Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:….East of Conn is much cheaper but it feeds into the Einstein HS cluster, plus it’s also not easily walkable to the KP pool and the little restaurants (plays bowl, gelato, chipotle) on the W side of Ct Ave.
That’s not accurate. Most of the Town of Kensington is east of Conn Ave and it all feeds into WJ. Also, it’s the far more walkable side, with easy walking to brewery, Tacos Don Perez, farmers market, gym, MARC train station, etc.
That’s totally right about the walkability to things like the frankly pizza etc. but I really thought east of Conn all went to Einstein. My kids are at WJ and NB and all their Kensington friends are in the KP area west of Connecticut. What MS do those families east of Connecticut go to? Where is the WJ/Einstein dividing line if it’s not Ct Ave?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which park of Kensington? The poor side or the UMC side? Bethesda is Bethesda and will always be expensive. I don't think that Takoma Park is expensive.
Schools and proximity to amenities and work centers are what generally makes places expensive.
I never knew there were “poor” and “UMC” sides of Kensington. I live just behind where the old White Flint Mall used to be—can someone advise if I’m poor or upper middle class?
I think most people consider that Rockville.
I live in the same neighborhood (hi neighbor!) and our mailing address is Kensington. There is a 20895 Post Office on Nicholson. I agree that no one really thinks of that area as Kensington though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:….East of Conn is much cheaper but it feeds into the Einstein HS cluster, plus it’s also not easily walkable to the KP pool and the little restaurants (plays bowl, gelato, chipotle) on the W side of Ct Ave.
That’s not accurate. Most of the Town of Kensington is east of Conn Ave and it all feeds into WJ. Also, it’s the far more walkable side, with easy walking to brewery, Tacos Don Perez, farmers market, gym, MARC train station, etc.
That’s totally right about the walkability to things like the frankly pizza etc. but I really thought east of Conn all went to Einstein. My kids are at WJ and NB and all their Kensington friends are in the KP area west of Connecticut. What MS do those families east of Connecticut go to? Where is the WJ/Einstein dividing line if it’s not Ct Ave?
Anonymous wrote:The inventory in TKPK is insanely limited. Old housing stock, strange layouts, heavily regulated development (thanks NIMBYs!).
IMHO you will generally get more house for your buck in Kensington but you are farther out and don’t have the cute centralized TKPK downtown with hip new restaurants popping up everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's further away from DC. And east of Rock Creek which is significant at rush hour.
Kensington is currently zoned for Walter Johnson which is considered by some (not by me, I DGAF) a "lesser" W school.
There are some cool restaurants here and there but the commercial area is divided by a busy 6 lane road.
Doesn’t most of Kensington go to Einstein?
It's split between WJ and Einstein.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:….East of Conn is much cheaper but it feeds into the Einstein HS cluster, plus it’s also not easily walkable to the KP pool and the little restaurants (plays bowl, gelato, chipotle) on the W side of Ct Ave.
That’s not accurate. Most of the Town of Kensington is east of Conn Ave and it all feeds into WJ. Also, it’s the far more walkable side, with easy walking to brewery, Tacos Don Perez, farmers market, gym, MARC train station, etc.
That’s totally right about the walkability to things like the frankly pizza etc. but I really thought east of Conn all went to Einstein. My kids are at WJ and NB and all their Kensington friends are in the KP area west of Connecticut. What MS do those families east of Connecticut go to? Where is the WJ/Einstein dividing line if it’s not Ct Ave?
They also go to North Bethesda middle school with the rest of Kensington Parkwood - there isn't any split articulation. the dividing line is the edge of the Town of Kensington boundaries which are to the east of Conn Ave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:….East of Conn is much cheaper but it feeds into the Einstein HS cluster, plus it’s also not easily walkable to the KP pool and the little restaurants (plays bowl, gelato, chipotle) on the W side of Ct Ave.
That’s not accurate. Most of the Town of Kensington is east of Conn Ave and it all feeds into WJ. Also, it’s the far more walkable side, with easy walking to brewery, Tacos Don Perez, farmers market, gym, MARC train station, etc.
