Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I have 5 years of wonderful memories of walking together to school.
this. Being right down the street from the schools has been great for us. I can count on my hands how many times in 12 years I have had to deal with kiss and ride.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in an "undesirable " neighborhood in S. Arlington. We can walk to ES and Shirlington (so restaurants, groceries ans the movie theater). We can bike to the MS ans HS easily (and could wall if we weren't always rushed lol).
We also often go fishing in the stream near us. But again "undesirable " neighborhood.
South Arlington looks so drab and poor and run down.
Anonymous wrote: I have 5 years of wonderful memories of walking together to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The short answer to your question is 50+ years of poor urban planning and car-centric design. In most cases, the decision to make things unwalkable was very much on purpose. We've (mostly) realized the error of that approach by now, but walkable spaces are now pretty scarce outside of pre-WWII neighborhoods, and they're enough in demand that they go for a large price premium even though walkability doesn't really cost more to build.
We're starting to retrofit walkable infrastructure into suburban neighborhoods, but it'll take decades, and we're limited with what can be done within the constraints of many of the choices that are already baked in.
Ding ding ding. Basically op, it’s literally illegal to build walkable neighborhoods in most of America. That’s the reason AU Park is so absurdly expensive
And AU Park sucks. Who wants to walk to what they can walk to besides Wagshals.
Anonymous wrote:In the US, developers build neighborhoods around the car. And so very little is walkable. Yet when people are searching for houses, they say they want to live in a neighborhood where they can walk to amenities. It seems like there is a disconnect between what developers think people want, and what people actually want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate to be an Arlington band wagon person but if I wanted that urban balance not in DC (let’s face it, DC is not getting a safer anytime soon so I would not realistically consider it) I would choose that orange line corridor.
Not the very north/McLean wannabe part of Arlington but the actual urban part of it.
Otherwise you may as well live in Vienna or n Bethesda or an exurb for something further out that does not cost 2.5m for a decent house.
+1 to the Arlington bandwagon. We live in the south part of North Arlington (Ashton Heights/Lyon Park) and are in the walking boundary for all three schools (elementary, middle, high). Plus we walk to daycare so there you go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because schools are big. ES have 500+ kids instead of small ones. And it only gets bigger from there.
+1
Everything is on a massive scale.
Yes. And even if you do find something walkable it's very rare to be walkable to ES and MS and HS.
My kids had a bus to ES but are walkable to MS and HS and I really appreciate that. ES kids still need parents to take them to/from school so the walkability is of limited value IMO. But the independence for teens in getting to/from school has been great.
I think it's been wonderful to be within walking distance of my daughter's school. I have 5 years of wonderful memories of walking together to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because schools are big. ES have 500+ kids instead of small ones. And it only gets bigger from there.
+1
Everything is on a massive scale.
Yes. And even if you do find something walkable it's very rare to be walkable to ES and MS and HS.
My kids had a bus to ES but are walkable to MS and HS and I really appreciate that. ES kids still need parents to take them to/from school so the walkability is of limited value IMO. But the independence for teens in getting to/from school has been great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m seeing listings on Redfin that are 3+ miles away from the zoned school!
There are locations which provide both but good homes there are expensive and people don't want to accept what they have within their price range.
Anonymous wrote:I’m seeing listings on Redfin that are 3+ miles away from the zoned school!