Showing posts with label Westbard Sector Plan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Westbard Sector Plan. Show all posts

Monday, November 24, 2014

FOLLOW THE MONEY IN WESTBARD REDEVELOPMENT

Special Investigative Report

The pressure to transform the suburban Westbard area of Bethesda into an urban town center is not coming from residents. According to Montgomery County planner Marc DeOcampos, 85-90% of resident feedback during the week-long Westbard Sector Plan charrette was in favor of low-density development.

With those same residents panning the initial concept plan last week, and no clear incentives or perks to justify the negatives of urbanization on the Westbard area, where will any support for radical change come from in the Westbard Sector Plan process at the Planning Board and County Council levels?

Follow the money.

Developer Equity One, which owns all of the commercial properties along Westbard Avenue and Ridgefield Road, has partnered with local development firm EYA. EYA has donated many thousands of dollars to councilmembers. Here's a chart detailing checks the firm and its leaders have written to those members of the Montgomery County Council:

EYA (corporate)

2010
Nancy Floreen $250
Hans Riemer $500

2013
Hans Riemer $500

2014
Hans Riemer $500
Nancy Floreen $500

Bob Youngentob

George Leventhal $250
Nancy Floreen $1000
Hans Riemer $1100

LeRoy Eakin

Hans Riemer $500

Frank Connors

Hans Riemer $100

Aakash Thakkar 

Hans Riemer $743.12

The grand totals are $1750 for Councilmember Nancy Floreen (D-At-Large), $250 for Councilmember George Leventhal (D-At-Large), and a whopping $3,200 for Councilmember Hans Riemer (D-At-Large).

All 9 councilmembers will have the final say on the Westbard Sector Plan. If anyone keeps pushing for higher than 45' buildings in the plan, now that residents have made clear they are opposed, you'll know where it's coming from. Follow the money.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

SUBURBAN TO URBAN: WESTBARD PROPOSAL COULD ADD 4972 NEW RESIDENTS, 3758 CARS TO NEIGHBORHOOD

The future of the Westbard area of Bethesda is at a crossroads - will it remain a suburban residential area, with a commercial area that provides essential services to residents? Or will it become an urban area of concrete canyons, despite not being within walking distance of any Metro station? This is what ultimately the Montgomery County Council will decide. But right now, the planning process affords the opportunity for residents to be heard.

Residents have clearly spoken against the high-density proposal on the table now. As you can see in greater detail today in these images from the Plan Westbard web site, the plan as proposed would entirely change the character of the area from suburban to urban. 

This first image is virtually identical to what one would find in an urban town center near a Metro station, such as Bethesda Row or Rockville Town Square. The current sight lines to the forested tree canopy around the borders of the commercial area are all blocked by buildings. These 80' buildings will also impose themselves over the single-family homes of the Springfield neighborhood behind the Westwood Shopping Center, the Westbard Avenue homes on the other side of Ridgefield, and over the existing Kenwood Place condominiums.

If you are familiar with the Chevy Chase area, you will notice this second image is almost identical to what you would see while driving south into Friendship Heights - yet there is no Metro station to be found in the Westbard area.

There are a handful of non-conforming high-rises from an earlier time in the Westbard Sector Plan area. However, these are no longer allowed under current zoning, and placed far apart, they do not create the canyon effect clearly visible in the images immediately above. But the new structures combined with the existing towers would create a definitively urban character, out of context with the geographic location and low-density neighborhoods around it.

With schools and roads already jammed, it is unclear how this part of Bethesda could possibly handle the 4972 new residents and 3758 new cars that would be generated by 1927 new units. If anything, River Road would lose capacity under the new plan, with narrower lanes and new traffic signals. There's no guarantee of approval of a new elementary school on the current Little Falls Library site, as it is not large enough under current MCPS standards. And that doesn't even begin to address overcrowding at Pyle MS and Whitman.

Just the idea of 4972 more people, and 3758 new automobiles along two one-block strips boggles the mind. All of them will have to travel out of the Westbard area in the morning, as there is no new office space proposed for them to "live where they work," and no Metro within walking distance. And the "smart growth" folks say this scheme will reduce automobile use?

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

RESIDENTS REJECT WESTBARD CONCEPT SECTOR PLAN (PHOTOS)

The wraps came off the Westbard Concept Framework Plan last night at Westland Middle School, and residents quickly were asking them to be put back on again. "We just don't want it," might be the best summation of 90 minutes of resident feedback to Montgomery County planners. "This is the beginning, not the end," Westbard Sector Plan project manager John Marcolin said at the outset, as Phase 1 of a 2-year process came to a close.


Everything in the plan revealed Tuesday evening had mostly been seen last week, with the exception of a new 80' building shown for the area of the Westwood Shopping Center parking lot over by Westland. Previously, that site had been been proposed to have a height limit of 50', a significant difference. Given that Equity One's land area had only increased since Friday, with the deletion of a new elementary school site on the current Springhouse nursing home property, it was unclear what the developer had done over the weekend to suddenly gain 30' of bonus density. A second 80' tower would be allowed on Ridgefield Road where the Westwood Center II and Citgo currently stand, and all of River Road would be given a 75' height.

