Each week, “Just Reduced” spotlights properties in Arlington County whose price have been cut over the previous week. The market summary is crafted by Arlington Realty, Inc. Maximize your real estate investment with the team by visiting www.arlingtonrealtyinc.com or calling 703-836-6000 today!

Please note: While Arlington Realty, Inc. provides this information for the community, it may not be the listing company of these homes.

As of December 8, there are 119 detached homes, 26 townhouses and 184 condos for sale throughout Arlington County. In total, 26 homes experienced a price reduction in the past week, including:

112 S Barton Street

Please note that this is solely a selection of Just Reduced properties available in Arlington County. For a complete list of properties within your target budget and specifications, contact Arlington Realty, Inc.


wagamama Expands Its Culinary Lineup with a New Bar Menu

wagamama has introduced a new bar menu that broadens its culinary offerings beyond its signature dishes. The refreshed selection centers on small plates and cocktails that highlight contemporary Asian flavors and encourage exploration through a range of distinct pairings.

Small Plates with a Modern Edge

The new dishes emphasize bold seasonings and shareable portions. Among the featured items is a crisp roti canai served with a warm curry dipping sauce that brings together rich spices and a delicate bread texture. Korean BBQ wings appear on the menu as well, prepared with a sweet and smoky glaze and balanced by a cool yuzu mint yogurt. Another new option, the wagyu-mama sliders, uses high-quality beef accented with a savory house glaze to create a compact but flavorful bite.

A Cocktail Program Designed for Variety

wagamama’s beverage additions are just as prominent. The Thai chili margarita blends heat with citrus for a sharp and refreshing profile. A lychee and blood orange sangria offers a fruit-forward alternative with a lighter finish. The ube espresso martini rounds out the selection, combining the richness of coffee with the subtle sweetness and color of ube to create a distinctive stylish drink.

All of the menu items are priced under ten dollars and the bar menu is available all day.

With its energetic atmosphere, modern design, and a location right in the heart of Clarendon, wagamama is ready to become your new go-to spot for after-work drinks, date night, or weekend lounging. The new wagamama bar menu brings bold flavors and good energy to every occasion.

wagamama Arlington
2950 Clarendon Blvd, Arlington, VA 22201
Visit anytime. The bar menu is available all day, every day.
wagamama.us


This regularly scheduled sponsored column is written by Carolanne Korolowicz, Arlington-based Realtor and Arlington resident. If you would like to work with Carolanne in Northern Virginia and the greater D.C. Metro area, you can reach him directly at [email protected].

This holiday season marks my first as a toddler mom. The concept of Santa and the significance of the celebrations are far beyond my son’s understanding, but the themes, images and magic are starting to click. Besides the constant supply of sugary treats, my son is mesmerized by the glow of a Christmas light.

As someone whose holidays have always been spent in Arlington, I wanted to relive my earliest memories of driving around sleepy neighborhood roads to see displays of holiday cheer. My husband and I packed up the kids, my brother joined too, to experience the nostalgia and see Christmas through a child’s eyes.

Of course, the first stop was 1713 N. Quebec Street, the famous “Christmas House”. For over 30+ years, the owner – who is considered an unofficial resident historian – has created a winter wonderland in the heart of Cherrydale. Built in 1898, the Dutch Colonial acts as the perfect backdrop for this temporary Santa’s Workshop.

 

My son was lifted up to overlook the vast array of vintage Santas, a life-size Thomas: The Train Engine, Garfield with his lasagna in tow, and a toy-shop window display. As I look out onto the scene I’ve admired for three decades (many years where I, too, had to be held up to get a decent view), the magic was less about the mythical characters, but the humans behind it. First, the logistics of pulling this off year after year are impressive. But mostly, I was taken aback by the dedication and gift these neighbors continue to give. (more…)


For two flavorful years, Soul Thai Kitchen & Bar has been serving the Arlington communities with authentic Thai comfort food, creative cocktails, and a warm, rustic atmosphere — including a rotating selection of local craft beers from the DMV area (DC, Maryland, and Virginia) that celebrate our vibrant local community.

As we celebrate our 2-Year Anniversary, we want to thank our loyal guests who have supported us since day one — you are the soul of Soul Thai. 

This holiday season, we’re inviting everyone — our beloved regulars and new friends alike — to come celebrate Christmas and our anniversary together! Enjoy festive Thai dishes, cozy cocktails, local DMV craft beers, and the warm feeling of being part of our Soul Thai family.

