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Great wealth in Great Falls Nowhere in the Washington area is wealth more concentrated than Great Falls. Sixteen percent of households in the Northern Virginia enclave earn at least $500,000 a year.
A sign shows the plans for a new 25,000-square-foot home at 494 River Bend Road.
Matt McClain
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For The Washington Post
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Grand homes in Great Falls. The area was rural a couple of decades ago; about 15,000 people live there now.
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Karen Washburn walks her dogs in Great Falls Riverbend Park.
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Juanita and Joe Pierson dance at Summer Concerts on the Green in Great Falls Village.
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Summer Concerts on the Green in Great Falls.
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Hindy Mokhiber, left, and Gigi el-Bayoumi enjoy one of the summer concerts.
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Bob Morris, who runs a string of golf courses, shows some of his vintage cars in his garage.
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Bob Morris behind the wheel of his 1955 Austin-Healey.
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Expensive cars are a passion for many Great Falls residents. Some of them gather to look over one another's cars on Saturdays.
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The Saturday gatherings of car aficionados provide opportunities for schmoozing and networking.
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Bob Brown of Leesburg walks by his 1959 Cadillac Eldorado Seville that was once owned by singer Hank Williams Jr. Brown is holding a Williams doll.
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Karen and Ian Landy live on 17.5 acres in Great Falls. He sold a tech company to Cisco Systems for more than $100 million in the late 1990s. He enjoys racing antique cars.
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Karen Landy, center, and Gail Dell, right, take riding lessons from Vanessa Doyle, left, on Landy's property.
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Karen Landy prepares for a riding lesson with one of her horses.
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Ian Landy walks on his property in Great Falls.
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Ian Landy in one of his garages.
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Ian Landy with sons Sebastian and Forrest at Virginia International Raceway in Alton, where they participated in a race.
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Peter Garahan works on his Ferrari 360 Spider at his home in Great Falls. Like Ian Landy, Garahan made a fortune by selling a tech company to Cisco Systems.
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Mike Kearney, owner of Katie's Coffee House in Great Falls, talks with customers Sara, left, and Joan Darnell.
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The Washington Post
Kimberly Sisco, a struggling bartender, at home with son Wyatt.
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The Washington Post
While many of her wealthy neighbors have weathered the recession without too much trouble, Kimberley Sisco has struggled. Her graphic-design job was outscourced overseas, and her husband has had difficulty finding work. She's shown with son Wyatt in the kitchen of the Great Falls cottage they rent.
Tracy A. Woodward
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Kimberley Sisco plays with son Wyatt.
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The Washington Post
Wyatt Sisco practices with his Little League team. When his mom asked to pay his registration fee in installments, the league waived the fee.
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Kimberley Sisco tends bar in Tysons Corner. She and her husband are barely scraping by. "I don't go out to eat," she says. "I don't take vacations. I haven't shopped for new clothes, other than for my son, in seven years."
Tracy A. Woodward
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The Washington Post
Sisco at work in Tysons Corner.
Tracy A. Woodward
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The Washington Post
Sisco in Tysons Corner. She needs 18 credits to get a degree from American University but doesn't know if she can find the money and time to return to school. She says, "I'm so tired most of the time, it's enough just to get through each week right now."
Tracy A. Woodward
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The Washington Post
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