One connector road remains an option from Westbard Avenue to River Road along the Capital Crescent Trail, but an alternate map shows it cut-off from Westbard. That alternate map also shows an extension of Dorsey Lane to Little Falls Parkway. An extension of Butler Road to the parkway remains, as well. There will apparently be a parallel road alongside Westbard Circle at the border of Equity One's property with the Kenwood Place condos. Westland MS would still gain a new soccer field, but the impact on the forest area around the school was not discussed. Little Falls Library is shown moving into the "town square" at the current Westwood Shopping Center site, and its current location being used for a new elementary school.

With attendance estimated at 250 people, the 100 printed copies of the Concept Framework Plan quickly ran out, and dozens more metal chairs were wheeled in as the meeting got underway.
Westbard Avenue, or
Bethesda Row?

River Road, or
Friendship Heights?
Renderings of what Westbard Avenue and River Road would look like after full buildout of the plan drew gasps and grumbling from the audience. Essentially, they represented the worst nightmare of any resident or civic association who testified against the new zoning code rammed through by the Planning Board and Montgomery County Council, or the county's general shuffling toward urbanizing its suburbs. Simply unrecognizable, and a complete change in character from suburban to urban. It didn't help that the rendering of Westbard Avenue - using stock images, which of course (one would hope) won't be the architecture actually used - showed that same rounded off building you've seen in Rockville Town Square, Downtown Crown, and a host of other "town centers" in the area. In short, the images showed the "concrete canyon" many residents referred to last week during the many charrette meetings.

The estimates of new units were given at 1685-1927 at full buildout. That is less than the maximum plan (2529 units) shown last Thursday, but represents a stunning tripling of the current population and automobile count.
"That's just insane, and 
that's a nice word for it"
Out of 250 attendees, only one speaker supported the plan shown. Everyone else who rose to speak opposed the overall plan for a variety of reasons.

"This is my worst nightmare," said Sarah Morse, Executive Director of the Little Falls Watershed Alliance, which advocates for the stream branches that flow through the Westbard Sector Plan area. "I am squeezed out by high density everywhere." Noting the lack of green space, Morse asked, "Where are those people going to play? Where are the parks?"

A planner's laser pointing to the tiny postage stamp of a "town square" on the map elicited howls of laughter from the crowd. Along with an uncertain plan to create a new linear park along the beleaguered Willetts Branch Stream, that is it, as far as green space in the plan, which severely displeased residents last night. "I'm really so disappointed that this plan doesn't add any green space to speak of," said Mikel Moore, another LFWA board member.

Also missing from the map were gas stations, and several residents questioned that. Concerns of price gouging by any stations that would remain were cited, as has happened in downtown Bethesda. It is an issue that - as of this morning - no county official has taken seriously, even though it presents a public safety and emergency preparedness disaster as much as an economic one. When a weather or - God forbid - terror event strikes, where would people fill their gas tanks? With the map showing no gas stations left at all, the plan seems to encourage more driving, not less. "It is a concern," said Senior Urban Designer Paul Mortenson of Bethesda's vanishing gas stations.

Residents advocated for other services necessary to the community, from auto repairs to the Westwood Pet Center. "What this area provides is a service to the community," Norman Knopf told planners. "We want to keep that service." Another resident said, "we love the stores that are there now."

Schools were another sticking point, and planners did not have definitive answers about how MCPS would accommodate new students at all three levels in the already-overcrowded Whitman cluster. Even the plan to build a new elementary school on the library site is uncertain, as the land area is not large enough to meet current MCPS standards for an elementary school, much less ample enough to provide the outdoor facilities needed for recreation and other practical concerns. The spectre of redistricting had one mother wondering if the elementary school her daughter was looking forward to attending would still be available when the time comes.

Traffic was just about as much on residents' minds. With the density proposed, one resident predicted the plan couldn't "possibly result in anything but horrible traffic."

Since the impact on schools and roads is driven entirely by density, the urban growth shown came under sharp fire from residents. "What you're doing by adding density is creating a wasteland" of automobile congestion, argued one.
"Honestly, that's
ridiculous."
Residents were clear from the beginning that they wanted low-rise buildings. One last night referred to Poundbury, England, a new urbanist planned community with lower scale buildings. "I frankly love Poundbury," Mortenson replied. "It's a gorgeous town."

Many were upset by the perception that the entire process is being driven by developers. "I hope you're keeping in mind your constituency here," one resident warned. "Your constituency is us." "I feel defrauded," said another. "I expect more from Montgomery County than this."

In the most heated exchange of the evening, a resident of Springfield - a neighborhood directly behind the Equity One site - challenged planners to identify the specific problems in the Westbard area's zoning that the Concept Plan would correct. "You're not identifying any problems with the current zoning," which would cap heights at 45'. "What are they?" he demanded.

"We haven't identified all of them," Mortenson responded. "Surface parking is not ideal," he noted.

"We like it like it is!" shouted a resident from the crowd.

"I don't have an answer to the question," Mortenson said.

"Stop lying to us!" bellowed one audience member.

In a more mild-mannered wrap-up to the public comments, a gentleman from Nebraska said the problem with the process was that it was placing design and land use before public facilities. Since so many problems with the plan relate to lack of sufficient infrastructure capacity, he urged planners to "put all of this on hold," until the county can articulate its solutions to providing adequate public facilities. He cited the Doctrine of Comprehensive Planning as the model to follow.

How should planners proceed? Here are my thoughts:

First, I think the Charrette process was a valuable one. I grew up here, and even I learned some new things about the neighborhood over the last nine days. With planners' help, we've identified a lot of the problems and concerns, even if we don't have the solutions yet.

