Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to live near Wheaton and you could not pay me to move back to Maryland. I’m in Arlington now. Of course a place that’s cheaper is going to have more crime. MD has a lot more Ms 13 than Arlington does. Taxes are a lot higher too if that matters to you.
When you say taxes are higher, do you mean state income taxes or property taxes or both? I want to calculate how much that will impact me each year.
Anonymous wrote:How about a tiny SFH in South Arlington for $560k?
https://redf.in/Or4PGd
There's also a 1989 townhouse in South Arlington coming soon for $572K.
https://redf.in/CMwIuc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And it’s also just true that places like Bethesda and Silver Spring are way older than a place like Arlington. You see 20 and 30 somethings in Arlington while MoCo is increasingly becoming a retirement community. And with that comes a resistance to development, change, and economic progress.
I always wonder why the Arlington folks make these sorts of generalizations which are backed by nothing -- no data, no evidence, nothing. What's the "development, change, and economic progress" they think Arlington has that Bethesda and Silver Spring don't? They never say. OP, please be skeptical of stuff like this, and as a PP said, visit the areas in MoCo you're interested in and judge for yourself. Northern Virginia lost jobs compared to last year, and threw out the "change" and "development" that were Missing Middle. And MoCo's school system is growing rapidly (some would say too rapidly), including in the affluent Whitman pyramid, which makes no sense if it's a "retirement community."
This is OP. Where I live in Ballston, the whole mall has been renovated from being a run-down, crappy mall area to being a nice, walkable area they call Ballston Quarter with lots of restaurants and stores. I assume that's what the PP means about development. They've done the same thing in Crystal City. But here's the thing -- I'm not at a stage of life where I use much of that. I care much more about a yard, schools, a pool, availability and cost of summer camps, sidewalks, libraries, having neighbors with young kids, etc. I get it that the new restaurants affect my property value, but I'm buying a place to live in it and raise my family, not primarily for resale value, so I'm not sure that that stuff matters that much to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And it’s also just true that places like Bethesda and Silver Spring are way older than a place like Arlington. You see 20 and 30 somethings in Arlington while MoCo is increasingly becoming a retirement community. And with that comes a resistance to development, change, and economic progress.
I always wonder why the Arlington folks make these sorts of generalizations which are backed by nothing -- no data, no evidence, nothing. What's the "development, change, and economic progress" they think Arlington has that Bethesda and Silver Spring don't? They never say. OP, please be skeptical of stuff like this, and as a PP said, visit the areas in MoCo you're interested in and judge for yourself. Northern Virginia lost jobs compared to last year, and threw out the "change" and "development" that were Missing Middle. And MoCo's school system is growing rapidly (some would say too rapidly), including in the affluent Whitman pyramid, which makes no sense if it's a "retirement community."
Anonymous wrote:What about another location in Virginia? There are plenty of nice places on the metro line and you’d have the option of Virginia colleges and universities as a resident when the time comes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. We wouldn’t be living in downtown Silver Spring. I don’t know which neighborhood we’d be living in, because it depends on where a house pops up, but not downtown. What the first poster says is helpful. From the outside it’s hard to tell if what some folks are saying is overblown. I will say that we live in the Ballston neighborhood in Arlington now, which actually has shootings from time to time.
Would you move to South Arlington? If no, then you also probably would not enjoy Silver Spring.
Anonymous wrote:What about another location in Virginia? There are plenty of nice places on the metro line and you’d have the option of Virginia colleges and universities as a resident when the time comes.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. We wouldn’t be living in downtown Silver Spring. I don’t know which neighborhood we’d be living in, because it depends on where a house pops up, but not downtown. What the first poster says is helpful. From the outside it’s hard to tell if what some folks are saying is overblown. I will say that we live in the Ballston neighborhood in Arlington now, which actually has shootings from time to time.
Anonymous wrote:And it’s also just true that places like Bethesda and Silver Spring are way older than a place like Arlington. You see 20 and 30 somethings in Arlington while MoCo is increasingly becoming a retirement community. And with that comes a resistance to development, change, and economic progress.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. The houses in Kensington look nice! One of my co-workers said that if we move there, a lot of our neighbors would go to Catholic school rather than the neighborhood schools, which he finds to be a negative (as far as making friends). Is that generally true?