Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm still trying to follow the logic of "I need a big house to have a dry basement". You couldn't do a smaller house because it wouldn't fit into the neighborhood? Because all of the other new homes in GF are BFHs?
Maybe: Want GF for commute and want some land. Need new house for new basement w/ best waterproofing technology(??). Builders only build big houses on big land in GF?
Anonymous wrote:I'm still trying to follow the logic of "I need a big house to have a dry basement". You couldn't do a smaller house because it wouldn't fit into the neighborhood? Because all of the other new homes in GF are BFHs?
Anonymous wrote:Bethesda 2,400 sq feet and $3,000 all inclusive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spring Valley area DC, 4500 sq ft, no mortgage (but my mother lives with us it's her house until she croaks then it's our inheritance).
you're charming
Anonymous wrote:Spring Valley area DC, 4500 sq ft, no mortgage (but my mother lives with us it's her house until she croaks then it's our inheritance).

Anonymous wrote:I hate this post. I thought we had pretty good housing costs, but there are a lot of people in nice houses in nice neighborhoods with some low mortgages!! Says the Silver Spring, 1600 sq ft owner with a mortgage of $2470 (all in). Maybe when I grow up, I can be some of the pp's ...
Anonymous wrote:I hate this post. I thought we had pretty good housing costs, but there are a lot of people in nice houses in nice neighborhoods with some low mortgages!! Says the Silver Spring, 1600 sq ft owner with a mortgage of $2470 (all in). Maybe when I grow up, I can be some of the pp's ...