Instagram : @soulthaikitchenandbar
Facebook : @soulthaikitchenandbar


Applications are open until January 14, 2026

Arlington residents can get FREE native trees planted on their property through EcoAction Arlington’s tree planting program. All private property owners and managers of apartments, condos, and places of worship have an opportunity to receive a free native tree, which will be planted on their property during the spring 2026 planting season.

We have a goal to increase the tree canopy in Arlington. Trees provide cooling shade that can reduce your energy bills, improve air quality, and increase your property value. Moreover, trees help stormwater management by intercepting rainfall and reducing stress on the stormwater system. Large canopy trees in our program qualify for a 5% stormwater utility credit – the number of trees needed varies from 1 to 4 depending on your property size. More information and available species are on our website.

Applications close January 14, 2026 – Don’t wait, there is a detailed application process and limited inventory – apply today at www.ecoactionarlington.org to secure your free native tree for spring 2026 planting. Need help with your application? Contact us at [email protected].


This article is written and sponsored by Arlington Economic Development.

BizLaunch is proud to present the 2026 BizLaunch Transformational Challenge and PitchFest for a third year, a five-week journey designed to help small businesses and startups refine their models, strengthen their marketing and prepare to pitch its business with confidence. Hosted in partnership with SCORE and the Industrial Development Authority, this event is more than a workshop series — it’s a launchpad for growth. Past participants have seen their business grow after participating in the program.

Beginning Jan. 30, 2026, participants will dive into sessions covering business planning, marketing strategies, financial projections and leveraging AI for business success. Each week builds toward the ultimate goal: The PitchFest in April 2026, where entrepreneurs will present their business to a panel of judges for a chance to win up to $12,000 in cash prizes.

What makes this challenge unique is its transformational approach. By combining expert instruction with hands-on practice, BizLaunch teaches entrepreneurs to compete and thrive in today’s competitive marketplace. Registration fees directly fuel the investor pool, meaning every participant contributes to the high-stakes pitch competition that could redefine their business future.

Whether you’re a startup looking to validate your idea or an established small business aiming to scale, this event offers the tools, mentorship and exposure you need. Set aside time for homework, bring your best ideas and prepare to transform your business.

Early bird registration ends Dec. 15, for this transformational experience to set your business up for success in 2026. Sign up today!


Each week, “Just Reduced” spotlights properties in Arlington County whose price have been cut over the previous week. The market summary is crafted by Arlington Realty, Inc. Maximize your real estate investment with the team by visiting www.arlingtonrealtyinc.com or calling 703-836-6000 today!

Please note: While Arlington Realty, Inc. provides this information for the community, it may not be the listing company of these homes.

As of December 1, there are 129 detached homes, 32 townhouses and 187 condos for sale throughout Arlington County. In total, 15 homes experienced a price reduction in the past week, including:

3708 N Vermont N

Please note that this is solely a selection of Just Reduced properties available in Arlington County. For a complete list of properties within your target budget and specifications, contact Arlington Realty, Inc.


This regularly scheduled sponsored column is written by Eli Tucker, Arlington-based Realtor and Arlington resident. If you would like to work with Eli and his team in Northern Virginia and the greater D.C. Metro area, you can reach him directly at [email protected].

I recently read a surprisingly fun, interesting book on housing (de)regulation, Build, Baby, Build: The Science and Ethics of Housing Regulation (2024) by Bryan Caplan, an economics professor at our very own George Mason University. It’s a graphic novel, so you’re essentially reading an econ comic book rather than a dense policy text. It’s an easy, worthwhile read that I found relevant to our current Missing Middle housing/densification discussions and recommend it.

The book makes a clear, unapologetic case for radically loosening housing (and all building) regulations—height limits, density caps, parking minimums, etc. If you lean libertarian, you’ll be smiling the whole time. If you’re more skeptical of deregulation, you’ll at least walk away with a sharper understanding of why so many economists, planners, and “YIMBY” advocates keep calling to densify your neighborhood.

Overlaps With New ‘Abundance Liberalism’ Politics

Caplan’s arguments overlap a lot with ideas in another new, popular book, Abundance (2025) by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson. They’re coming at housing deregulation from a more political viewpoint in what’s referred to as “abundance liberalism” or “supply-side progressivism”, but the core housing regulation message is similar:

  • We don’t build enough homes where people want to live due to over-regulation, especially in blue, high-opportunity metro areas
  • Well-intentioned regulation in zoning, environmental review, permitting, etc make the right construction too slow and too expensive
  • If we want broadly available prosperity, we must make it easier and faster to build what the market wants in the places where people most want to live and work

As the Democratic Party searches for a stronger identity, many are grabbing onto the Abundance concepts and Build, Baby, Build is a good way of learning about the housing-specific ideas, although the book takes a more extreme viewpoint than you’ll likely heard from most Abundance-believers. You don’t have to agree with the authors, but if you want to understand where a lot of the pro-building, pro-density conversation is coming from, especially inside the Democratic Party, it’s a good education.

