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Cities Near Reston, VA

$364,900 View on Map
TDA4918 13 Photos
1727 Sundance Dr
Reston, VA (in city)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath Townhome
3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bathroom fully updated townhome in Reston.  Granite countertops, stainless …more»
$370,000 View on Map
PWG0720
13138
Herndon, VA (in city)
3 Bed, 3+ Bath Townhome
1410 sq.ft.

Just Reduced! All Offers Welcome!

$513,900 View on Map
GBW7717 19 Photos
11113 Watermans Dr
Reston, VA (in city)
4 Bed, 3+ Bath Townhome
JUST REDUCED!   This Inmmaculate water property features over 2700 sf of Sunlit …more»
$514,900 View on Map
PGW1797 19 Photos
13011 New Parkland Dr
Oak Hill, VA (in city)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
LOVELY 4 BR, 2.5 BA Colonial, 2-Car Garage, Front Porch, Large Deck, Fenced Backyard, Main Flr …more»
$850,000 View on Map
ADT0984
11872 Fawn Ridge Ln
Reston, VA (in city)
5 Bed, 3 Bath Home
4572 sq.ft.
From FSBO listing on Zillow Description: all photos to be uploaded by 5-29-2012 …more»
$899,000 View on Map
MJD9546
11990 Market St Unit 202
Reston, VA (in city)
3 Bed, 3 Bath Home
$450,000 View on Map
TMW1532
45901 Transamerica Plz Ste 100
Sterling, VA (3.0 miles)
Commercial
$798,333 View on Map
WDM0137
1112 Riva Ridge Dr
Great Falls, VA (3.4 miles)
4 Bed, 3 Bath Home
2462 sq.ft.
$344,999 View on Map
TJP8056
210 Keyes Ct
Sterling, VA (4.0 miles)
4 Bed, 3 Bath Home
1868 sq.ft.
$959,900 View on Map
PPA0835
3628 Rocky Meadow Ct
Fairfax, VA (4.9 miles)
4 Bed, 4+ Bath Home
 

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Local city information for Reston, VA

Reston is a census-designated place (CDP) in Fairfax County, Virginia, United States, within the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. The population was 56,407 at the 2000 census. An internationally known planned community, it was built with the goal of revolutionizing post-World War II concepts of land use and residential/corporate development in American suburbia.

The Reston Town Center is the de facto central business district, with high-rise and low-rise commercial buildings that are home to shops, restaurants, offices, a cinema, and a hotel. It comprises over of office space.

Municipal, government-like services are provided by the nonprofit Reston Association, which is supported by a per-household fee for all residential properties in Reston.


The land on which Reston sits was initially owned by Lord Fairfax during the 18th century. C.A. Wiehle (for whom Wiehle Avenue is named) bought the land later in the 1880s. He died after construction of several buildings. His sons did not share his vision, and sold the land to A. Smith Bowman, who built a bourbon distillery on the site while maintaining a farm on most of the area, a tract. An office retail development and a road are named for him. In 1961, Robert E. Simon bought most of the land, except for on which the Bowman distillery continued to operate until 1987.

Reston was conceived as a planned community by Robert E. Simon. Founded on April 20, 1964 (Simon's 50th birthday) and named for his initials, it was the first modern, post-war planned community in America, sparking a revival of the new town concept. Simon's family had recently sold Carnegie Hall, and Simon used the funds to create Reston. Simon hired Conklin Rossant Architects as master planners to incorporate higher density housing to conserve open space, as well as mixed use areas for industry, business, recreation, education, and housing.

The first section of the community to be built, Lake Anne Plaza, was designed by James Rossant (who studied under Walter Gropius at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design) to emulate the Italian coastal town of Portofino. Lake Anne village was designed with modern architectural themes that extend to a nearby elementary school, a gasoline station, and two churches. Lake Anne also has an art gallery, several restaurants, the Reston Historic Trust Museum, shops, and a senior citizens' fellowship house. All are local businesses, as there are no chain stores or chain restaurants allowed in Lake Anne. Close by are the cubist townhouses at Hickory Cluster that were designed by the noted modernist architect, Charles M. Goodman, in the international style. Other sections of the town, such as Hunters Woods, South Lakes, and North Point, were developed later, each with a neighborhood shopping center and supermarket.

The careful planning and zoning within Reston allows for common grounds, several parks, large swaths of wooded areas with picturesque runs (streams), wildflower meadows, two golf courses, nearly 20 public swimming pools, bridle paths, a bike path, four lakes, tennis courts, and extensive foot pathways. These pathways, combined with bridges and tunnels, help to separate pedestrians from vehicular traffic and increase safety at certain street crossings. Reston was built in wooded areas of oak, maple, sycamore, and Virginia pine.

The growth and development of Reston has been monitored by newspaper articles, national magazines, and scholarly journals on architecture and land use. In 1967 the First Lady of the United States, Mrs. Lyndon Johnson, visited Reston to take a walking tour along its pathways as part of her interest in beautification projects. Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin visited Reston elementary schools named for them. The Washington Post featured a road trip to Reston in January 2006 and a relatively new website "Beyond DC" has a page devoted to Reston with almost 150 photos.

Reston is the location for a regional government center serving citizens in the northern part of Fairfax County. The Reston Regional Library, Reston Hospital Center, and The Embry Rucker Community Shelter are located nearby. The Reston police sub-station is also the office headquarters of the locally elected supervisor of the Hunter Mill District within the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors.

Reston experienced increasing traffic congestion as it grew in the late 1970s and early 1980s. This was a time when Reston's population was growing but the Dulles Toll Road had not been built. Commuter traffic between Reston and Washington created serious traffic congestion on the roads that connected Reston to Washington DC. In 1984 the toll road opened and in 1986 the West Falls Church Washington Metro station opened. Most recently the Fairfax County Parkway, a major north-south artery, was opened.

Reston is one of just a handful of communities in the U.S. that has been designated a backyard wildlife habitat community. Usually this designation is for single homes.

Reston has grown to a point where it now fits the definition of an edge city. While Reston takes on the statistical properties of an edge city, its tightly controlled design averted several problems they typically face, such as hostile pedestrian situations and lack of mass transit. Many of the neighborhoods in Reston were designed to be medium density, which is atypical of an edge city. In other ways it is a textbook example, with a majority of medium rise office buildings, and some citizens opposed to the expansion of its high density core.

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