
Map of Northern Virginia
'Northern Virginia (NoVA)' consists of
Arlington,
Fairfax,
Loudoun, and
Prince William counties and the
independent cities of
Alexandria,
Falls Church,
Fairfax,
Manassas, and
Manassas Park. It is part of the
Baltimore-Washington Metropolitan Area, the fourth-largest metropolitan area in the
United States. Northern Virginia is the wealthiest and most diverse (in terms of both ethnicities and nationalities represented) region of
Virginia.
Demographics
2 million people (about 1/4th of Virginia's total population) live in Northern Virginia.
The racial breakdown of the population of Northern Virginia is as follows:
★ 66%
White
★ 11%
Hispanic
★ 11%
Black
★ 9%
Asian
★ 3%
mixed race
Northern Virginia is home to people from diverse backgrounds, with significant numbers of
Arab-Americans,
Korean-Americans,
Indian-Americans,
Iranian-Americans,
Jewish-Americans,
Filipino-Americans,
Pakistani-Americans,
Chinese-Americans and
Vietnamese-Americans, along with other Americans of Asian descent. There is a sizable
Latino population, primarily consisting of
Salvadorans,
Peruvians,
Bolivians, and
Colombians. Arlington is center of the largest Bolivian community in North America (mostly immigrants from
Cochabamba). Northern Virginia is also home to one of the largest African immigrant populations in America, with significant numbers of
Nigerians,
Ethiopians,
Eritreans,
Somalians, and
Ghanaians. This leads to the availability of such diverse
cuisines as Ethiopian,
Afghan,
Pakistani,
Korean,
Vietnamese, and
Indian in the region.
Politics
Northern Virginia is becoming known for favoring candidates of the
Democratic Party in its voting patterns.
Fairfax County went for
John Kerry in 2004 for U.S. President (the first time the county went for a Democratic candidate since 1964). The area also went for Democrats
Jim Webb in 2006 for U.S. Senator,
Tim Kaine in 2005 for Governor, and
Mark Warner in 2001 for Governor. In three out of four of these races, the wide margins tallied in Northern Virginia have swept the Democratic candidate into office statewide.
The most recent election in Virginia was an extremely close one statewide. Democrat
Jim Webb defeated incumbent Senator
George Allen by the slim margin of 49.6% to 49.2%
[1]. However, that margin ballooned to 58.1% to 40.7% in favor of the Democratic challenger in the counties and cities of Northern Virginia, whereas Webb ran behind Allen, 46.1% to 52.7%, in the remainder of the Commonwealth. Webb carried
Fairfax County,
Prince William County, and
Loudoun County, as well as the more urban areas of
Arlington,
Alexandria, and
Falls Church. Allen's sole wins in Northern Virginia were the cities of
Manassas and
Manassas Park, winning the latter two only by the razor-thin margins of 298 votes and 47 votes, respectively.
The 2006 election also had a gay marriage ban on the ballot in Virginia. While the rest of the state voted heavily for the ban, Northern Virginia voted heavily against it.
In the
2004 presidential elections, 53% of Northern Virginia voters voted for
John Kerry, the
Democratic candidate, and 46% voted for
George W. Bush, the
Republican candidate. This contrasted with the rest of Virginia, where 43% of voted for John Kerry and 56% for George Bush. Kerry also carried
Fairfax County, the most populous county in Virginia, and
Fairfax City, the first time those jurisdictions had voted Democratic since
Johnson's national landslide in 1964 (although now the county is almost consistently voting Democratic). The strongest support in the area for the Democrats lies inside
the Beltway, in
Arlington,
Alexandria, and parts of Fairfax County. The more distant areas (i.e.,
Loudoun County and
Prince William County) are generally more conservative though as they have increased in population they have also become more liberal. Both Mark Warner in 2001, and John Kerry in 2004, lost Loudoun and Prince William. Tim Kaine won both counties in 2005. And in 2006, despite not polling as strongly as Mark Warner statewide, Democratic senate candidate
Jim Webb won both Loudoun and Prince William. In 2005 65% of the voters of Northern Virginia voted for Democrat
Tim Kaine for governor over
Jerry Kilgore, who received only 32% of the vote, easily 14 points lower than George W. Bush's showing only a year earlier.
