Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC, particularly the walkable core of the city.
joke of the day
? Why? I live in Dupont and it's wonderful. Want to live here for the foreseeable future.
How many people do you know well on our block? Your actual block.
I live in Shaw/Logan in a condo, and we know about 75% of our hundred unit building. We hang out with at least half of them once a year and several many times a week. We know lots of other people on our block and all of the people who run the local businesses. We are also active in the community, going to community meetings at least once a week, so we know a lot of others who live around here. This is our home day and night, and we love it.
Wow, you guys must have a lot of free time, to be hanging out with several people many times a week.
I have maybe a close circle of 2-3 friends that I would hang out with at that frequency if I was so inclined. But at most we met one to two friends/families for lunch/dinner on the weekends.
I guess things would be different if I was single, but with work, family obligations, and school nights, I just don't envision having any free time to spend with non-family members multiple times a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC, particularly the walkable core of the city.
joke of the day
? Why? I live in Dupont and it's wonderful. Want to live here for the foreseeable future.
How many people do you know well on our block? Your actual block.
I live on Capitol Hill, not in Dupont--still central DC, though. And I know every one of my neighbors (and even like most of them). And there's nothing like rats, property crime, and school insecurity to create a bond between neighbors.
It really is a great place to live, though. I thank my lucky stars every day that we stumbled onto our house. (Mostly because it was all we could afford.)
Capitol Hill is not Dupont, though.
Just like, Brookland is not Cleveland park, even though many of the kit bungalows were built in the same 1920s era.
Well, I don't have any best friends on my block, but I am incredibly friendly with 3 or 4 neighbors in my building, most of the workers at the coffee shop downstairs, the owners of the dry cleaners on the corner, and I meet new parents at Stead Park all the time. I have 4 good friends that live a few blocks away in Dupont. Not really sure what PP was getting at. I grew up in Gaithersburg and Falls Church and we were not friendly with our neighbors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC, particularly the walkable core of the city.
joke of the day
? Why? I live in Dupont and it's wonderful. Want to live here for the foreseeable future.
How many people do you know well on our block? Your actual block.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tend to agree that Arlington is like purgatory. It's trying to be like dc and McLean at the same time without the benefit of being in the city and without the larger lots. The only benefit is being close to DC but if you are rich and have your pick to "live anywhere you could" you won't commute and don't really care about proximity to DC.
Totally disagree. If I was rich I would buy a bigger house in Lyon Village but never move out to the car-centric suburbs. To be able to walk to everything -- that's wealth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tend to agree that Arlington is like purgatory. It's trying to be like dc and McLean at the same time without the benefit of being in the city and without the larger lots. The only benefit is being close to DC but if you are rich and have your pick to "live anywhere you could" you won't commute and don't really care about proximity to DC.
Totally disagree. If I was rich I would buy a bigger house in Lyon Village but never move out to the car-centric suburbs. To be able to walk to everything -- that's wealth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd have difficulty choosing between the following locations: North Arlington, Georgetown, or Foggy Bottom.
Remove North Arlington it is not really that desirable compared to McLean or Great Falls
for you? Because home prices in Arlington suggest that it's "really" actually "that desirable." Remove your head from your ass because it's really not desirable.
When people think of the DC area suburbs they don't think of Arlington , they think of McLean and Great Falls where the politicians, rich business owners, royalty and sports stars live.
No. People think of Arlington, Alexandria, Bethesda, and CCMD.
FWIW, I don't live in any of them, but I have no problem admitting what suburbs are the most well-known.
The best known suburbs, at least among those who aren't looking for their first apartments fresh out of school, are the ones with money and expensive homes, and that means Chevy Chase, Bethesda, Potomac, McLean and Great Falls, not Arlington. It's not really debatable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd have difficulty choosing between the following locations: North Arlington, Georgetown, or Foggy Bottom.
Remove North Arlington it is not really that desirable compared to McLean or Great Falls
for you? Because home prices in Arlington suggest that it's "really" actually "that desirable." Remove your head from your ass because it's really not desirable.
When people think of the DC area suburbs they don't think of Arlington , they think of McLean and Great Falls where the politicians, rich business owners, royalty and sports stars live.
No. People think of Arlington, Alexandria, Bethesda, and CCMD.
FWIW, I don't live in any of them, but I have no problem admitting what suburbs are the most well-known.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd have difficulty choosing between the following locations: North Arlington, Georgetown, or Foggy Bottom.
Remove North Arlington it is not really that desirable compared to McLean or Great Falls
for you? Because home prices in Arlington suggest that it's "really" actually "that desirable." Remove your head from your ass because it's really not desirable.
When people think of the DC area suburbs they don't think of Arlington , they think of McLean and Great Falls where the politicians, rich business owners, royalty and sports stars live.
Anonymous wrote:I tend to agree that Arlington is like purgatory. It's trying to be like dc and McLean at the same time without the benefit of being in the city and without the larger lots. The only benefit is being close to DC but if you are rich and have your pick to "live anywhere you could" you won't commute and don't really care about proximity to DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd have difficulty choosing between the following locations: North Arlington, Georgetown, or Foggy Bottom.
Remove North Arlington it is not really that desirable compared to McLean or Great Falls
for you? Because home prices in Arlington suggest that it's "really" actually "that desirable." Remove your head from your ass because it's really not desirable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd have difficulty choosing between the following locations: North Arlington, Georgetown, or Foggy Bottom.
Remove North Arlington it is not really that desirable compared to McLean or Great Falls
for you? Because home prices in Arlington suggest that it's "really" actually "that desirable." Remove your head from your ass because it's really not desirable.