Second, there is one great proposal in the plan - the daylighting of Willetts Branch Stream, and the construction of a linear park and trail alongside it. I would be fantastic to see that happen. It might be nice to have a brand-new library, although I happen to like the current one. It would also be unfortunate to lose a forested library site, and end up with a bait-and-switch apartment building there instead of an elementary school.

But there's no reason that planners cannot salvage a workable plan from all of the work they and we  put in last week.

So keep the Willetts Branch Plan. Change the proposed zoning back to the current 45' maximum height on Westbard and River Road. Frankly, I'm not convinced we need 45' on all of that area myself. There's big money in shopping centers, especially in 20816.

We've been told that development needs to be greater in scale to be profitable. But this past weekend, a beautiful new shopping center opened in Upper Marlboro. The Osborne Shopping Center was closed after 20 years at 7583 Crain Highway, and replaced by...a new shopping center. No apartments. No townhouses. No residential component whatsoever. Just a fabulous new strip mall shopping center with plenty of free surface parking, and a brand new Safeway store anchoring it. The Osborne Shopping Center pretty much shoots down the argument that Equity One can't simply give us a better shopping center. Equity One would still have plenty of room to develop across the street at 45'.

The 80' heights of two buildings proposed are incompatible with the nearby single-family homes, as are the 75' heights on River for Kenwood. These buildings will impose themselves on backyards of people who have invested just as much in their properties as the developers. And with no Metro station at Westbard, the heights and density proposed are simply creating more automobile traffic.

Planners should make an explicit text and map recommendation to retain the gas stations along River Road, and at least one on Westbard. Period. With more cars being added, we have to have gas stations to fill them up.

Regarding schools, the plan should not be approved until MCPS has made clear exactly what capacity improvements or new school construction it will provide to meet the number of students generated by the new units. Can the library site actually work for a school? We need to know that, and what they'll do at the middle and high school levels, as well. Is redistricting ahead? Tell us the truth now, not later.

Planners, and Planning Director Gwen Wright, have acknowledged that Westbard is not a transit station community. The plan needs to better reflect that, as well. With no new office space proposed, virtually all new residents will be heading into the District each day for work. New units will require new capacity on River Road and Massachusetts Avenue. As of right now, no such project has been proposed. We need to hear specifics from the State Highway Administration as to what can be done. You could widen River Road, but that would require taking front lawns east of Little Falls Parkway, and the road narrows in DC, anyway. So what is the answer? Maybe it's that this area is currently built out, and its roads and schools can't handle major new development.

I don't think residents are asking as much of the Westbard area as planners seem to be. No one considers the commercial strips along River and Westbard to be grand boulevards. They are simply service areas where one can fill the gas tank, get a quick meal from the drive-thru at McDonald's, buy some pet food or pick up a prescription. Could pedestrian and bicycle access be made safer? Sure. But there's no reason that can't happen at 45' height. This is perhaps the most in-demand area of the county, with Whitman schools and right outside the DC line. If apartments are built at 45', they will fill up quickly. They will probably still be too great in number for our roads and schools to absorb, but what is currently proposed is far worse.

The suburbs should remain suburban, basic residential services must remain, and the plan should put quality of life ahead of all other priorities.

Does that require putting the concerns of residents above the profits of developers who consider the neighborhood their personal Monopoly board? Absolutely.

Monday, November 17, 2014

WHAT WOULD THE IDEAL LITTLE FALLS LIBRARY BE LIKE IN WESTBARD REVELOPMENT?

Along with plans for daylighting Willetts Branch Stream and a potential new elementary school, the idea of relocating Little Falls Library to the Equity One redevelopment on Westbard Avenue is one of several intriguing ideas floated in the early Westbard Sector Plan process. I happen to like the current library, its architecture - and large side window, and forested setting. It is perhaps the ideal suburban library. Despite my nostalgia, I would begrudgingly admit it is growing outdated.

One of several public meetings held last Friday sought to get feedback from Montgomery County Public Libraries and nearby residents on the feasibility of relocating the library, and what features the ideal library would have.
Rita Gale (foreground) of MCPL
discussed what the ideal new
Little Falls Library would be

Rita Gale, Public Service Administrator for Facilities and Capital Projects for MCPL, discussed potential floorplans and designs with planners Marc DeOcampo and John Marcolin. Gale said MCPL is on board for the idea of libraries as anchors of public squares, with the Rockville Memorial Library being the most notable existing example. How would a potential land swap and construction of the new facility occur? It would likely be a public-private partnership between MCPL, Equity One and Montgomery County Public Schools, should the current library site become a school site.

Gale explained that the library system utilizes 3 year strategic plans. She mentioned that MCPL recently shifted from complete renovations of libraries every 20-30 years to mini-renovations every 7 years. The reason for the shift was the inability to keep up with technological changes on a 20-year calendar. If the relocation were to go forward, the existing library would remain in operation until the new building was ready to move into.

What would that new building be like, ideally? 23,000 square feet on a single floor, said Gale. Why a single floor? Staffing one floor is far less expensive than multiple floors. Meeting space would preferably be on a separate level, as that does not require the same level of monitoring by employees, Gale said. The existing Little Falls Library is far smaller at 10,000 SF, while the Rockville Library is 63,000 SF by comparison. Having the library at street level would also be important, as is free parking for patrons. I have to say that paid parking at the new Equity One development on Westbard would be a non-starter.