The 8th, the 10th, and the 11th
congressional districts lie within Northern Virginia. The 8th district votes overwhelmingly Democratic while the other two districts generally elect Republican congressmen but by smaller margins. The current congressman from the 8th district is
Jim Moran (
D), the current congressman from the 10th district is
Frank Wolf (
R), and the current congressman from the 11th district is
Tom Davis (
R). The 10th is slightly more Republican than the 11th, although both districts have awarded re-election to the incumbents by comfortable margins, and both were won by George W. Bush in 2004. However, all three districts voted for Jim Webb in the 2006 Senate election, reflecting their increasingly Democratic nature.
In the 2005 Gubernatorial election, the entire region continued to move away from the Republicans. Fairfax County, Arlington County, the cities of Alexandria, Fairfax City, and Falls Church, and for the first time, Loudoun County and Prince William County, went to
Tim Kaine, the Democratic candidate. The area continued to be more Democratic the closer it was to
Washington, D.C., but Richmond resident Kaine was able to accomplish what Northern Virginian
Mark Warner had been unable to do just four years earlier in 2001: carry Loudoun County and Prince William County (as well as win over 60% of the vote in Fairfax County).
In 2006, Democrat Mark Herring swept every precinct in the 33rd state Senate District Tuesday, Jan. 31, en route to beating Republican Loudoun County Supervisor Mick Staton by a wide margin of 62 to 38 percent, evidencing Loudoun's transformation into a liberal county. The district sits primarily in Loudoun County but also includes nine precincts in western Fairfax County: Floris, Fox Mill, Frying Pan, McNair, Franklin, Kinross, Navy, Lees Corner East and Lees Corner West.
Secession
Due to the political and economic differences between Northern Virginia and the rest of the commonwealth, some secessionist sentiments have emerged with those persons wishing that the area could become the separate state of "North Virginia." Delegate Jeannemarie Devolites (R-35) expressed a common sentiment when she said "The formula for funding school construction in Northern Virginia requires that we pay 500 percent more than the actual cost of a project. We have to pay 500 percent because we give 400 percent away to the rest of the state." The failure of state government to fund urgently needed transportation projects in Northern Virginia is also a perennial issue that often causes consternation in the region's politicians and citizens.
Secession would require consent from the
Virginia General Assembly and the admission of a new state by the U.S. Congress, neither of which is a practical possibility. Consequently, the idea is a rhetorical one used to express frustration with the treatment of Northern Virginia by the state government as well as the occasional opposing political sentiments between it and the rest of Virginia.
Culture
Northern Virginia is considered to be more cosmopolitan in its culture than the rest of Virginia. This can be attributed to the movement of people from the rest of the country to the area and its location near Washington D.C, as well as the fact that more
urban areas in Virginia tend to have more frequent migration and mixing of cultures.
Northern Virginia's population is ethnically diverse with significant numbers of immigrants. There are large numbers of restaurants, and international food of nearly any type is easy to find. Immigrants have established many shops and many in ethnic centers, such as the
Eden Center. Some are highly-educated doctors, engineers, diplomats, and other professionals, while others work in construction, landscaping, airport services, restaurants and convenience stores, vendors, taxi drivers, custodial services, and parking garages.
The
Army of Northern Virginia during the
American Civil War was the primary army for the former
Confederate States of America. Important battlefields and other Civil War themed attractions dot the region, most notably
Manassas National Battlefield Park, and many area schools, roads, and parks are named for Confederate generals and statesmen.
Due to the proximity to the capital, many Northern Virginians go to Washington D.C. for cultural outings and nightlife. The
Kennedy Center is a popular place for performances as is
Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts near
Vienna.
Nissan Pavilion (near
Manassas), the Patriot Center at
George Mason University in
Fairfax, and the
Verizon Center in Washington serve as popular concert venues, and the Verizon Center also serves as the home of sporting events.
Smithsonian museums also serve as local cultural institutions with easy proximity to Northern Virginia, and the new Udvar-Hazy center of the
National Air and Space Museum at Dulles Airport is popular as well.
