Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All those houses are walkable. In particular Gary drive is a five minute walk brand new Potomac Elementary and five minute walk to village. Bank, post office, library, two supermarkets and several restaurants. And river road has a great sidewalk.
The one on Holly Hill is super nice and a cul de sac.
Walkable these house are 100 percent.
What are you smoking. Most of the homes there don't have sidewalks. I live not that far from there, and drive through it to get to a camp my kids were going to over previous summers.
River road has a sidewalk. The one house is literally river road and Gary.
River road from Bradley to River falls has a sidewalk on one side
Anonymous wrote:At least 90% of the posts on this forum are a variation of “don’t/do live there because it’s not/it is my neighborhood and my lifestyle is the bestest.” The narcissism is hilarious.
Anonymous wrote:I live a few blocks from there.
I had several family’s move near me in last year from Bethesda/DC. They needed more space as kids older and wanted Churchill. I only moved here in 2018 from “close in” but I had an 18, 16 and 11 year old at time. They are far beyond the stroller and park stage. And my wife is far past hang out with new Moms phase.
I work from home. I actually technically have a 7 bedroom house. Two are basement guest bedrooms. But home office wise is great. I literally had a 1,600 square foot house close in with a one car driveway! Was no longer practical
Also it is not generational it is age. The majority of parents on my block who moved in with kids are in there 50s. Been there don’t that close in. And the hipster parents in there 30s pushing their kid in a stroller come 55 when you have three kids 15-20 and five cars it won’t be fun anymore
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mansions are not moving in the Potomac Village area even after repeated price reductions and some approach their price levels several years back. It is an area with shopping, library banks etc and not particularly remote. Any ideas?
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Rockville/10001-Gary-Rd-20854/home/10911971
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Rockville/10107-Gary-Rd-20854/home/10888099
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Rockville/10217-Holly-Hill-Pl-20854/home/10920224
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Potomac/10100-Gary-Rd-20854/home/10888011
Huh???
Only 4 and one of them has been on the market for only 10 days , and you call that dying market?
Anonymous wrote:Mansions are not moving in the Potomac Village area even after repeated price reductions and some approach their price levels several years back. It is an area with shopping, library banks etc and not particularly remote. Any ideas?
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Rockville/10001-Gary-Rd-20854/home/10911971
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Rockville/10107-Gary-Rd-20854/home/10888099
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Rockville/10217-Holly-Hill-Pl-20854/home/10920224
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Potomac/10100-Gary-Rd-20854/home/10888011
Anonymous wrote:So houses in Potomac are actually moving very fast and much faster due to the pandemicr than they have in the past few years. The problem in MOCO wealthy areas is that there has been inventory sitting out when it doesn't sell for high as people wanted. MOCO property tax assessment is substantially higher than the market value. People who bought back in 2005-2007 never believed that their house value dropped 200K and never challenged their assessment. Many that went on the market delisted and the owners decided to wait it out. Now that things are selling they are all jumping to sell with prices back up but the increased inventory is holding back what they can get.
Potomac doesn't really compete with Bethesda. these are very different markets. It competes with Northern VA -McLean. MOCO has been losing badly to NOVA as all the higher paying jobs are located in NOVA. Potomac does a little better when the school boundary talk comes up because families who want a good school and to pay a little less who were considering Wootton get spooked and move into Churchill boundaries instead.
The other drawback with Potomac is that most of the residents who are selling bought their house 15-20 years ago and updated based on what was current back then. They are selling now and at Potomac price points you are looking at buyers who don't want to live in a dated house. This isn't Silver Spring where something can be incredibly ugly and tacky but the buyer will say its charming because they are simply grateful to find something they could afford. This also isn't a buyer population that is OK loving in something dated for several years. In the pandemic no one wants a remodel/complete re-decorating going on so its easier to buy a tear down and build new.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People with money are getting out of here.
People with money live in Woodland-Normanstone or Kalorama, not Potomac.
You're clueless
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Potomac was one of the places to be in this area maybe for my parent's generation. But now, more millenials prefer the urban setting with proximity to metro over the McMansions and the large plot of land.
I would disagree - I grew up here & Potomac has never been a place to be. It was always for people who couldn’t afford cc or even Bethesda. As the traffic has gotten worse, it has gotten even less desirable. The only people I ever knew who aimed to live there were people into horses who wanted to ride regularly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People with money are getting out of here.
People with money live in Woodland-Normanstone or Kalorama, not Potomac.