In regards to the second options planners have outlined - adding an addition to the existing library - Gale said that would require removal of several mature trees, and "generally taking down trees is not something that's appealing to folks. Of course, if the site becomes a school, those trees would come down anyway. Neither clearcutting sounds like a good idea at a corner of Bethesda known for its forested surroundings.

Residents who have spoken to the potential library relocation seem to be cautiously favorable in their opinion about it. One detractor at the meeting said a library would be a terrible choice for what is being touted as a vibrant public space. He argued the new library would be a "dead space in the evening. Leave the library where it is. [Relocating it] makes no sense to me whatsoever." He noted that a similar library upcounty, which has residential units facing it, has become a hangout for drug dealers after hours, and a magnet for crime in general. DeCampo said Equity One would likely take steps to secure the site, particularly with residents living in close proximity to it.

I thought the man did have a valid point, as - assuming the library operates on the typically-limited MCPL hours - the space around it could become a dead zone after 6:00 PM. Banks are another notorious vibrancy killer in urban settings. It would seem that other more active tenants would have to be located close to the library in order to prevent that from happening. Having said that, I don't think anyone expects the Equity One "town center" to be a noisy city that never sleeps. This is a bedroom community in the suburbs, not a true urban area, and should tone down the volume at night anyway.

The other thing those comments brought to mind, is the need to recognize that public areas - of which there are currently none on Westbard Avenue - need policing, as well as upkeep such as that which Bethesda Urban Partnership provides downtown. That should be considered during the design phase, as security costs money, whether it is public or private.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

FIRST LOOK: MOCO PLANNER'S PROPOSALS FOR KENWOOD PLACE IN WESTBARD SECTOR PLAN UPDATE (PHOTOS)

Senior Urban Designer Paul Mortenson, of the Montgomery County Planning Department Director's office, hosted a discussion with residents of the Kenwood Place condos Friday morning. The primary topic was the property's future borders with Equity One's planned town center, and a potential new elementary school alongside it.

Mortenson took residents' input, and then sketched out a few potential designs for the land around the condo complex's edges. Here is how it would look if left alone, which would likely result in a "double road" (the existing Westbard Circle, paralled by a new Equity One-built road), an outcome that planners and Equity One have said is undesirable:

Concept 2 is a composite that uses one road for both Kenwood Place traffic and "outside" traffic.

Concept 3 shows a greater barrier between the Equity One property and Kenwood Place, while still avoiding a double road at the lower edge of the condo site.

Also shown in Concept 3: A new soccer field for a potential shared site holding the existing Westland Middle School and a new elementary school (on the current Little Falls Library site downhill from there). Mortenson said the current tennis courts could be moved further back, with two of them being eliminated. The windows of residential units on the Westland side of the Equity One site would look down onto the field, increasing safety for pedestrians and field users, Mortenson said. He noted that would preserve the baseball diamond on the Westland site, but would also result in a significant loss of mature trees in that vicinity. Environmental planner Katherine Nelson said she would not recommend cutting down those trees, saying that the plan should instead preserve them under a forest conservation easement.
New soccer field to left of
Westbard Circle

Saturday, November 15, 2014

SCHOOL RAGE: RESIDENTS QUESTION HIGH-DENSITY WESTBARD PLAN, NEW ES SITES NOT LARGE ENOUGH (PHOTOS)

"This is crazy!"

UPDATED: 12:30 AM, November 16, 2014*

Friday brought one of the most contentious meetings of the Westbard Sector Plan charrette, and not surprisingly, the topic was schools. Current and future public school parents in the Wood Acres-Pyle-Whitman cluster acutely aware of existing overcrowding questioned how Montgomery County planners could recommend a high-density growth plan for Westbard in that context.
Concept 1 - all of the red
structures are new apartment
buildings
Planners released their first projections for total housing units, and students to be generated by the plan, at the meeting. Those numbers were met with skepticism. Under a full build-out of Concept 1, Westbard residents would find 2529 apartments dropped into their community. That would, under the current U.S. census bureau statistic of 2.58 persons per housing unit, bring 6525 new residents (and 4932 additional cars!) to the 153 acres that comprise the Westbard Sector. In other words, 43 people per acre, which is quite a change from the area's single-family-home suburban character.

The Planning Department projection calculated Friday predicts 306 new students, with 153 of them being elementary school students. Those numbers generated some grumbling among the crowd of residents at the meeting. If one has been on Westbard Avenue when the school buses stop there in the morning, you know there are quite a few students coming from those few buildings now. In fact, Park Bethesda alone has 59 students, and Westwood Tower adds 65. Unfortunately, the chart shown did not have the numbers for the Kenwood Place condominium, which is also in the Walt Whitman HS cluster.
Bruce Crispell of MCPS
on the hot seat Friday
MCPS' infamous forecaster Bruce Crispell made a late arrival to the meeting, but tried to generate some numbers more in line with what we've seen in the Westbard area. Crispell's calculator gave him a projection of 750 students, more than double what planners forecast - and equal to the size of the entire Wood Acres ES population, one resident noted. In the context of 6525 people coming under Concept 1, 750 still sounds a bit low.

