Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hm. Where is this Kensington neighborhood where the average home price is $1 million? I can't picture it.
PP is probably talking about Chevy Chase View or Rock Creek Hills. I still think she's exaggerating, though. But not by much.
I just looked at a nice house in that neighborhood for $650k. And it looked like all the rest of them. I'm sure there are ones that have Vikings etc. and go for me, but the million dollar home has to be rare. There's no neighborhood that I am aware of in Kensington that would average $750k to $1mill. Maybe a few streets of a larger grouping. Too many homes in Kensington not redone or renovated for that. Almost all areas are a mixed bag. My friend lives in Rock Creek Hills and she bought a crappy house at the height of the market for $850k and put in $150k to renovate (just the interior; no walls moved etc.) and her house probably could list for maybe the $850k today. It is no looker either. Nice location and good place to raise a kid and good schools but visually unappealing for the most part in my view. Mostly ugly houses.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Four Corners and the neighborhood high schoolers all go to Blair. (My kids are in younger ...) These are parents with professional careers and advanced degrees who are have high expectations in terms of education.
We talk about schools a lot and I have never heard anyone say anything but praise for Blair. Sure, there are thousands of kids there and not all of them are kids you want your child to hang out with. But these neighborhood kids take academically challenging classes, participate in lots of activities (sports, award-winning school paper, theater, academic clubs/teams, etc.). One kid that I know takes Arabic. I hear similar things about Einstein.
These same kids all went to Silver Spring International Middle School (SSIMS) and, the usual middle-school stuff aside, parents were also generally happy with academic opportunities there.
In any MCPS school, if your child needs very advanced content, you will have to fight for it, particularly in ES and MS. But that's kind of a different issue.
Anonymous wrote:
OP here. I guess I wasn't clear that by "worst" high schools I was trying to get a sense of whether all MoCo high schools are actually good--i.e., that the ones that aren't in very wealthy areas are actually quite good in spite of naysayers that only the ones in very wealthy or far-out areas are decent.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the replies. We wouldn't be able to afford private school if we bought for $400K. We're currently living in DC in a neighborhood with terrible schools and daunting odds of getting into a good charter or out-of-boundary school. I'm honestly not sure how high my standards are for middle school and high school, partially because our DS isn't even in kindergarden yet. On the one hand, I feel like just about anything would be better than our current school prospects. On the other hand, I really would hate to get to middle school or high school and feel like we made a big mistake. We definitely don't need the best middle school or high school in MoCo--while we would go for that if we could afford it, I know we can't. What are the "worst" MoCo high schools? Are they only bad in comparison to other MoCo (and similarly wealthy suburban) high schools?
My non-driving wife currently works in Silver Spring, but may take a new job at some point, so somewhere that offers public transportation to a variety of places would be good. We don't need to live near somewhere where we can walk to do errands, although that is nice of course. I could drive to work if necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Woodmoor is a good option for me, but the public elementary school appears to be uber sucky.
Takoma Park is a good option as well but I find the streets in and around it very congested and find it harder than you would think to get into DC and out to the beltway (driving).
I too am struggling with finding the perfect neighborhood. Ideally I'd like to find a historic looking home - so sick of the ugly brick things all over Bethesda and Kensington that are affordable (aka under $650k).
Anonymous wrote:Hm. Where is this Kensington neighborhood where the average home price is $1 million? I can't picture it.
PP is probably talking about Chevy Chase View or Rock Creek Hills. I still think she's exaggerating, though. But not by much.