condominiums, houses and townhouses in Alexandria, Kingstowne, Crystal City and Arlington VA
Monday, August 10, 2009
Nearby there are plenty of other opportunities for fun. Catch a film at the Kingstowne 16 movie theater at the Kingstowne Town Center or check out Top Golf Kingstowne on Van Dorn St. Top Golf offers a 76 suite golf practice facility which is fun all alone and also available for groups and parties. There are a number of nearby public courses like:
For a mix of fun, about 10 minutes from your new home in Kingstowne you'll find  Burke Lake Park. Burke Lake has an 18 hole public course with facilities that are fun for the whole family. Burke Lake is great for fishing, camping, picnicking and has a carousel, ice cream stand and more. 

There are plenty of parks to enjoy nearby too. The Lee District RECenter and Park in Fairfax County is just a few minutes away from Franconia and Kingstowne. Lee District has a natatorium, gymnasium, fitness center, indoor cours and a lot more. The RECenter is site on a large public park. Don't forget nearby Lake Accotink Park where you can rent a boat, fish or even hike. Lake Accotink also boasts a 9-hole putt-putt for family outings. Huntley Meadows is a great place to walk about and enjoy nature.

The list goes on for nature and water lovers. Pohick Bay Regional Park is just 17 minutes from Kingstowne Towne Centre. Pohick Bay has offers a place to rent a boat or and a place to launch a boat. There are cabins for camping and picnic facilities. Pohick Bay is relatively close to Mason Neck State Park---another several hundred acres of wooded nature. The Belle Haven Marina another great place to launch or rent a boat and is about 15 minutes from Franconia / Kingstowne.
Monday, August 10, 2009 4:35:39 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00) | Comments [0] | Burke | Fairfax County | Hayfield | Kingstowne | Lorton | Parks & Libraries#
Tuesday, June 09, 2009

Lee District RECenter off Telegraph Road near Kingstowne and Rose Hill in Franconia Virginia is sited on a 193 acre park. The park at "Lee District" has one soccer field with two overlay T-Ball fields. In addition, two football fields have overlay softball fields. There are

  • four outdoor basketball courts;
  • an amphitheater;
  • four picnic areas (one sheltered);
  • horseshoe pits;
  • a sand volleyball court;
  • a playground and tot lot;
  • four lighted tennis courts with a tennis practice wall;
  • walking trails;
  • a carrousel;
  • and the RECenter itself.

The REC is has nearly 84,000 square feet of recreational facilities where you'll find a natatorium (indoor pools), a gym and a fitness center.

The focus of the natatorium is a heated 50-meter pool with spectator seating . The pool has a superslide and three diving boards. The natatorium also provides the public with spa, locker rooms, family changing room, saunas, and showers and an outdoor sun deck and grassed sunbathing area.

Like the pool, the gym is most usually open to the public. The gymasium is 20,400 sqft of hardwood with one regulation size basketball court that can be converted into two smaller courts, or two volleyball courts. RECenter has electronic scoreboards, spectator seating, boxing equipment, volleyball nets and a three-lane, tenth-mile indoor running track.

If you need a work out, Lee District has it all. The fitness center has a wide selection of cardiovascular equipment, free-weights, work-out machines and a stretching area.

The RECenter also contains racquetball/wallyball courts, two mirrored dance/fitness rooms, three multi-purpose rooms, a mezzanine, and preschool.

Lee District RECenter
6601 Telegraph Road
Franconia, Virginia
703-922-9841

Directions: Lee District RECenter may be reached by taking Beltway Exit 176A which is Telegraph Road south, two and one-half miles to the park entrance on the left.

The RECenter is open to all residents of Fairfax County. Non-residents pay higher fees.

Tuesday, June 09, 2009 6:17:21 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00) | Comments [0] | Fairfax County | Franconia | Hayfield | Kingstowne | Lee District | Parks & Libraries | Rose Hill | Victoria Crossings#
Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Huntley Meadows

Huntley Meadows is a 4500 acre park in Fairfax County, but today the park service only maintains about 30 acres of meadows. The remainder of the park is following the natural life cycle of the land.