Tysons Corner Center ("Tysons I") is one of the largest malls in the country and is a hub for shopping in the area.
Tysons Galleria ("Tysons II"), its counterpart across Route 123, carries higher-end stores. Tysons Corner is the 12th largest business district in the United States. Other malls include Springfield Mall,
Fair Oaks Mall, the Mall at Manassas, and The
Fashion Centre at Pentagon City.
Dulles Town Center is the region's newest mall, serving the eastern
Loudoun County area.
Reston Town Center is a high-density mixed-use retail, commercial, and residential development located just off the 267 Toll Road in
Reston.
Potomac Mills, located in Prince William County, is one of the largest outlet malls in the region. The town of
Leesburg, in Loudoun County, is locally famous for its
outlet mall, Leesburg Corner Premium Outlets.
Since the mid-1990s, Loudoun County has become known as America's fastest-growing county, having grown by almost 50% from 2000 though 2005. Since the 2000 census, both Loudoun and Fairfax counties are the top two large
Highest-income counties in the United States by median household income. Loudoun County has branches of at least five higher education institutions.
Transportation
The area has two major airports,
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and
Washington Dulles International Airport. While flights from the older National Airport are restricted for distance, frequency, and flight paths due to the proximity to federal facilities, Dulles is the fastest-growing airport in the world, and as of this writing is number five in terms of aircraft movement also a hub for
United Airlines. In recent years it has become a major center for low-cost flights, as it is the primary hub of (now defunct)
Independence Air as well as a major hub for
jetBlue,
Ted, and others.
Commuters are served by the
Washington Metro subway and the
Virginia Railway Express, a
commuter railroad. Metro is the second-busiest subway system in the nation; only
New York City's
subway system carries more passengers. A
planned expansion project will, if built, extend the system past Dulles Airport. Bus service is provided by WMATA's Metrobus, and many local jurisdictions also provide bus service. Parking lots at metrorail stations fill up very early in the morning, but are gradually being expanded.
Virginia Railway Express commuter trains have also seen increased ridership but are plagued by frequent delays for various reasons.
Major highways include interstates
495 (
Capital Beltway),
95,
395, and
66; US routes
1,
29, and
50; and local routes
Fairfax County Parkway, Virginia Routes
7,
28,
120,
123,
193,
234,
236,
244,
544,
545, and
620, the
George Washington Memorial Parkway, and
Franconia-Springfield Parkway.
High-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes are used for commuters and buses in I-66 and I-95/395. (Also see
slugging.)
Northern Virginia suffers from severe road congestion. The congestion consistently ranks with
Los Angeles and
San Francisco, California as one of the worst three areas in the nation. To alleviate gridlock, local governments encourage using Metrorail,
HOV, carpooling, and other forms of mass transportation. The conditions are only getting worse, however, as the population skyrockets. The roads are one of the biggest local issues. The current reconstruction of the
Woodrow Wilson Bridge near Alexandria on the portion of the Capital Beltway which also carries Interstate 95 into Maryland (300,000 vehicles daily) will double the traffic lanes at that particular bottleneck area when completed in 2008. The complex
Springfield "mixing bowl" freeway junction is now seeing some relief as the massive interchange reconstruction was completed in 2007 with many new ramp configurations. Several public-private partnership proposals to increase capacities of the Beltway and Interstate 95 south of Springfield to be funded through collection of
tolls are under consideration by
VDOT.
On
November 5,
2002, voters rejected a
referendum to raise the
sales tax to pay for transportation improvements
[2]. The measure was criticized as a subsidy for developers, who would merely build more houses along the new roads and add to the congestion
[3].
In such a highly competitive and expensive region (much like urban California), many workers with families feel they cannot afford suitable homes near their jobs (and are unwilling to live in the
District), and so commute from more affordable, far outlying counties, which creates intolerable traffic congestion, as does the limited number and capacity of bridges over the
Potomac River (no new bridges have been built since 1965). Unfortunately, all proposals to add more Potomac bridge crossings (such as near
Leesburg or
Quantico as part of a long-proposed "outer beltway") are opposed by communities near the suggested bridge sites who want continued peace and quiet, and by Marylanders who fear that new bridges would bring new housing development to "open spaces". Furthermore, large-area, low-density residential zoning restrictions in parts of Fairfax County such as
Great Falls,
Dranesville,
Clifton and
Fairfax Station, also prevent people from living near the highest-density job centers, forcing commuters to leapfrog out to find housing instead in
Prince William,
Loudoun, and outside of Northern Virginia to a lesser extent Stafford, Fauquier, Warren, Clarke, Shenandoah, and Frederick counties and causing worse traffic. Workers from these outlying counties face daily commutes that exceed well over an hour each way.
