Archive for May, 2009

Agenda posted for Planning Board Worksession

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

The Montgomery County Planning Board does much of its work on the White Flint Sector Plan in worksessions organized around topics. The topic for the next worksession, scheduled for 9AM on Thursday, May 21, is the new Design Guidelines, with an eye toward working through the Guidelines on a district by district basis (the Staff has divided the Sector into six Districts).

The agenda can be found at:

http://montgomeryplanningboard.org/agenda/2009/documents/20090521_White_Flint.pdf

NRC Best Place to Work

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

The Nucelar Regulatory Commission is the largest employer in the White Flint area, and is a member of Friends of White Flint. Today’s Washington Post had a front-page article on the best federal agencies to work for, and NRC was at the top of the list, with even higher employee satisfaction than in the last survey. Not mentioned in the survey was NRC’s successful efforts to encourage its employees to use transit; NRC has seen transit ridership increase to half its workforce.

The Post article can be found at:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/19/AR2009051903621.html?hpid%3Dtopnews&sub=AR

Additional Comments about Article on “Movement to Reduce Dependence on Cars” which was posted on 5/12

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

This article highlights the type of visionary thinking that is happening around the Nation and the World.   Our lives and built environment encourage car use.  My wife and I have lived full and part time in New York, Boston and Philly and we didn’t own a car in any of those three cities.  It was only when we moved to DC 6 years ago that we gave in.  We live in the heart of the city near Dupont Circle but because our jobs are spread throughout the region we needed at least one car.  For 5 years before joining Federal Realty, I drove to work.  Even if I had a meeting that was metro accessible, I didn’t even stop to think about public transit because my car had become an extension of me.  It had all of my stuff in it, it felt comfortable, I liked my music, etc… 

 In July when I started my job with Federal Realty I assumed we would get a second car.  For a month I drove to work, each day trying to beat the time it took me the previous day. I tried 6 different routes and drove as fast as possible to see if I could shave my commute by a minute or two down to 35 minutes.  Looking back, it wasn’t safe, it wasn’t comfortable, and it made my commute filled with pressure.  The unpredictability of the home commute made things even worse.  It ranged from 35 minutes with the wind at my back to an hour if the beltway was backed up. 

 When my wife went back to work from maternity leave, given the economy, I decided to give Metro a try.  The trip is a dependable 45 minutes round trip door to door no matter what.  For the first week or two I would sprint to the metro from my home to get it down to 41 or 42 minutes, but in the end, over time, I have adjusted my expectations and now take pleasure in the 20 minutes of reading that I get done in each direction every day!!!  I have read more books in the past 10 months than I had in the previous 2 years!  While it was a difficult adjustment at first, now I find myself purposefully not taking the car even when it is available.  It sits in the garage on days that neither my wife nor I need it.  I also now use metro for shorter trips during the day.  For the first few months, there was always a negotiation because if I had a meeting outside the office, and forgot to alert my wife far enough in advance, one of us would have to find an alternate method to get to work.  Now, I have become used to travelling to meetings in Bethesda, Silver Sprint, White Flint, and Rockville by mass transit.  It truly is a nice, enjoyable, hassle free, and pressure free way to travel.  I have had my bad days here and there and some delays, but nothing compared to the unpredictability of driving! 

 So, while this is just my story, I have learned quite a bit.  Mass transit usage is social engineering.  Breaking the car habit is really hard at first, but once someone makes the effort, there are some rewards to getting out of the old tin can!  Now, when I do take the car (3 to 4 times per month) it just doesn’t have the same allure as it once did…. and I am ok with that!

 Evan

Gazette article about the Friends of White Flint

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Below is the link to a really nice article about the Friends of White Flint community written by Jen Beasley of the Montgomery County Gazette.  Enjoy!

http://www.gazette.net/stories/05132009/bethnew194440_32535.shtml

You are not alone, Part III

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

   The FLOG continues to grow. Last week, we averaged more than 350 readers (”unique viewers”) every day. We expect readership to slow a little during the next two weeks, since the Montgomery County Planning Board has no meetings scheduled on the White Flint Sector Plan.