In the days before Columbus, Northern Virginia and the Shenandoah Valley mostly a sprawling meadow, and even here on the East Coast we had bison herds. The meadows are not the natural state here though, and they were maintained by natives who burned and cut the forest from time to time to leave room for the big herding animals. Left on its own, the land here will slowly revert to a hardwood forest. In Huntley Meadows, visitors can explore this forest by way of many trails and paths.

Huntley Meadows trees

The change to forest happens over time. When the meadows first fall fallow, weeds rush in. In a few years brambles and honey suckle mix in with fast growing trees like locusts or cedars. Eventually the tree canopy grows so thick that the vines and undergrowth begin to die off. In dry months, this undergrowth becomes brittle and fires are easy to start. Left unchecked, nature will start its own fire to clear the undergrowth and to replenish the hardwoods as they grow.

vines and duff

The forests of Huntley Meadows are young. This is evidenced not only by the diameter of the trunks and by the types of trees that are tallest. It's also evidenced by the duff, or undergrowth, that is heavy in parts of the forest. The park's management recently ignited a number of controlled burns to clear up the duff and to help keep the forest healthy.

fire at Huntley Meadows

You'll see signs of the fire along many paths in the park.

feathers at Huntley Meadows

Huntley Meadows is also popular with birdwatchers. I found these feathers scattered along the trail. Perhaps a fox found a meal here? I am curious what type of bird this might have been.


Neighborhoods near Huntley Meadows

Here are a few resources for house hunters in Northern Virginia:
  • Huntley Meadows --- a map of the park with homes for sale nearby
  • Kingstowne --- condos, houses and townhouses for sale in and near Kingstowne
  • Hayfield Farm --- Single family homes near the Coast Guard station
  • Woodstone -- Townhouses and single family houses near Huntley Meadows
  • Stoneybrooke -- Single family homes between Groveton Hieghts and Huntley Meadows

 


Will Nesbitt About the Author --- Will Nesbitt is the principal broker of Will Nesbitt Realty and maintains Condo 1 Alexandria. Will specializes in condos, townhouses and single family residences in Alexandria, Arlington, Fairfax County, Crystal City, and Kingstowne. Will resides in Belle Haven Estates just outside Alexandria VA in Fairfax County.

 

Tuesday, April 21, 2009 8:48:11 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00) | Comments [0] | Fairfax County | Hayfield | Parks & Libraries | Woodstone | Huntley Meadows#
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Saturday, October 11, 2008

How will BRAC affect area real estate? Well, one of the big pieces to that puzzle was solved at the end of last month when the announcement was made that Fort Belvoir was going to add the Mark Center to its list of holdings rather than heading for Springfield. Donald Carr Director of Public Relations for the US Army at Fort Belvoir contacted me in response to my recent post. He said, "of the total 19,300 jobs, 4,400 are coming to main post Fort Belvoir; 8,500 to the EPG (Engineer Proving Grounds); and, 6,400 to the Mark Center. Additionally, only about 500 of the 19,300 are actually new population incoming to the region."

This makes clear that there will probably be no great regional surge in home values as a result of these changes. In fact, many service members may opt to stay where they are and drive across town to new offices and locations.  The official press release regarding the Mark Center:

The U.S. Army announced today, Sept. 29, that the Mark Center in Alexandria, Va., will be the future home of the 6,400 personnel associated with the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure, Recommendation # 133. The decision puts in place the last piece of the Fort Belvoir, Va., BRAC initiative that sites more than 19,000 workers to the installation.

The BRAC 133 jobs - a collection of Defense Department-level agencies whose move is being managed by the Washington Headquarters Service - are the last remaining of those being realigned to Fort Belvoir.

"The decision concludes more than a year of work by hundreds of people in the Army, surrounding communities, and all levels of government to develop proposals and options for review by the selection board," said Assistant Secretary of the Army for Installations and Environment Keith Eastin.

Following completion of Fort Belvoir's BRAC Environmental Impact Study in Summer 2007, the Army's Record of Decision, or ROD, directed placement of all but the BRAC 133 jobs. The jobs originally would have been placed at Fort Belvoir's Engineer Proving Ground in Springfield, Va.