A jurisdictional restriction that prohibits Virginia-based versus Washington and Maryland-based taxicab companies from picking up passengers on their empty return trips to and from Dulles and Reagan National airports also needlessly adds millions of additional trips to congested roads. A U.S. Army proposal made in 2006 to relocate 18,000 additional employees to
Fort Belvoir, which is already choked with traffic and has few public transportation options, is the newest major area of concern to planners.
Education
Fairfax County has an outstanding public school system, including
Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, an award-winning
magnet school. James W. Robinson, Jr. Secondary School, the largest public school in the Commonwealth, is also located in Fairfax County.
Although Northern Virginia contains about 25% of the Commonwealth's population, there are only a handful of colleges and universities in the region. The largest and most well-known is
George Mason University in
Fairfax, the second-largest public university in Virginia. Other higher education institutions include
Northern Virginia Community College (affectionately known as NOVA) in
Annandale (with several branch campuses throughout Northern Virginia), and
Marymount University in north
Arlington. A relatively new addition to the roster of colleges and universities in the region is the
University of Northern Virginia in
Manassas, established in 1988. Several other universities have branch campuses in Loudoun County.
Economy
In recent decades, Northern Virginia has become filled with technology companies, especially in the
Dulles Technology Corridor. The best-known of these technology companies is
AOL. This economic boom has attracted many people from outside the region, from all over the country and throughout the world. The region has recovered relatively quickly from the effects of the
dot-com bubble because of increased defense spending in the wake of the
September 11th attacks and
Iraq War. Other large corporate employers include
ExxonMobil near Falls Church,
Micron in
Manassas, and
Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) in
Reston.
It also is a desirable spot for government and defense contractors due to the location of
the Pentagon and close proximity to the national capital.
The Federal government is a major employer in Northern Virginia, which is home to numerous government agencies; for example,
Central Intelligence Agency headquarters and
the Pentagon (headquarters of the
Department of Defense) are located there, as are
Fort Myer,
Fort Belvoir,
Marine Corps Base Quantico,
Patent and Trademark Office, and the
United States Geological Survey. All of this tends to shield Northern Virginia from the effects of recession.
After the large
shopping malls such as
Potomac Mills and
Tysons Corner, the sites which attract the greatest numbers of visitors are
Washington, D.C., and
Civil War battlefields.
Old Town Alexandria is popular with its noted historic townhouses, restaurants, gift shops, artist studios, and cruise boats. The waterfront and outdoor recreational amenities such as biking and running trails (the
Washington and Old Dominion Rail Trail is the longest paved path in the U.S.; the
Mount Vernon Trail, and trails along various stream beds are also popular), whitewater and sea kayaking, and rock climbing areas are focused along the
Potomac River, but are also found at
other locations in the Baltimore-Washington metropolitan area. Scenic
Great Falls Park and historic
Mount Vernon (which opened a new visitor center in 2006) are especially noteworthy.
Woodbridge is home to two minor-league sports franchises, the
Northern Virginia Royals soccer team and the
Potomac Nationals baseball team.
See also
★
Northern Virginia trolleys
Further reading
★
D.C. Dotcom - TIME
★
The Federal Job Machine - TIME
External links
★
Northern Virginia Regional Commission
★
Northern Virginia Transportation Authority
References
★ Melton, R.H.:
Voters Reject Roads Tax: Defeat Is a Major Loss for Gov. Warner, ''
The Washington Post'',
November 6,
2002.
★ Schulte, Bridget and Jenkins, Chris L.:
So Close, Yet So Far: Once Solidly Part of the South, the Old Dominion Now Encompasses a Widening Cultural Chasm, ''The Washington Post'',
November 16,
2006