Anonymous wrote:We were where you were 10+ years ago.
We moved slightly further out of DuPont to kalorama. We had no meaningful budget constraints.
It was a very compromise neighborhood. It’s objectively great but it’s not the excitement of DuPont circle and it doesn’t have a great kid vibe. But therein lies the rub.
Good kid neighborhoods are either new build suburban or in less expensive area of the city (palisades, barnaby woods). They both have their advantages, but you would likely hate both.
We have twice considered moving. We wanted very walkable and a kid friendly neighborhood. The first time around we set a budget at $5M, the second time $10M. It literally doesn’t exist at any dollar amount.
Don’t comes down to personal preference. What is more important to you personally?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, I'm a Virginia person, I never looked back after leaving DC and never even go there anymore except for ballgames. I actually go to Japan more in a year than DC and I live 10 minutes away.
That said, if you are doing the school thing, stay in DC or close-in Maryland.
On a website of bizarre flexs this is one of the more bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:I would personally move to Cleveland Park/ Woodley/ Tenleytown near the Metro, but wait until you feel more of a pull from friends leaving the area. We live in one of these neighborhoods and I don't drive. There are a lot of buses and the Metro is easy. The restaurants aren't awesome, but there are some along with a library, outdoor and indoor public pools, many grocery stores, several farmers' markets etc.
We used to live in a small townhouse in Dupont and I miss the restaurants and density, but now I actually am friends with my neighbors and there's more of a community vibe. We also really wanted more outdoor space. With young kids, we and friends entertain more at home than we used to anyway.
Anonymous wrote:We were where you were 10+ years ago.
We moved slightly further out of DuPont to kalorama. We had no meaningful budget constraints.
It was a very compromise neighborhood. It’s objectively great but it’s not the excitement of DuPont circle and it doesn’t have a great kid vibe. But therein lies the rub.
Good kid neighborhoods are either new build suburban or in less expensive area of the city (palisades, barnaby woods). They both have their advantages, but you would likely hate both.
We have twice considered moving. We wanted very walkable and a kid friendly neighborhood. The first time around we set a budget at $5M, the second time $10M. It literally doesn’t exist at any dollar amount.
Don’t comes down to personal preference. What is more important to you personally?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, don't move to NoVa if you plan to send your kids to a private in NW DC.
Stay where you are. See where they get into schools. Move if you don't like living in Dupont and driving to the private.
Tho if money were no object, I would move to Cleveland Park or Woodley.
I think the Arlington reference was due to one parent working in NoVA. Because of that, I would suggest staying where you are (as another PP did) until you sort out PK for your oldest (1-2 years, you can move the spring/summer after they get in). The gov lawyer will also have a better sense of what is happening with their job and/or may have changed jobs at that point. You’ll also have a better sense of how many kids you’ll have and your space needs. Two working parents and three kids is the upper limit of what most people can handle. With four young kids and two working parents you may end up needing a live in nanny, especially if you’re living in NW and one parent is going to NoVA every day and the other parent is working in BigLaw. If you want the flexibility to have a live in nanny you’ll probably be looking for a house with somewhat separate quarters for them (third floor bedroom or basement bedroom or apartment over the garage set up) and you will want to know something like that going into your search.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, I'm a Virginia person, I never looked back after leaving DC and never even go there anymore except for ballgames. I actually go to Japan more in a year than DC and I live 10 minutes away.
That said, if you are doing the school thing, stay in DC or close-in Maryland.
On a website of bizarre flexs this is one of the more bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:We’ve lived in upper NW for 20+ years and like it a lot, but I can’t imagine leaving your current situation until you absolutely have to. You have the best of all worlds right now. The only thing you don’t have is a yard, and honestly that’s overrated; our kids much preferred going to a playground to playing in the yard.
Stay in Dupont as long as you can, then move to Cleveland Park or the part of Forest Hills close to Connecticut. Walkable, close to metro, lots of kids, etc. But don’t do it until you really can’t make your current situation work any more. You’re living the dream!
Anonymous wrote:I would say stay and join a country club so that you have space to roam and socialize when needed.
You are smack in the middle of all your destinations, so stay put and keep enjoying life!