Under Concept 2, the numbers are lower. From those 1386 units, planners forecast 199 students, with 97 of them being at the elementary level. Crispell's number was 425, again more than double, but still sounding a bit off the mark for 3576 new residents (bringing 2703 cars with them to the community, by the way).
"Why are we building
more housing?"
Clearly, I think MCPS forecasters need to apply a new "Westbard" or "Whitman" factor to their prediction formula. The residential community that surrounds, and is served by, the commercial-retail Westbard area is one of the most desirable in America. Atop the list of Pros that make it so is the Whitman school cluster. When you ask yourself how much do people want to live here, just remember: 30 billionaires are actually willing to pay well over a million dollars, to live in a cramped townhouse in the middle of a contaminated industrial dump off of Little Falls Parkway.

Much has been made of the supposed lone student who has been generated by that unfinished townhome development being the norm for that type of housing. But remember, those homes are in the BCC district, not Whitman. Fair or not, most well-off parents moving here want Whitman. I think one can reasonably expect student generation rates to exceed those of virtually any other community in America.
Map of current schools in
the area; not shown are
several leased to private
schools by MCPS
The other problem? "We're already bursting at the seams," as one parent put it so well yesterday. Community members actually forecast the number of students that would eventually attend Wood Acres better than MCPS did, noted Springfield Civic Association President Phyllis Edelman. Another parent made the excellent point that the county and state can't even fund a new gym at Pyle Middle School, where students now take gym in a hallway - so how can they fund entire new schools? "This is crazy," she said, asking why developers aren't being asked to shoulder more of the burden they are creating.
"We don't want it."
Earlier in the morning, the new president of the Sumner Citizens Association - who moved here six months ago for the schools in the Whitman cluster, said "now I'm thinking, well, shoot, maybe I'm not going to get the benefit of this school system like I thought." Several parents expressed frank opinions that the quality of schools in the Whitman cluster is today being degraded by class size, lack of space and reduced amenities caused by overcrowding. 

One bright spot in both plan concepts is a new elementary school site near Westbard Avenue. There are two problems with that, however. As Rob Snow, a parent and officer with the Springfield Civic Association noted, "ignoring the impact on middle schools and high schools is silly." Crispell said there simply is no room left in the area for a new middle or high school.
"We bought for
Whitman and Pyle."
The other big problem? It turns out that neither proposed school site is big enough. Planners say they are going to pitch a new type of taller, "urban school" to MCPS. But there is no guarantee that MCPS will adopt that, meaning that the promised new school could go unbuilt. Even moving Ridgefield Road eastward won't expand that site large enough to meet the current 7.5 acre MCPS standard for elementary schools. It would seem that reality should be addressed now, and a larger site found before the plan is finalized in April 2015.

Planner Marc DeOcampo stressed that the concepts shown were hypothetical full build-outs, which are unlikely to occur, he said. However, if you apply the "Whitman" factor, my guess is that you'll see developers moving quickly in this area to build once the plan passes, than you would in Wheaton or Long Branch. One has to ask where the impetus for high-density urbanization of Westbard is coming from. Certainly not the residents. DeOcampo concurs, noting that "85-90% of the comments we've heard are, 'Keep it low density.'"

A final hybrid concept with some options will be presented this coming Tuesday night, November 18, at 7:00 PM at Westland Middle School. If you have concerns, this is the time to come out and express them.

* The article was updated to correct the estimated number of vehicles per unit that would be brought to Westbard under Concept 1 and Concept 2, based on the latest statistical data.

Friday, November 14, 2014

EUROMOTORCARS REVEALS PLANS FOR WESTBARD REDEVELOPMENT

EuroMotorcars told planners in a Westbard Sector Plan meeting that they are staying in the Westbard industrial area for the long-term. Their acre-and-a-half property services Volvos, an "important auto use for us. They don't make more property like this in Bethesda, or down county," a company representative said.

The problems with the site are that it is not on a heavy-traveled thoroughfare like River Road itself, and the current facility is "not well-located on the site."

To remedy this, the company plans to build a new structure with a 20' first level for auto bays, and a 65' height overall. The majority of the upper levels will be parking for Volvos being serviced.

When told they would lose some land out front if a new bypass road goes along the Capital Crescent Trail, they initially were concerned. However, they realized the new road could give them the attention they currently lack from passing motorists, and appeared to endorse the bypass concept.

WESTBARD SECTOR PLAN CONCEPT REFINED AS BUSINESSES, COMMUNITIES PONDER FUTURE (PHOTOS)

Less than 12 hours after Westbard Mews residents made clear that a Crown Street bypass of Westbard Avenue was unacceptable, planners had removed that alignment from the newest map of the sector's potential future. By Thursday evening, a Westbard-to-River Road connection remained, but was shown as being routed through either the current driveway of the Park Bethesda apartments, or the sloping rear driveway of the Westwood Tower property.

Long before that community meeting at Walt Whitman High School, several more groups of stakeholders sat down with Montgomery County planners. Land and business owners discussed their future in the Westbard area, and residents expressed their concerns about how those plans might affect them.

"We've been a staple in the community since 1953," American Plant's Todd Shorb said as his popular gardening and landscape design company considered the future of its 5258 River Road location with planners. For the near future, the company would like to stay and continue to operate successfully at this location. "If you continue, you don't have to do anything - that's fine," planner Marc DeOcampo assured them. American Plant is considering possible joint redevelopment with neighbors The Roof Center and Talbert's in the future. Right now the basic concept is a 6-8 story building with a 72' height.

