1624
Magruder 1617
Rockville 1476
Seneca Valley 1187
It's no surprise Blair is at the top of that list. People that live across the street from Blair are zoned for Northwood. Blair serves close-in suburbs of Takoma Park and parts of Silver Spring which are adjacent to DC.
BCC also covers a large portion of Maryland’s border with DC (the desirable part too) and a major Urban center and only has 2200 kids?
True the population of Bethesda has gone up about 10%, but the notion of what's desirable today is not the same as it was back in 1990. That's the point. Things are changing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is a pipe dream that people are all of a sudden going to stop moving to the outer burbs because of the walkability factor. One, developers understand the walkabality factor and hence are building new developments, even in far out ones that address this desire. Second- people are moving into this county year after year, NOT out. You don't think they're all moving to Bethesda and SS, do you? FYI-here's the most populated High Schools from largest to smallest:
Blair 3083
Northwest 2508
WJ 2475
RM 2428
Gaithersburg 2388
Clarksburg 2148
Wootton 2134
Churchill 2123
BCC 2102
Whitman 2085
QO 2031
Paintbrach 2000
Sherwood 1967
Wheaton 1958
Einstein 1803
Northwood 1731
Kennedy 1720
Blake 1624
Magruder 1617
Rockville 1476
Seneca Valley 1187
It's no surprise Blair is at the top of that list. People that live across the street from Blair are zoned for Northwood. Blair serves close-in suburbs of Takoma Park and parts of Silver Spring which are adjacent to DC.
BCC also covers a large portion of Maryland’s border with DC (the desirable part too) and a major Urban center and only has 2200 kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is a pipe dream that people are all of a sudden going to stop moving to the outer burbs because of the walkability factor. One, developers understand the walkabality factor and hence are building new developments, even in far out ones that address this desire. Second- people are moving into this county year after year, NOT out. You don't think they're all moving to Bethesda and SS, do you? FYI-here's the most populated High Schools from largest to smallest:
Blair 3083
Northwest 2508
WJ 2475
RM 2428
Gaithersburg 2388
Clarksburg 2148
Wootton 2134
Churchill 2123
BCC 2102
Whitman 2085
QO 2031
Paintbrach 2000
Sherwood 1967
Wheaton 1958
Einstein 1803
Northwood 1731
Kennedy 1720
Blake 1624
Magruder 1617
Rockville 1476
Seneca Valley 1187
It's no surprise Blair is at the top of that list. People that live across the street from Blair are zoned for Northwood. Blair serves close-in suburbs of Takoma Park and parts of Silver Spring which are adjacent to DC.
Anonymous wrote:
It is a pipe dream that people are all of a sudden going to stop moving to the outer burbs because of the walkability factor. One, developers understand the walkabality factor and hence are building new developments, even in far out ones that address this desire. Second- people are moving into this county year after year, NOT out. You don't think they're all moving to Bethesda and SS, do you? FYI-here's the most populated High Schools from largest to smallest:
Blair 3083
Northwest 2508
WJ 2475
RM 2428
Gaithersburg 2388
Clarksburg 2148
Wootton 2134
Churchill 2123
BCC 2102
Whitman 2085
QO 2031
Paintbrach 2000
Sherwood 1967
Wheaton 1958
Einstein 1803
Northwood 1731
Kennedy 1720
Blake 1624
Magruder 1617
Rockville 1476
Seneca Valley 1187
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I wouldn't call the vast number of families who live in the suburbs a small minority.
Montgomery County has urban areas. And it has close-in suburbs. And it has way-out-there suburbs. People increasingly want to live in close-in areas, which is why the close-in areas are expensive.
Exactly
Again, nothing new. Always has been the case. Andta lot of families make sacrifices that make the most sense for them, hence lots of people are still moving further out.
Not always... not too long ago, MCPS closed schools closer in as families moved out to the 'burbs for more room. Now, probably due to commute time and/or people wanting "walkability", people are wanting to move closer in. And this is why now the outer burb schools are not as crowded, too.
There was an article on this with a map showing which schools closed during the 80s/90s.
I remember the 60s and 70s too! However, there have been many more articles about the great inversion. More and more people are abandoning the burbs for more urban living. This is why the population of DC is up over 40% in recent years and the changes in demand are effecting the market now and will impact schools in the coming years.
That's what I stated.
Outer burb are over capacity but probably not nearly as much as closer in.
http://gis.mcpsmd.org/cipmasterpdfs/CIP20_EntireBook.pdf
Closed schools Appendix I4 - note the number of closed schools closer in
Over capacity by cluster Appendix D4 - note that the schools with the *most* over capacity are closer in -- exception is Clarksburg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Potomac and I'm very worried about real-estate not keeping up and its impact on the schools. These days people are abandoning the burbs for closer in areas that are quickly becoming more desirable.
You should be worried. Between Whitman's declining test scores and the neverending racial incidents at places like Churchill, it's evident this has already happened.
NP here. What a perplexing statement. How are declining test scores (which we know was done by Whitman deliberately to say F.U. to the tests) and racial incidents evidence that people are abandoning schools in the burbs? I fail to get the correlation. ARe you saying that the smart and non-racist people have left for the city or places closer in? Signed, by a non-W parent
Don't worry, that was just our friendly DCUM racist troll chiming in with jealousy and delusion. Facts don't matter to Ms. Troll.
I heard the lower scores at Kennedy were deliberate, but the scores at Whitman were a symptom of its continued slide.