That’s totally right about the walkability to things like the frankly pizza etc. but I really thought east of Conn all went to Einstein. My kids are at WJ and NB and all their Kensington friends are in the KP area west of Connecticut. What MS do those families east of Connecticut go to? Where is the WJ/Einstein dividing line if it’s not Ct Ave?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which park of Kensington? The poor side or the UMC side? Bethesda is Bethesda and will always be expensive. I don't think that Takoma Park is expensive.
Schools and proximity to amenities and work centers are what generally makes places expensive.
I never knew there were “poor” and “UMC” sides of Kensington. I live just behind where the old White Flint Mall used to be—can someone advise if I’m poor or upper middle class?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which park of Kensington? The poor side or the UMC side? Bethesda is Bethesda and will always be expensive. I don't think that Takoma Park is expensive.
Schools and proximity to amenities and work centers are what generally makes places expensive.
I never knew there were “poor” and “UMC” sides of Kensington. I live just behind where the old White Flint Mall used to be—can someone advise if I’m poor or upper middle class?
I think most people consider that Rockville.
Anonymous wrote:Kensington west of Connecticut is not significantly cheaper than much of bethesda (KP, ashburton and WYngate all feed into NBMS middle school and are pretty equivalently priced). East of Conn is much cheaper but it feeds into the Einstein HS cluster, plus it’s also not easily walkable to the KP pool and the little restaurants (plays bowl, gelato, chipotle) on the W side of Ct Ave.
Anonymous wrote:OP here... I just did a bunch of searching on Zillow, and I definitely see multiple houses west of Conn Ave in the $700ks while similar houses west of the park in Bethesda are $900ks... but similar looking ones in Takoma Park are more like low $800ks, so I guess the price difference isnt' as dramatic. But earlier this summer, I definitely saw some 2000sq ft houses on postage stamp lots in Takoma going for $900k, and it does seem like anything that's close to the downtown is in that range.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which park of Kensington? The poor side or the UMC side? Bethesda is Bethesda and will always be expensive. I don't think that Takoma Park is expensive.
Schools and proximity to amenities and work centers are what generally makes places expensive.
I never knew there were “poor” and “UMC” sides of Kensington. I live just behind where the old White Flint Mall used to be—can someone advise if I’m poor or upper middle class?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:….East of Conn is much cheaper but it feeds into the Einstein HS cluster, plus it’s also not easily walkable to the KP pool and the little restaurants (plays bowl, gelato, chipotle) on the W side of Ct Ave.
That’s not accurate. Most of the Town of Kensington is east of Conn Ave and it all feeds into WJ. Also, it’s the far more walkable side, with easy walking to brewery, Tacos Don Perez, farmers market, gym, MARC train station, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which park of Kensington? The poor side or the UMC side? Bethesda is Bethesda and will always be expensive. I don't think that Takoma Park is expensive.
Schools and proximity to amenities and work centers are what generally makes places expensive.
I never knew there were “poor” and “UMC” sides of Kensington. I live just behind where the old White Flint Mall used to be—can someone advise if I’m poor or upper middle class?
But on the "poor" side of Kensington you need at least $700k for a decent sfh in good condition which tells you "poor" actually means UMC.
Prices are way up. They aren’t decent for that price.
+1, below are some examples of what has sold in Homewood, a neighborhood “on the other side of the tracks” zoned for non-Bethesda schools. A small updated home is well over 700k and a larger updated home is over 1M.
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/3019-Fayette-Rd-Kensington-MD-20895/37297419_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/3013-Homewood-Pkwy-Kensington-MD-20895/37297396_zpid/
Fair. I do think Kensington Heights and North Kensington are cheaper. Homewood is nice because it is walkable to the shops and restaurants and train station in Kensington so I think that drives up the prices a little.
Also your definition of "decent" matters. These houses are large for the area. You can get something well maintained for closer to $600k or less in North Kensington but it will be less than 2000 sq ft.
What is unfortunate is that you are paying so much and the middle and high schools are so poorly rated by staff and students.
https://sharedaccountability.mcpsmd.org/SurveyResults/content.php