That would change things, however, as the current draft proposal is showing a naturalized and wider Willetts Branch Stream as part of a new linear park concept. This would bisect American Plant and other properties in the rear, a potential problem for future redevelopment plans. "Yes, you would have a bisected property," DeOcampo noted, but the new stream park would be an amenity that would give American Plant "two developable lots, with all of this street frontage." That didn't placate Shorb, who replied that they would need additional height and density to justify a bisection. How high, DeOcampo asked? A building in line with The Kenwood, Westwood Tower would be a fair comparison, Shorb suggested.

American Plant also expressed skepticism about the stream plan and sidewalk upgrades proposed in the plan. River Road currently works for them in terms of foot traffic and access, and they pointed out that Willetts Branch as it is reaches the top after 3-4" of rain.

The Shorbs said they would like to discuss their options further in the months ahead and meet with planners again. "Think about what best serves you," head planner John Marcolin told them.
Westbard Mews President
Dick Mathias discusses
traffic impacts of the
plan on his community
Next up was Westbard Mews, who continued to express displeasure at the proposed Crown Street bypass of Westbard Avenue that would begin near their homes, and the outsized plans of next door neighbors Park Bethesda. Westbard Mews Condominium Association President Dick Mathias described the future growth at the Park Bethesda site as "two more monster buildings." Mathias felt the zoning should remain as it is. "If we hear through our discussions with the community and landowners [that a zoning change] is something we can consider," DeOcampo said. "We know we don't want to be next to three monster buildings," Mathias asserted. "You know we don't have the school capacity for the children that would live there." The new proposed heights are "totally incompatible with our vision for what the future of the neighborhood should be," Mathias added.

Of course, the Crown Street bypass was foremost on Westbard Mews' residents' minds. "We feel like we're sitting at this funnel," Mathias lamented, "and you're figuring out ways to fill it." Putting cars onto Goldsboro Road and Little Falls Parkway would be a better option, argued several residents.

"I'll be completely honest with you," DeOcampo said. "Sumner came to us with their concerns that Westbard Avenue was going to be the alternative road for ICC-B (Sangamore Road intelligence campus) employees to get to the Beltway if Clara Barton [Parkway] was blocked in any way." Parks and Planning cannot widen Little Falls Parkway, DeOcampo said, as that would be "against our charter." Besides, DeOcampo noted, the new traffic will be the same volume even if nothing is built.

"Have you done a study of how traffic actually moves?" asked Phyllis Edelman, President of the Springfield Civic Association. She said the major problem is west-to-east/east-to-west during rush hour.

Mathias suggested a new cut-through route between Little Falls Parkway and Westbard (via River Road crossing) would generate even more traffic. Why would I leave Little Falls, DeOcampo asked, "if I have a straight shot" to Massachussetts Avenue? "You're paving over the whole sector in asphalt," Mathias countered. "The more options you have, the more dissipated traffic will be," DeOcampo said.

Equity One should be limited to 45' heights on the Westwood Shopping Center, with low density housing, townhouses and neighborhood, Mathias suggested. That developer returned to the charrette Thursday primarily to comment on what planners and stakeholders had assembled the previous day in the form of three options. Michael Berfield, Executive Vice President of Development for Equity One, said "it's been a very helpful process for us."
Equity One and EYA return
Berfield addressed traffic concerns, saying that a reorientation of Ridgefield Road would be expensive but possible. Smaller blocks along Westbard Avenue "makes sense for a lot of different reasons." He questioned the need for new roads, and believes that Westbard has excess capacity to handle any future increase in traffic. A shuttle bus to the Red Line "is critical [and] we will do anything we can do to make that happen," Berfield promised.

The proposals for a new school site and for moving Little Falls Library to the Equity One site were new to him, Berfield noted, but said both could be achieved. He said he has had libraries in other retail centers in the past. But Berfield suggested 65' heights are "not a huge difference" from the 50' planners are recommending. He views 120' as ideal for the Bowlmor side of Westbard.

Equity One's architect Matt Bell said Westbard was the product of "an era when the automobile was king," but did not identify which other mode of transportation had vanquished automobiles since then. Berfield said that underground garage parking "can be made appealing," but did not offer examples of where that has been accomplished. I can't think of any myself around here.

