Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just think tastes have changed. Many of the folks I know who would have wanted Potomac in the early 2000s want NWDC now. I even lived in Chevy Chase back then. Now I live in NEDC. There really was something about the allure of it. I dine out a lot more these days as my kids have gotten older. Back then I was at Biglaw with small kids. Now, the thought of the suburbs makes me crazy.
I get it though.
You get that enough of the poor people in NE got pushed out that you can comfortably live there now?
Unlike Avenel, UMC tone-deafness never goes out of style.
hi there were a lot of UMC people in NE before also
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just think tastes have changed. Many of the folks I know who would have wanted Potomac in the early 2000s want NWDC now. I even lived in Chevy Chase back then. Now I live in NEDC. There really was something about the allure of it. I dine out a lot more these days as my kids have gotten older. Back then I was at Biglaw with small kids. Now, the thought of the suburbs makes me crazy.
I get it though.
You get that enough of the poor people in NE got pushed out that you can comfortably live there now?
Unlike Avenel, UMC tone-deafness never goes out of style.
Anonymous wrote:I just think tastes have changed. Many of the folks I know who would have wanted Potomac in the early 2000s want NWDC now. I even lived in Chevy Chase back then. Now I live in NEDC. There really was something about the allure of it. I dine out a lot more these days as my kids have gotten older. Back then I was at Biglaw with small kids. Now, the thought of the suburbs makes me crazy.
I get it though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Restrictive zoning is protecting these areas form condos and the people getting pushed out of proximity but it isn't sure for how long with modern justice trends and the news cycle showing the east county voters just how many times out of sight and out of mind decisions that protect areas like that turn out to hurt areas like silver spring.
This is ridiculous. Nothing in Potomac is hurting Silver Spring. In fact, the western areas funds all the programs in Silver Spring.
Well there are policy reasons most of the affordable and low income housing was built over there and it wasn’t because Silver Spring asked for it. Yes the west county pays for much of silver spring but it is a Faustian bargain that for years meant getting the short end of the stick.
Anonymous wrote:Restrictive zoning is protecting these areas form condos and the people getting pushed out of proximity but it isn't sure for how long with modern justice trends and the news cycle showing the east county voters just how many times out of sight and out of mind decisions that protect areas like that turn out to hurt areas like silver spring.
This is ridiculous. Nothing in Potomac is hurting Silver Spring. In fact, the western areas funds all the programs in Silver Spring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow! This thread does not make avenel sound good at all. They need to move into the present day. No way would I buy with those crazy HOA rules.
Those rules are sort of the point of the place though. It always looks...groomed. For many people that's their bag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like there's only a problem at Avenel if you compare appreciation there to very hot areas. It's not a hot area but its hardly in crisis. Plus, big showy houses like that, but all houses really, have a period where they look bad old and not yet good old, and those houses are in it. In another few decades maybe they will start to seem retro chic. Peak Avenel moms wanted to wear big gold earrings and take their friends to the wine cellar when they came over for cheese overlooking the golf course. Peak 2019 moms want to pretend a 1000 sq ft kitchen is "farm house" because it has black hardware. They want to make artisanal crackers for when their friends come over for cheese and to run down to the pretend-street-mall-thing for dinner. In either case, a bunch of the value was the "lifestyle" and lifestyles go in and out of fashion.
Where's the love button? Please quit your job, abandon your spouse and children, neglect your friends and give up your hobbies. Do DCUM 24-7. Please -- this is what God is calling you to do.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like there's only a problem at Avenel if you compare appreciation there to very hot areas. It's not a hot area but its hardly in crisis. Plus, big showy houses like that, but all houses really, have a period where they look bad old and not yet good old, and those houses are in it. In another few decades maybe they will start to seem retro chic. Peak Avenel moms wanted to wear big gold earrings and take their friends to the wine cellar when they came over for cheese overlooking the golf course. Peak 2019 moms want to pretend a 1000 sq ft kitchen is "farm house" because it has black hardware. They want to make artisanal crackers for when their friends come over for cheese and to run down to the pretend-street-mall-thing for dinner. In either case, a bunch of the value was the "lifestyle" and lifestyles go in and out of fashion.
Anonymous wrote:Wow! This thread does not make avenel sound good at all. They need to move into the present day. No way would I buy with those crazy HOA rules.
Anonymous wrote:The issue is not just Avenel but frankly the entire area. When you have a region that is rooted in gov't, the houses are going reflect that. So any SFH before 1970 is (by today's standards) a small-ish 1800-2400 sq ft house, often brick with 8ft ceilings, relatively small lot size - the result of both being affordable on a gov't salary from 40-50 years ago. The needs/priorities were different then. No one swore by mudrooms with cubbies, farmhouse sinks and higher ceilings - nor any Instagram envy.
Simply put, the housing stock is very dated, decent build but not 100-year-old houses like some parts of Europe, but lacks features today's buyers want - higher ceilings, more light, mudrooms with cubbies, spa bathrooms and a different look than brick (hence McCraftsmans). Clearly, with people spending 2 million or more for new homes like this, those with the means are setting direction for the market. And it already is working its way down as you now see similar houses at 1 million but with fewer amenities. They are choosing to tear down and build closer in at the detriment to neighborhoods like Avenel.
To the OP, there is technically nothing wrong with Avenel. If you brought someone to Avenel who was making 30k a year in some other place, they would think they were in a special place. The homes are nice, common areas and pool/tennis/golf are all right there.
The issue is really does it fit your lifestyle, budget, location, and yes, some plane noise (this is everywhere in DC folks).
Not all over Potomac--but Avenel is close to the river, where plane noise is concentrated.