However, because another 8,500 jobs of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency were also placed there, significant concerns for traffic impacts in the area prompted the Army to agree to limit EPG to the NGA jobs, and to look elsewhere for the BRAC 133 jobs. In September 2007 evaluators began work to study alternative sites, including the General Services Administration warehouse site in Springfield and commercial sites in the region.

BRAC legislation and follow-on language in the 2008 National Defense Authorization Act allow the Army to purchase land in the National Capital Region to facilitate Fort Belvoir's realignment. "Any non-DOD site selected would have to become part of Fort Belvoir in order to comply with the law," Eastin said. The Army must now buy the Mark Center property to make it part of Fort Belvoir.

In arriving at the Mark Center decision, Eastin said the Army considered multiple factors, including project timelines, transportation management and site adaptability. "The Mark Center site resolves security issues, improves space requirements and mission relationships, and minimizes changes to existing living, working, and quality of life issues," he said.

"The Mark Center site minimizes to the greatest extent practicable disruption of current commuting needs and mission coordination requirements of the workers," said James Turkel, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, who led the evaluation team. "It will also require little to no change in contractor support relationships, as well as changes to residency or schools requirements for the workers."

Eastin echoed the point. "The new commute for the realigned personnel supports their mission by keeping them in close proximity to the Pentagon agencies and senior leaders they support," he said.

Post officials said putting the jobs at the Alexandria City site reduces the number of jobs coming to Fairfax County's part of the post to 12,900 - 4,400 to Fort Belvoir's main post, and 8,500 to Engineer Proving Ground.

The Army must now purchase the Mark Center property to meet BRAC law and plans to make the purchase before the end of the year. Construction is scheduled to begin on the site in January 2009, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.


Saturday, October 11, 2008 5:20:11 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00) | Comments [0] | Alexandria | Fairfax County | Fort Belvoir | Hayfield | Lorton | market conditions | Springfield | Virginia#
Friday, May 02, 2008

Huntley Meadows Park, located in the Fairfax County’s Hybla Valley south of Alexandria, is an oasis of wildlife in Fairfax County's urban setting. Huntley Meadows is home to beavers, dragonflies, and 200 species of birds. The park occupies more than 1400 square acres of well preserved, natural forests.

Pileated Woodpecker at Huntley Meadows

Huntley Meadows Park provides its visitors the opportunity to appreciate the pure beauty of what nature has to offer. From a Hickory Horn Devil to a Yellow-Legged Meadowhawk, there are an abundance of interesting creatures right here. A one-half mile board walk which journey’s its way through the wetlands. The boardwalk leads to a hidden observation platform to view the wildlife. This is a great place to hike or bike trail. There is a two mile interpretive trail system enhance your park experience!

Huntley Meadows Birds

The land was owned by George Mason IV who’s house, Historic Huntley Est. 1825, is now apart of the National Register of Historic Places, Virginia’s Landmarks Register, and Fairfax County Historic House Inventory.

Huntley Meadows lies in a wet lowland which provides cleanliness to polluted waters and maintains control of floods and storms. On May 30, 2007 a series of meetings began taking place in order to find better long term solutions in preserving the wetlands. Friends and neighbors of the park are invited to to join the next meeting which takes place on August 23rd, 2008, 5pm - 7pm.

Educational programs are also provided by Huntley Meadows from preschool to self-guided visits. Volunteers are always needed and welcome to join the Friends of Huntley Meadows by helping to preserve the park. Four-hundred citizens are involved but more are also invited.

Hours:

  • July 1st -September 1st
    •  Monday - Friday 9am-5pm
    • Closed Tuesday, Sundays and Holidays.
  • September 2nd- October 31st
    • Everyday 9am- 5pm
    • Closed Tuesdays, Noon-5pm for Holidays
  • November 1st - December 31st
    • Monday - Friday 9am-5pm
    • Closed on Tuesdays, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years

Huntley Meadows Trails

Huntley Meadows Park & Visitor Center
3701 Lockheed Blvd.,
Alexandria

703-768-2525

For more information about sales and rentals in the areas near and around Huntley Meadows Park please contact Condo 1 Alexandria.

Condo 1 Alexandria 703 765 0300

Friday, May 02, 2008 3:49:22 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00) | Comments [0] | Alexandria | Fairfax County | Hayfield | Parks & Libraries#
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