Anonymous wrote:
It is a pipe dream that people are all of a sudden going to stop moving to the outer burbs because of the walkability factor. One, developers understand the walkabality factor and hence are building new developments, even in far out ones that address this desire. Second- people are moving into this county year after year, NOT out. You don't think they're all moving to Bethesda and SS, do you? FYI-here's the most populated High Schools from largest to smallest:
Anonymous wrote:
No one said people will stop moving out to the outer burbs. I was addressing the ^^^PP's assertion that "people have always wanted to live close in". That is not true. At one point, there were a lot of people moving to the 'burbs and that's why closer in schools were shutting down. See the appendix on the link I provided. Most of the school closures were closer in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I wouldn't call the vast number of families who live in the suburbs a small minority.
Montgomery County has urban areas. And it has close-in suburbs. And it has way-out-there suburbs. People increasingly want to live in close-in areas, which is why the close-in areas are expensive.
Exactly
Again, nothing new. Always has been the case. Andta lot of families make sacrifices that make the most sense for them, hence lots of people are still moving further out.
Not always... not too long ago, MCPS closed schools closer in as families moved out to the 'burbs for more room. Now, probably due to commute time and/or people wanting "walkability", people are wanting to move closer in. And this is why now the outer burb schools are not as crowded, too.
There was an article on this with a map showing which schools closed during the 80s/90s.
I remember the 60s and 70s too! However, there have been many more articles about the great inversion. More and more people are abandoning the burbs for more urban living. This is why the population of DC is up over 40% in recent years and the changes in demand are effecting the market now and will impact schools in the coming years.
That's what I stated.
Outer burb are over capacity but probably not nearly as much as closer in.
http://gis.mcpsmd.org/cipmasterpdfs/CIP20_EntireBook.pdf
Closed schools Appendix I4 - note the number of closed schools closer in
Over capacity by cluster Appendix D4 - note that the schools with the *most* over capacity are closer in -- exception is Clarksburg.
It is a pipe dream that people are all of a sudden going to stop moving to the outer burbs because of the walkability factor. One, developers understand the walkabality factor and hence are building new developments, even in far out ones that address this desire. Second- people are moving into this county year after year, NOT out. You don't think they're all moving to Bethesda and SS, do you? FYI-here's the most populated High Schools from largest to smallest:
Blair 3083
Northwest 2508
WJ 2475
RM 2428
Gaithersburg 2388
Clarksburg 2148
Wootton 2134
Churchill 2123
BCC 2102
Whitman 2085
QO 2031
Paintbrach 2000
Sherwood 1967
Wheaton 1958
Einstein 1803
Northwood 1731
Kennedy 1720
Blake 1624
Magruder 1617
Rockville 1476
Seneca Valley 1187
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I wouldn't call the vast number of families who live in the suburbs a small minority.
Montgomery County has urban areas. And it has close-in suburbs. And it has way-out-there suburbs. People increasingly want to live in close-in areas, which is why the close-in areas are expensive.
Exactly
Again, nothing new. Always has been the case. Andta lot of families make sacrifices that make the most sense for them, hence lots of people are still moving further out.
Not always... not too long ago, MCPS closed schools closer in as families moved out to the 'burbs for more room. Now, probably due to commute time and/or people wanting "walkability", people are wanting to move closer in. And this is why now the outer burb schools are not as crowded, too.
There was an article on this with a map showing which schools closed during the 80s/90s.
I remember the 60s and 70s too! However, there have been many more articles about the great inversion. More and more people are abandoning the burbs for more urban living. This is why the population of DC is up over 40% in recent years and the changes in demand are effecting the market now and will impact schools in the coming years.
That's what I stated.
Outer burb are over capacity but probably not nearly as much as closer in.
http://gis.mcpsmd.org/cipmasterpdfs/CIP20_EntireBook.pdf
Closed schools Appendix I4 - note the number of closed schools closer in
Over capacity by cluster Appendix D4 - note that the schools with the *most* over capacity are closer in -- exception is Clarksburg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I wouldn't call the vast number of families who live in the suburbs a small minority.
Montgomery County has urban areas. And it has close-in suburbs. And it has way-out-there suburbs. People increasingly want to live in close-in areas, which is why the close-in areas are expensive.
Exactly
Again, nothing new. Always has been the case. Andta lot of families make sacrifices that make the most sense for them, hence lots of people are still moving further out.
Not always... not too long ago, MCPS closed schools closer in as families moved out to the 'burbs for more room. Now, probably due to commute time and/or people wanting "walkability", people are wanting to move closer in. And this is why now the outer burb schools are not as crowded, too.
There was an article on this with a map showing which schools closed during the 80s/90s.
I remember the 60s and 70s too! However, there have been many more articles about the great inversion. More and more people are abandoning the burbs for more urban living. This is why the population of DC is up over 40% in recent years and the changes in demand are effecting the market now and will impact schools in the coming years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not always... not too long ago, MCPS closed schools closer in as families moved out to the 'burbs for more room. Now, probably due to commute time and/or people wanting "walkability", people are wanting to move closer in. And this is why now the outer burb schools are not as crowded, too.
There was an article on this with a map showing which schools closed during the 80s/90s.
Schools closed during the 1980s because enrollment dropped, because of the baby bust.
Where are you living that you think schools in far out burbs in this area will need to close due to underenrollment? Have you heard of Clarksburg? Have you heard that they are planning on building a new HS in Gaithersburg to address overcrowding in RM, QO and Gaithersburg HS? Have you heard that they're expanding Seneca Valley HS to address overcrowding in upcounty schools? Have you heard of the newly built Hallie Wells MS? And the planned building of another new elementary school to accommodate the new families moving to the new Cabin Branch development?