Anonymous wrote:Not to defend the fool, but I think she was saying that Glover Park is bad enough (i.e., it isn't the downtown hub replete with tapas restaurants and furniture boutiques), but AU Park is a entirely different level of awfulness.
Just ignore the rube. She is probably some underemployed twenty-something who thinks she knows everything about the world. She doesn't understand the attraction of calm, peaceful living with a family because she doesn't have a family. (Not that there's anything wrong with it.) She speaks from ignorance, that much is clear. Just ask her to sing the praises of living in "AdMo" (not Lanier Heights, by the way) or H St. with a family.
Anonymous wrote:22:25 has clearly never been to AU Park or he/she would know it's nowhere near walkable to Glover Park and a lot more walkable than most parts of VA where you could find a lot more house for a lot less money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:who would pay 1.5 million to live in an area that's so far out from the fun parts of the city that it's basically in the suburbs?
You are either clueless or trying to be provocative. AU Park is the ideal combination of homes with yards, walkability, proximity to downtown, and the best schools in DC. Most homes go for less than 1.5 million, but the location isn't the reason for that (the houses just aren't that big). It isn't "the suburbs" by any stretch, and it's an extremely hot market right now.
Gee, I sure am deluded.... or maybe I just know how to use Google StreetView, and I'm not utterly fucking blind as you appear to be? Here's the location of the house:
![]()
If I told you that was a picture of anywhere in the anonymous, soulless NoVA suburbs, you'd believe me.
Walkability is all well and good, but you have to have someplace exciting to walk to -- and while Glover Park isn't terrible or anything, it's nowhere near the U Street/CoHi/AdMo/14th St/Dupont/H St nexus where everything fun actually happens.
You can get the same schools for less money in plenty of other areas.
And yes, it is indeed an extremely hot market right now. A lot of people in DC have terrible taste, which is a big part of why NoVA is as bad as it is. But if you have this particular brand of terrible taste, just buy a similar home inbound for TJ out in VA for cheaper.
Just keep proving your cluelessness. Maybe you should actually visit instead of using Google Streetview? We're from Europe, and after living in Dupont for years, we house shopped in both upper NW and the NoVa suburbs (quickly ruled those out), and there is no comparison. And who walks to Glover Park from AU Park?
I'm not sure if you're just angry or need to grow up.
Anonymous wrote:22:25 has clearly never been to AU Park or he/she would know it's nowhere near walkable to Glover Park and a lot more walkable than most parts of VA where you could find a lot more house for a lot less money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:who would pay 1.5 million to live in an area that's so far out from the fun parts of the city that it's basically in the suburbs?
You are either clueless or trying to be provocative. AU Park is the ideal combination of homes with yards, walkability, proximity to downtown, and the best schools in DC. Most homes go for less than 1.5 million, but the location isn't the reason for that (the houses just aren't that big). It isn't "the suburbs" by any stretch, and it's an extremely hot market right now.
Gee, I sure am deluded.... or maybe I just know how to use Google StreetView, and I'm not utterly fucking blind as you appear to be? Here's the location of the house:
![]()
If I told you that was a picture of anywhere in the anonymous, soulless NoVA suburbs, you'd believe me.
Walkability is all well and good, but you have to have someplace exciting to walk to -- and while Glover Park isn't terrible or anything, it's nowhere near the U Street/CoHi/AdMo/14th St/Dupont/H St nexus where everything fun actually happens.
You can get the same schools for less money in plenty of other areas.
And yes, it is indeed an extremely hot market right now. A lot of people in DC have terrible taste, which is a big part of why NoVA is as bad as it is. But if you have this particular brand of terrible taste, just buy a similar home inbound for TJ out in VA for cheaper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:who would pay 1.5 million to live in an area that's so far out from the fun parts of the city that it's basically in the suburbs?
You are either clueless or trying to be provocative. AU Park is the ideal combination of homes with yards, walkability, proximity to downtown, and the best schools in DC. Most homes go for less than 1.5 million, but the location isn't the reason for that (the houses just aren't that big). It isn't "the suburbs" by any stretch, and it's an extremely hot market right now.
Gee, I sure am deluded.... or maybe I just know how to use Google StreetView, and I'm not utterly fucking blind as you appear to be? Here's the location of the house:
![]()
If I told you that was a picture of anywhere in the anonymous, soulless NoVA suburbs, you'd believe me.
Walkability is all well and good, but you have to have someplace exciting to walk to -- and while Glover Park isn't terrible or anything, it's nowhere near the U Street/CoHi/AdMo/14th St/Dupont/H St nexus where everything fun actually happens.
You can get the same schools for less money in plenty of other areas.
And yes, it is indeed an extremely hot market right now. A lot of people in DC have terrible taste, which is a big part of why NoVA is as bad as it is. But if you have this particular brand of terrible taste, just buy a similar home inbound for TJ out in VA for cheaper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:who would pay 1.5 million to live in an area that's so far out from the fun parts of the city that it's basically in the suburbs?
You are either clueless or trying to be provocative. AU Park is the ideal combination of homes with yards, walkability, proximity to downtown, and the best schools in DC. Most homes go for less than 1.5 million, but the location isn't the reason for that (the houses just aren't that big). It isn't "the suburbs" by any stretch, and it's an extremely hot market right now.
Anonymous wrote:who would pay 1.5 million to live in an area that's so far out from the fun parts of the city that it's basically in the suburbs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do a search on this forum for "Pasadena" and you will see where I'm coming from. 150 hits. There is someone here who posts obsessively. Apologies if it isn't you!
And I'm happy here, too. But I still love California and miss it. I just think it's really strange how frequently people post listings in Pasadena in response to people's DC queries. Also San Diego.
Also searches for Orange County, Bay Area, and San Francisco literally draws hundreds of posts across all Forums as well. Perhaps there are just a lot of transplants, like you, who miss their home state, or just a lot of California Dreamin'.