Fairfax County

Fairfax County is a suburb of Washington, DC, in Virginia. It often trades places with next-door neighbor Loudoun County as the nation's wealthiest county.

Cities

In Virginia, incorporated cities are politically completely independent of their counties. County law does not apply in incorporated cities (but may apply in incorporated towns); the only local law in incorporated cities is city law.

Inside the Beltway

  • 🌍 Annandale Home to DC's "Koreatown" and some of the best Korean food you'll ever have outside of Korea.
  • 🌍 McLean CIA Headquarters amidst a sea of McMansions and Republican congressmen.
  • 🌍 Springfield "All roads lead to Springfield" β€” Not a fabulous destinationβ€”more of an urban/suburban messβ€”but there are still some really great Asian and Latino restaurants sprinkled throughout all the strip malls. Has land on both sides of the Beltway.

Outside the Beltway

Get in

By plane

For more information on these airports, and on getting into Fairfax County by plane, see the "Get in" section of Washington DC.

By car

  • From Washington, DC go South on I-395 or I-66. Or cross on Memorial Bridge, Key Bridge, or Chain Bridge, to the George Washington Parkway. Or take I-295 South to I-95 South/I-495 West, and cross the Wilson Bridge.
  • From the Northeast including Southeast Washington DC, Prince George's County, and Baltimore: take I-95 South/I-495 West, across the Wilson Bridge. Or, take the Baltimore-Washington Parkway (I-295) South, connect to I-95 South/I-495 West, and cross the Wilson Bridge.
  • From the Northwest (Montgomery County, MD) take I-495 South, across the Legion Bridge.
  • From the South (Richmond, VA) take I-95 North.
  • From the West take I-66 East.

By train

WMATA (DC Metro), VRE commuter trains, and Amtrak all serve Fairfax County.

Get around

There are a few public transport options in the county:

However, this area is mostly car-centric; expect the public transport routes from point A to point B to be impractical to use all the time.

By car

  • The National Capital area (including Fairfax County) is the 9th largest metropolitan area in the U.S., but has the 5th worst traffic congestion in the U.S.
  • Both I-95 and U.S. Route 1 pass through Fairfax County, on their way from Maine to Florida.
  • I-95, the major North-South Interstate on the East Coast, joins the I-495 Beltway to points South, at the Springfield Interchange (a.k.a. the Mixing Bowl).
  • The Southwestern portion of the Capital Beltway (I-495) runs through Fairfax County. The Legion Bridge connects to Montgomery County, MD, in the North. The Wilson Bridge connects to Southeast Washington, DC, and Prince George's County, MD, to the East.
  • I-395 runs from the Springfield Interchange Northeast to Washington, DC.
  • I-66 runs from the West to Washington, DC.
  • U.S. Route 1, the original North-South highway on the East Coast, runs due North through Alexandria and Arlington to Washington, DC, and South to Prince William County, VA, passing through downtown shopping districts all the way.
  • U.S. Route 50, the original East-West transcontinental highway, passes through Fairfax County on its way from California to Maryland. It joins I-66 to cross into Washington, DC, on the Roosevelt Bridge.
  • Fairfax County Parkway is a North-South highway, West of the Beltway.
  • Inside the Beltway, major streets move in seemingly random directions, with heavy stop and go traffic. It may seem as though they're all named Chain Bridge, Lee, and/or Jackson!

See

The Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts is a performing arts center in Vienna.

The Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center - National Air and Space Museum in Chantilly houses many air/spacecraft, including the SR-71 "Blackbird" spy plane, the Concorde supersonic jet and the space shuttle "Enterprise".

Do

Biking and walking

Go next

  • Washington, D.C. is just across the Potomac River, featuring the Washington Monument, Lincoln Memorial, Jefferson Memorial, Smithsonian Institution, White House, US Capitol Building, Supreme Court and the Library of Congress.
  • 🌍 Alexandria While bigger than just its historic center, Old Town Alexandria is a great tourist destination for shopping, dining, boating, and colonial history. It has a beautiful historic district on King St, by its port on the Potomac.
  • 🌍 Arlington Popularly thought of as southwest D.C. (which it historically was). Officially a county, but if counted as a city (which it basically is): It would be the fourth-largest city in the state, ahead of Richmond, and potentially first in cultural vibrancy. Features the Pentagon, and Arlington National Cemetery.
  • 🌍 Falls Church β€” Vietnamese and Cantonese dining par excellence.
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