Regarding the popular small businesses on Westbard like Anglo Dutch Pools and Toys, Westwood Pet Center and the Westwood Barber Shop, Berfield said their popularity "gives me incentive to try to  keep them."
Royco discussed the future of
its Whole Foods-anchored
Kenwood Station
Kenwood Station has some of the most popular retail in the Westbard Sector, but perhaps the most-hated parking lot besides Trader Joe's in downtown Bethesda. Landowner Royco, Inc. followed Equity One's presentation, and said nothing substantive will change in the near future there. "We love the building, we love the way it performs from a real estate standpoint," Royco President Joe Kelly said. With leases there running through 2026, expect no redevelopment in the next decade, Kelly reassured neighboring residents.
Ridgewells explained its
potential future expansion
to planner Marc DeOcampo
Further up River Road, The Ballroom and Ridgewell's catering are also not planning to go anywhere. The Ballroom is having great success as an events space and busy dance hall, although like most smart businesses, is keeping future options open. Likewise, Ridgewell's is the most popular catering service in the DC area, and is thinking more of redeveloping a larger facility that will allow it to operate in a more modern setting, and better accommodate circulation of delivery trucks on its site. For that reason, Ridgewell's opposes bisection of its property by any proposed new roads, or new alignments of existing roads, unless it accommodates its growth and truck traffic needs.
Little Falls Watershed Alliance
meets with Environmental Planners
Katherine Nelson and Marco Fuster
The Little Falls Watershed Alliance wrapped up Thursday's session with planners, saying it wants the new sector plan to restore the watershed to the greatest extent possible. LFWA's Dan Dozier said the group would like more rain gardens and less concrete holding tanks. Along those lines, it would like the new Westbard Avenue to be a "green street," meaning it will have active filtration and stormwater management features. Water flow is at least as critical as water quality, Dozier argued, even though it is not discussed as much. Several members stressed the need to acquire more green space along Willetts Branch Stream, and to widen it and restore a fuller flood plain with parkland. It seems that those are also priorities for planners, as well as the overarching goal of daylighting and naturalizing Willetts Branch in the coming decades. Environmental planner Katherine Nelson said she is hoping that the plan can reserve the room necessary to provide such a restoration in future years.
Senior Urban Designer Paul Mortenson
presents the 2 concepts planners
generated after feedback from
stakeholders the previous night
By nightfall, planners had worked up two concepts from the 3 options discussed the previous evening. While there were no massive changes, two jumped out. Crown Street was out as the bypass for Westbard, and one alignment for that utilizes the existing cross-stream passage behind Westwood Tower, still connecting to the County right-of-way parallel to the Capital Crescent Trail. And the road through American Plant - solidly rejected by the company that morning - was no longer an option.
Concept 1
I also noticed that the massing of buildings in Concept 1 leaves more space in-between, that hopefully will allow some of the suburban tree canopy that surrounds the Westbard area to be visible from within the "town center." A green space boulevard is supposed to prevent duplication of Westbard Circle outside of the Kenwood Place condos. Concept 1 allows 100' buildings on Ridgefield and the north side of Westbard, a 120' tower behind Park Bethesda, and 50' at the Westwood Shopping Center site.

75' would be the height limit for River Road in Concept 1, Whole Foods would be in the ground floor of a new apartment building, and new road connections to Little Falls Parkway would be achieved via Dorsey Street and Butler Road.
Concept 2
Concept 2 has lower heights, and one less new connection to Little Falls Parkway (at Butler). It has heights of 75' on Ridgefield and the north side of Westbard, 75' at Park Bethesda, and 50' on both the Westwood Shopping Center site and along River Road.

In my opinion, what remains fantastic is the plan for Willetts Branch Stream. It will not only be remediated over time, but could become a smaller-scale version of Carroll Creek in Frederick for the future Westbard. The improved street connections seem helpful to provide relief valves from a potentially jammed Westbard, although I think more needs to be fleshed out about what the State Highway Administration will do to handle increased volume on River and Massachusetts Avenue.

The Citgo II gas station by Park Bethesda should be recommended for continued use as a service station in the plan. Requiring much soil and groundwater remediation, it's hard to believe that plot has much potential for residential development. Rather than hold it as a dog park, why not allow Citgo to continue providing necessary services for the community there, including a Full Serve lane for the many senior citizens.

There is far too little industrial space left in either concept, and as you may have read in my report yesterday, some sites may simply be too contaminated to tamper with. Planners have promised a rough count of total potential housing units under the 2 concepts, which should give us a sense of whether they can be accommodated under the infrastructure that exists here.

Finally, while its too early for the design stage, I would strongly urge Equity One to ensure the architecture is unique within the parameters of what retail structures demand. One test is, what spot in the development will visitors take pictures of and post them to Instagram? Bethesda Row has that on Bethesda Lane (i.e. the arch, lighting, etc). RIO/Washingtonian Center has the water feature. Other centers like Rockville Town Square lack that unique feature. It is essentially an H-shaped box. Rockville Town Square resembles Pentagon City, and Downtown Crown is reminiscent of the Mosaic District. Westbard's architecture should be distinctive, and the gathering space should be unique and inspiring, not simply checking off a hardscape green square box on a planning form. It would be nice to figure out a design theme, like something playing off of the railroad history of the Westbard area. Or something entirely different from that. Just make it different, not cookie cutter.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

WWI CHEMICAL MUNITIONS BURIED IN BETHESDA?

While few business owners took advantage of the Plan Westbard Sunrise Session Wednesday morning, those who did show up had easily the most fascinating conversation so far in the week-long Westbard Sector Plan charette. Who knew that the Westwood Shopping Center site was a U.S. military rail yard back in World War I? That today's Crown Street was likely a remnant of the switchback that carried the rail spur from the main line of the Baltimore & Ohio's Georgetown Branch Railroad up to the rail yard? And that there is a potentially scary connection between the mustard gas munitions scandal at American University and the Westbard area of Bethesda?

Apparently, the mustard gas shells that were tested - and eventually, quietly buried - around American University were brought to the area by train, and then trucked from today's Westwood Shopping Center site to the university. Legend has it that a rail car containing these poisonous shells ran away from the rail yard, rolled down the Crown Street spur back towards the main line, and derailed at the bottom of the hill. Supposedly, the volatile car was then buried in the quarry pit in the vicinity of the structures at 5200 River Road (down at the end of the un-named road that runs down past EuroMotorcars Volvo). The military then instructed that concrete be poured over the rail car, and it very likely is still down there. There are apparently some other as-yet unidentified substances underground at various sites in the Westbard Sector. Reportedly, other rail cars were buried down in the quarry area when the Pentagon eventually abandoned the site. Their contents, if any, are unknown.