Housing Policy Changes Are Coming Locally, Regionally, Nationally

In late 2024, Freddie Mac estimated that the US is short about 3.7 million homes. The national/regional/local housing shortage is the primary driver of our affordability crisis (note: interest rates aren’t to blame, we are hovering around the 30-year average mortgage rate), which has become a frequent talking point amongst families and politicians.

Many ARLnow readers are familiar with Arlington’s “Missing Middle” policy, in which exclusively single-family zoning was eliminated in 2023 across the County to allow for 2-6 unit properties (and has since gotten stuck in a legal tug-of-war), but similar bans on exclusionary zoning and/or promotion of upzoning are happening elsewhere in the DMV including in Alexandria, Montgomery County, and Fairfax County.

These housing policy shifts are not just local to the DMV, they’re occurring in other localities, at the state level (e.g. California, Oregon, Washington) and at the national level by nudging/incentivizing localities away from exclusionary zoning and overregulation. Don’t be surprised to see the Trump Administration take this on in a more forceful way at some point in the next three years.

Whether or not you support these policy changes, I believe this is just the beginning of what will ultimately be a major shift in housing and building policy over the next 10-20 years. In Arlington, we may or may not end up with the current iteration of Missing Middle (personally, I’m hoping to see a better designed second version), but I’d bet my savings that housing policy in Arlington, our neighboring DMV communities, and many metro areas nationwide looks very different over the next two decades.

Your Neighborhood vs Their Growth

I find the “human nature” of the housing (de)regulation/zoning debate to be supremely interesting because self-interest (human nature) tends to override what would otherwise be agreeable politics. I believe most people who read Build, Baby, Build or the housing portion of Abundance will find political and social arguments they objectively agree with, but the readers who are comfortably living in a single-family (or low density) home in a relatively quiet neighborhood feel the threat to their sanctuary and oppose it on emotion.

That is not meant as a slight to readers/citizens who are emotionally opposed to trending housing politics (upzoning, abundance liberalism); it’s rooted in sound arguments and something deeply personal, which makes the housing debates so complex and difficult. Housing debates can cause a die-hard libertarian to picket against deregulation that is perfectly libertarian because of where they live and the home they own.

Give It a Read, Tell Me What You Think

Don’t get me wrong, Abundance is a great read, but it’s already very popular and it’s a longer read, so I’m recommending Build, Baby, Build because it’s lesser known, a much easier read (it probably took me 60-90 minutes), housing-focused, and it was written by a professor at our local University.

It’s worthwhile for anybody who feels strongly about housing policy, but particularly those who feel strongly opposed to policy like Missing Middle so you learn about the other side of your position. If you do read it, especially if you’re part of the latter group, I’d love to hear your thoughts (good or bad) at [email protected].

If you’d like to discuss buying, selling, investing, or renting, don’t hesitate to reach out to me at [email protected].

We have access to the most pre and off-market listings across the DMV of any brokerage and are happy to share what’s available with anybody who asks.

Below are some of our team’s pre/off-market listings, details and additional listings available by request:

  • Glebewood – 3BR/2.5BA/1,800 sqft – Duplex (1953) – 20th Pl N Arlington VA 22207
  • Ballston – 1BR+den/1BA/900 sqft – Condo (2008) – 888 N Quincy St Arlington VA 22203
  • Annandale – 4BR/3.2NA/2,500 sqft – Townhouse (2003) – Aspen Hill Ct Annandale VA 22003
  • Highland Park/Overlee Knolls – 6BR/5.5BA/5,000+ sqft – Detached Single Family (2025) – 22nd Rd N Arlington VA 22205
  • Falls Church – 4BR/3BA/1,800 sqft – Detached Single Family (1946) – Tyler Ave Falls Church VA 22042
  • Falls Church City – 4BR/4.5BA/3,000+ sqft – End-unit townhouse (1995) – Rees Pl Falls Church VA 22046
  • Arlington Heights – 5BR/5.5BA/5,000 sqft – Detached Single Family (2026) – South Highland St Arlington VA 22204

Eli and his team believe that your real estate needs should be managed by advisors, not salespeople. Their mission is to guide, educate, and advocate for their clients through real advice, hands-on support, and personalized service.