     Many thanks to our readers, and we welcome you to participate as well as read.

Barnaby Zall

Article on Movement to Reduce Dependence on Cars

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

The May 11, 2009, New York Times included an article on movements to reduce dependence on the automobile in Europe and in the United States.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/12/science/earth/12suburb.html?_r=1&emc=eta1

New Urbanism Takes Off

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

     The Congress for the New Urbanism, www.cnu.org, has released a new video on New Urbanism, highlighting the “greatest threat to our civilization:” . . . . the cul-de-sac. The video won its contest to explain visually the philosophy of New Urbanism. “What we build is our greatest threat . . . or our greatest hope.” New Urbanism is the philosophy behind the White Flint Sector Plan.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGJt_YXIoJI

Board to Finish White Flint Plan by June 18?

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

At today’s Montgomery County Planning Board meeting, a tentative schedule was announced by chief White Flint staffer Piera Weiss to meet the Board’s anticipated deadline of having the White Flint Plan sent to the County Council by July. Weiss suggested that on June 18, the staff would provide the Board with a “redline rewrite” of the Public Hearing draft, incorporating the changes made since January. The Board would then work on the redline version and produce the final draft by July.

In the meantime, there’s a brief pause in the hectic schedule. No official meetings are scheduled on the White Flint Plan for two weeks. The next meeting is scheduled for May 21; the topic will be the new design guidelines, with the Board going through the White Flint Sector, “district” by district. Each district is a separate area of the sector, as described in the Public Hearing Draft of the Plan.

I expect the FLOG postings to be slower during this hiatus. But beginning in late May, the pace should be rapid again, as the Board steams toward a final White Flint plan.

Barnaby Zall

Design Guidelines Garner Applause

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Live blogging from the May 7, 2009, worksession of the Montgomery County Planning Board on the White Flint Sector Plan. Current topic is the new design guidelines.

John Carter, Chief Urban Design and Preservation Division, who has been involved with the White Flint Plan from the start three years ago, with Luis Estrada, project urban designer for White Flint, introduced the Guidelines. Hanson: this is not regulatory, just to give an idea of what is expected. Robinson: there’s a question. Some of these seem pretty prescriptive. Hanson: I don’t think we want that. The Plan will say the limits and maximum density. Carter: More detail will come as we go district-by-district through the guidelines. This is the glue that holds the vision together.

Carter: Not done yet, still being worked over. Once you finish the Plan, the design guidelines will catch up with that. We’ll bring the other agencies in so this is a county-wide agreement. Spirit this comes to you is in producing a lot of stuff. We’ll show how the districts fit together.

Estrada: describe streets, open space and buildings as they affect the public realm. Starting with the composite map results of a few weeks ago, to help us understand how to frame the guidelines. “Developer’s Composite” photo. Start with public roads, supplemented by proposed roads, in between a network of public open spaces. Promenades linking east-west and north-south, and a recreational loop. Expanded Loop from original plan to better serve all neighborhoods, especially with extensions. Adding local trails and historical sites (adds Montrose Schoolhouse). Tied to regional trails.

Estrada: 4 different walkways to four corners of the sector. Establishes character. First is Metro to Civic Green through Mid-Pike Plaza. Definition of the blocks along the corridor will be compatible, and culminating at the civic Green, the major gathering space for the sector.

Second walk: starts at Metro to Maple Ave to Metro East corner. Through North Bethesda Center, to existing developments along Citadel, to the new development.

Third walk: metro to conference center to wall Park to North Bethesda Marketplace.

Fourth walk is along the Pike to White Flint Mall. along the Promenade to connect north-south. envisioning more contemporary buildings since the right of way is substantial. More architecture character is possible.

Fifth walk is through White Flint Mall itself, through the various neighborhoods of that development. From the front of the Mall to the north and around to the new Park site to the east. More residential as you move closer to the edge of the district which are adjacent to residential neighborhoods. A new park to the south of the Mall.

