Anonymous wrote:DC area ?
Bethesda, Potomac, Chevy Chase, MD; Kalorama.
They have the history and money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:North Arlington
Maybe since 2015.. Up until then, it was behind McLean/Great Falls (which I know is Nouveau riche to CC/NWDC types) and certain parts of Alexandria. It has definitely become more "prestigious" in the last several years
Don’t try to play in this sandbox. The prize is a turd and N. Arlington still can’t win it.
I think Lyon Village could play. Everyone who lives there thinks it’s all that just like Bethesda.
Not even close. Prestige requires proximity to either top private or top public schools, and LV offers neither. It is near places that matter, but not itself on the map.
Look village is prestigious only to the classless people that live there. The worst
and Bethesda is prestigious only to the folks who live there, who have invested $$ in a low appreciating asset, and feel compelled to constantly justify that bad decision.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me, prestige means history. So places like Kalorama and Chevy Chase which have been exclusive for generations would meet that criteria. Some places like Georgetown which was exclusive a generation ago have lost cachet.
But Chevy Chase’s “history” largely is one of deliberate segregation, so your personal notion of “prestige” is tinged with exclusion at least as much as exclusivity.
I am aware. Places like Belle Haven in Alexandria which I think of as a Chevy Chase knock off had restrictive covenants as well. That said people are still clamoring to live there. They carry cachet in the stratospheres of DC. I am sure parts of NW had restrictive covenants as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me, prestige means history. So places like Kalorama and Chevy Chase which have been exclusive for generations would meet that criteria. Some places like Georgetown which was exclusive a generation ago have lost cachet.
But Chevy Chase’s “history” largely is one of deliberate segregation, so your personal notion of “prestige” is tinged with exclusion at least as much as exclusivity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me, prestige means history. So places like Kalorama and Chevy Chase which have been exclusive for generations would meet that criteria. Some places like Georgetown which was exclusive a generation ago have lost cachet.
But Chevy Chase’s “history” largely is one of deliberate segregation, so your personal notion of “prestige” is tinged with exclusion at least as much as exclusivity.
Anonymous wrote:To me, prestige means history. So places like Kalorama and Chevy Chase which have been exclusive for generations would meet that criteria. Some places like Georgetown which was exclusive a generation ago have lost cachet.
Anonymous wrote:Gaithersburg
Anonymous wrote:What about NOVA and MD suburbs? The question was about DC areas' neighborhoods.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown - still the home of some of the most expensive properties in town.
I love Georgetown and even lived there for a couple of years, but it's just not that convenient.
Anonymous wrote:McLean