The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian’s Native Art Market returns to the museum in Washington, D.C., Dec. 6 and 7, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. This annual event features award-winning and innovative Indigenous artists from across the Western Hemisphere. Visitors can meet Indigenous artists and learn about traditional Native arts and contemporary Native creativity. Artists will offer authentic, hand-crafted works of art, including jewelry, fashion, photography and pottery. Serious collectors and casual shoppers will find one-of-a-kind pieces at a wide range of prices.

During breaks from shopping at Native Art Market, visitors can enjoy curator-led tours of three of the museum’s exhibitions, including its newest, “Water’s Edge: The Art of Truman Lowe.” Tours will be at 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 and 2:30 p.m. Dec. 6 and 7. Also on Dec. 7, the museum will offer a tour of the National Native American Veterans Memorial at 3:30 p.m. in commemoration of Pearl Harbor Day.

Young visitors can enjoy a make-and-take winter craft in the imagiNATIONS Activity Center located on the museum’s third floor.

The museum’s espresso bar will offer a special winter menu for both days of the art market. Must-try items include warm hibiscus juniper-spiced cider; champurrado, a traditional Mexican hot chocolate drink made with masa harina, and notes of cinnamon, nutmeg and piloncillo; and piñon, which are Mexican wedding cookies made with pine nuts.

This schedule is subject to change; visit AmericanIndian.si.edu for event updates.


This sponsored column is by Law Office of James Montana PLLC. All questions about it should be directed to James Montana, Esq., Janice Chen, Esq., and Taryn Druge, Esq., practicing attorneys at The Law Office of James Montana PLLC, an immigration-focused law firm located in Falls Church, Virginia. The legal information given here is general in nature. If you want legal advice, contact us for an appointment.

With Thanksgiving upon us, we really wanted to write about What We’re Grateful For. Unfortunately, the Trump Administration terminated Temporary Protected Status for Burma this week, so we’ll have to save gratitude for a later date. Right now, we want to make sure that our understand the nature of the termination, so Burmese TPS holders can consider next steps and everyone else understands the Trump Administration’s aggressive approach to TPS terminations.

Burma – also known as Myanmar – suffered a coup d’etat in February 2021. (Those of us who spend too much time on the internet may remember the exercise instructor, Khing Hnin Wai, who demonstrated an exercise routine while a military convoy sped down the highway behind her.) The coup nullified the results of the 2020 elections and put a military government fully in control of the government; the country’s top elected leaders, including Aung Sang Suu Kyi, were jailed on false charges. Protests against the junta mushroomed into a full-scale civil war between the regime and its opponents. The civil war is still ongoing today.

(more…)


This column is sponsored by Arlington Arts/Arlington Cultural Affairs, a division of Arlington Economic Development.

Looking for one-of-a-kind gifts this holiday season?

Every holiday season, savvy Arlington shoppers have found unique wares made by a collective of studio artists at the former LAC Studios on Langston Boulevard. This year in a brand-new location, the ANNUAL HOLIDAY SALE AND OPEN HOUSE takes place on Saturday (10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.) Dec. 6, 2025 at the Studios at Arlington Arts, located at 3700 South Four Mile Run Drive, Arlington, Virginia.

Shop local this holiday season and let Arlington’s extraordinary community of artists help you find that unique gift you’ve been looking for. The annual show and sale features ceramics, pottery and hand-pulled prints for sale by member-artists of The Studios at Arlington Arts (formerly LAC Studios), a program of the Arlington Cultural Affairs Division.

Participating artists include: Cinda Berry, Marion Engelbach, Helen Hensgen, Elke Seefeldt, Claudia Vess, Dana Lehrer Danze, Emily Shepardson, Gayle Weiss, J. S. Herbert,  Laura Fall, and other talented resident artists.

https://www.facebook.com/share/r/17QYVzVWz6/

Consolidating a broad range of cultural offerings under one roof, the newly built studios are in Arlington Cultural Affairs Division’s headquarters building which also contains the black box Theatre on the Run, two dance studios, rehearsal rooms and gallery space. Occupying the third of the building formerly housing the County’s Sports Division offices, the facility is now fully devoted to bringing cultural amenities to the Four Mile Run area.

This is just one of the many opportunities to engage with Arlington’s arts and culture community this winter. For the upcoming listing of Winter Arts Highlights, as well as for more information on the Annual Holiday Sale and Open House at The Studios at Arlington Arts, call 703-228-0560 or visit www.arlingtonarts.org.


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