Area 1 issues: improving pedestrian environment along Rockville Pike; wide sidewalks, underground utilities, and safe pedestrian intersections. Area 2: 355 and Old Georgetown Rd; street beautification, more mid-block connections and transitions. Area 3: Pike and Nicholson; same as area 2. Area 4, by Mall, transitions with existing neighborhoods. As move to district/neighborhood levels, have a series of maps to describe.

Carter: conceptualization of aspirations and then applications. Cmsnr Robinson: very helpful format. consistent across neighborhoods. As you do district organization, you get lots of these things coming together. Estrada: Still more work to do. Carter: this doesn’t go in the Plan, but it’s an analytical tool to show how these things go into the public realm.

The Board applauded the presentation.

Cmsnr Cryor: pedestrians crossing the street? Carter: need to redesign the intersection to protect and accommodate the pedestrians. Cmsnr Presley: can we insure that these aren’t going to be undone by DoT. Carter: we have to make this an Urban District. DoT has different models. Hanson: You can do that in the Master Plan. Carter: once do that, you can direct the rest of the improvements. Once you build a new building, utilities must be underground. It’s the big lines to get those underground, so need some power to get that done. But we’ve been pretty successful in other areas. Presley: I would be more comfortable if everyone were to commit, because I know how often these things don’t come true. Carter: they won’t work unless we bring in the other agencies, if we just do this project by project. Very big dollar projects.

Alfandre: plan is to finish by June 18? Piera Weiss, chief White Flint planner: we come back to you on June 18 with a redline rewrite of the whole plan, and then you come back to us with any changes.

Cryor: Montrose Parkway. Are we going to change that? Busses? Weiss: bus bays at Metro station. Carter: whole loop. Dan Hardy: chief Vision Division, and head transportation planner: in the WF Sector Plan, Parkway is the northern boundary. Will have a signalized intersection on the east. On the western part, stays at grade, and what’s already built is what will be there. Did raise the question back in February about adding more development in White Flint which would have required more from the western area, but that has changed. Cryor: so 270/Fortune Parc area is much in the future? Not walking distance. Whose getting on the bus? I never thought it was going down there. Hardy: we’re not recommending any reconstruction of Montrose Parkway. Was there enough there to add a BRT lane? No, but you could add more bus service. Most of the people going on the Parkway during peak periods are going to No. Bethesda.

Alfandre: aside from the Pike issues you showed earlier, are there other problems in the grid? Carter: we’ll see those as we go through the districts. Alfandre: we need to look carefully at the MARC station area, because one area where we have an opportunity to connect a neighborhood. Heirarchy of open spaces? Carter: we have that. In the guidelines in the aspirations.

New Park by White Flint Mall

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Live blogging from May 7, 2009, worksession of the Montgomery County Planning Board. Live streaming video is available at www.montgomeryplanningboard.org.

Piera Weiss, lead White Flint planner. Last week, the Board asked for more information on parks in the White Flint sector. Recommendation on taking more property from White Flint Mall and White Flint Plaza. On Monday night, the Board realigned the “ring road” to the southeast of the Mall property to avoid a 90 degree turn, but the new road runs through part of that property. As a result, the only place for the park would be on the Mall property. Approximately 3.8 acre site. Plus the Garrett Park Estate - White Flint Park letter (discussed in an earlier FLOG post) of May 4, said this could be a buffer site. Cmsnr Robinson: could we ask for part of the property? Chairman Hanson: that’s getting ahead of our discussion. Cmsnr Alfandre: we get inundated by letters like this because we’re not looking comprehensively. We need to spend time looking at the connectivity. Decisions will always come back to haunt us until we see how they all fit. Hanson: go with tentatively designating it as a park. Board agrees, tentatively, to set the parcel to the east of White Flint Mall as a new park.

The site is flat enough and large enough to host a small ball field, which is a major need in the Sector and in the county as a whole.