If You Lived Here

Building an Open Community from the Ground Up

In the 1960s, Bob Simon sold Carnegie Hall in New York and began the New Town movement in Virginia. Purchasing thousands of acres in western Fairfax County, Simon envisioned a new community called Reston, which was modeled after village centers in Europe and open to all races and income levels. Sixty years later, present day residents of Reston reflect on Simon's vision.

Building an Open Community from the Ground Up

2m 58s

  • Occoquan/Lorton, VA: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Occoquan/Lorton, VA

    S4 E3 - 28m 38s

    After meeting realtor Theo Daubresse along the Occoquan River, hosts Jen Osborn and Ricardo Frederick Evans tour three homes at three different price points in Occoquan and Lorton, VA. In doing so, the hosts learn more about the history of the town’s very first automated mill, its Artists’ Undertaking Gallery, and its renovated Workhouse Arts Center.

  • Cleveland Park: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Cleveland Park

    S4 E2 - 28m 37s

    After meeting with realtor Christine Basso Fitzgerald at the Rosedale Conservancy, hosts Jen Osborn and Ricardo Frederick Evans visited three homes at three different price points in Washington D.C.’s Cleveland Park. Along the way, the hosts reflect on the neighborhood’s history as a booming suburb, and the role the Tregaron Conservancy continues to play in the community.

  • Burke: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Burke

    E1 - 28m 39s

    Following a walk in Royal Lake Park with realtor Lauren Breslaw, hosts Jen Osborn and Ricardo Frederick Evans visit three homes at three different price points in Burke, VA. Along the way, they explore the history of the community’s railroad, its Copperthite Racetrack, and the residents’ successful campaign against the construction of “Burke Airport.”

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