Planners have assured they are looking into the potential contaminants at these and other sites in the Sector Plan. It would seem that, if records indeed confirm this credible story, that excavation of these sites should be handled cautiously and with U.S. military oversight, as with the American University/Spring Valley munitions cleanup. Certainly, military records should be examined to determine the full scope of activities at this site, and along the former route of the spur.

A preliminary review of soil maps from the World War I era, along with notes made from walking the area prior to the charette by environmental planners, did appear to confirm the remains of a road bed or railroad bed in that vicinity below the grade drop from the Westbard level.

Stay tuned.

CROWN ST. BYPASS, HEIGHT, DENSITY REMAIN STICKING POINTS IN WESTBARD SECTOR PLAN OPTIONS (PHOTOS)

Day 2 of the Westbard Sector Plan charette was even busier than the first, with meetings sometimes going on simultaneously in the Montgomery County Planning Department's temporary space in the Westwood Center II shopping center. A fascinating discussion of history and environmental issues started the day with the Sunrise Session for business owners.

Some industrial business owners who own their land are open to selling for the right price. Others, like Bonds' Citgo service station on Westbard Avenue, would like to stay if allowed by landowner Equity One. From all that was discussed, there are many environmental issues within the sector, ranging from serious to scary, and could deter construction of residential housing on those sites without very costly cleanup. Did you know that the owner of a pesticide business on Butler Road was a Navy Cross recipient, a pilot in the Battle of Midway, and a P.O.W. in the Bataan Death March? What a story!
Planner Fred Boyd talks with the
Springfield Civic Association
The Springfield Civic Association's top concerns were schools, traffic (particularly cut-through traffic), and zoning/density. SCA President Phyllis Edelman said "current transit is insufficient" in the Westbard area. She said the SCA opposes connecting a current cul-de-sac on Jordan Road into the future Westbard "town center," because it would be "opening a can of worms." The association, which represents the neighborhood directly behind the Westwood Shopping Center, supports the plan to daylight Willets Branch Stream. SCA Zoning Chair Pete Salinger said of the future redevelopment of the Westwood Shopping Center that "most of us, almost all of us, want to retain that local flavor, the community feel that we've got here."
Brookdale residents tell planners
Boyd and Marc DeOcampo their
top concerns 
Brookdale, a neighborhood of single-family homes near River Road and Western Avenue, stressed schools, the need for more sports facilities, protection for tree canopy, cycling facilities, and protection of pedestrians walking to school and to the Little Falls pool. They also want to retain the local services in the shopping centers and industrial areas, such as auto repair, gas stations, and pet stores. Planner Marc DeOcampo said that such industrial uses are key to the continued success of neighborhoods inside the Beltway.
This map of possible new roads
to address cut-through traffic
concerns was not pleasing to
residents closest to their
proposed locations
The session on transportation was the most tense of the day, as Westbard Mews residents came out to condemn the proposed Crown Street bypass from Westbard to River Road next to their homes. Westbard Mews President Dick Mathias said he was "shocked that I hear what I feel is a strong bias by planning staff to build this new road, 20 to 40 to 50 feet in front of houses and damage" their values. "This came up for the first time Monday night," he continued. "We'd never heard of it. [You] give us six days to mobilize opposition...it's a screwy way to develop."

A current Crown Street resident said, "You would destroy our community and the value of our homes in one fell swoop, what for us is an oasis of calm."

By Wednesday night, planners had offered a new alignment that would run the bypass off Westbard through the Park Bethesda property as an option.
We're not done yet! It's off
to Whitman HS for the
presentation of planners'
work since Monday night
Speaking of Wednesday night, planners unveiled 3 alternative designs for the new Sector Plan, and took feedback from a not-so-happy audience. Heights in all three were higher than many residents had asked for on Monday. "We're slipping towards downtown Bethesda," one resident said, and felt that planners "did not include the feedback given by residents Monday night."

Planner Paul Mortenson responded that "we didn't feel that was fair to those [land]owners."

"I think it's a little bit disingenuous to say it's not fair," the resident rebutted, arguing that Equity One had said it could make a profit even without changing anything about the existing retail on Westbard.

Mortenson said planners are encouraging developers to choose structured, not surface parking. One resident said she often shops alone, and that surface parking "works for me. I feel safe. Parking garages are a nightmare." Equity One proposed an underground garage on Monday.

Residents did praise provisions in the plan for a new elementary school, buffering for Kenwood Place, and daylighting of the Willets Branch Stream. Each of the 3 plans had different road alignments and components, and locations for a new elementary school. Residents were split in opinion on those. There was also support to retain one of the Citgo stations on Westbard Avenue (including from me), as an essential service to the community.

I have to say that the planners did come up with several innovative ideas to deal with traffic, even if they are controversial, and the potential new school and Little Falls Library sound promising. The transformation of the stream into a new linear park would be fantastic. Whether the schools and roads can handle the density permitted is unclear. The heights being talked about for the Park Bethesda site are surprisingly high, as well. I hope we'll hear more from the State Highway Administration on how road capacity might be expanded on River Road, and that concerns about the environment and lost history of the African-American community there can be addressed in the plan process.

Planners will now take feedback on the 3 versions, and try to create a final composite for presentation to the community and the Planning Board. You can examine them below:
Option 1
(See close-ups on
details below)

Area of today's Westwood
Shopping Center and
Westbard Avenue




Option 2



Option 3