Is it real, or just a dream? Arlington Road between Edgemoor Lane and Moorland Lane has been in third-world shape for several years, due to damage incurred during the construction of the Maizon Bethesda apartments. But it has finally been resurfaced now that work is wrapping up at the Maizon site. So has Edgemoor Lane alongside the new building.
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Tuesday, August 03, 2021
Arlington Road, Edgemoor Lane resurfaced around Maizon Bethesda apartments (Photos)
Is it real, or just a dream? Arlington Road between Edgemoor Lane and Moorland Lane has been in third-world shape for several years, due to damage incurred during the construction of the Maizon Bethesda apartments. But it has finally been resurfaced now that work is wrapping up at the Maizon site. So has Edgemoor Lane alongside the new building.
Friday, April 23, 2021
Arlington Road resurfaced near EuroMotorcars
Well, at least one part of Arlington Road has a smooth surface. A section of the roadway by EuroMotorcars and the new Audi Bethesda dealership was resurfaced earlier this week.
I get why they are waiting to repave the stretch in front of the Maizon Bethesda construction site, but the damage allowed to be done and remain there for two years has been an abomination, and an embarrassment to to Montgomery County. Bethesda alignment repair experts, on the other hand, highly recommend you drive Arlington Road north of Edgemoor Lane as often as possible!
Photo by RFS
Sunday, March 28, 2021
Robbery reported in downtown Bethesda
Montgomery County police responded to a report of a robbery in downtown Bethesda Friday night. The robbery was reported along the street in the 7100 block of Arlington Road around 7:44 PM, according to crime data. No further details have been released by police as of this writing.
Thursday, January 07, 2021
New sidewalk on Arlington Road in Bethesda (Photos)
Contractors are installing new sidewalk pavers on Arlington Road in front of two adjacent properties. One is the new EuroMotors Audi Bethesda dealership (above), which is under construction on the old Goodyear site. The other is the recently-constructed 7001 Arlington Road apartment building (below).
Photos: RFS
Saturday, May 09, 2020
Montgomery County closes part of Arlington Road in Bethesda
Montgomery County officials have expanded their recent weekend road closures in Bethesda, which they say are designed to create more recreational space for pedestrians and cyclists near the narrower Capital Crescent Trail. The County Department of Transportation abruptly announced it was closing Arlington Road between Little Falls Parkway and Kenwood Forest Lane yesterday beginning at 9:00 AM Fridays through 6:00 PM Sundays.
Little Falls Parkway itself has been closed on that same weekend schedule for two weeks now. That closure was arbitrarily made by the Montgomery Parks department. Neither closure was preceded by any official public process, and no formal public input was sought.
In addition to the legal issues of closing public roads and spending the money needed to do this without an official public process, the closures are creating cut-through traffic in surrounding neighborhoods, and slowing fire and rescue response. Now that the closure is expanding into a commercial area, Safeway cannot be pleased that potential customers in one direction are being blockaded from patronizing their store without a lengthy detour. Of course, Montgomery County is nationally-known for being hostile to business - heckuva job, Brownie!
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Arlington Road squeezed by construction in Bethesda
Friday, January 24, 2020
Crawford Tire Goodyear fenced off for demolition in Bethesda
Saturday, July 27, 2019
Destruction on Arlington Road in Bethesda (Video + Photos)
Thursday, June 14, 2018
Parks dept. lays out options for Little Falls Parkway Capital Crescent Trail crossing (Photos)
Residents of neighborhoods immediately adjacent to the parkway criticized Parks for not considering the impact of constricting increasing traffic loads on their communities. Attendees who live in Kenwood and along Hillandale Road reported increased cut-through traffic since Parks instituted a "road diet" on the parkway 18 months ago. Frank acknowledged that official traffic counts show the road diet has reduced traffic on that stretch of the parkway between Hillandale and Arlington Road, as drivers seek to avoid the new bottleneck.
David Barron, President of the Kenwood Citizens Association, told Parks officials the current road diet on Little Falls Parkway needs to end. "It needs to be open. We have an influx of traffic [since the road diet]. They're turning down Kennedy Drive. Waze is putting traffic in our neighborhood," he said, referring to the app that helps drivers avoid traffic jams. Calling the parkway "the aorta" of the nearby road grid, he invoked the name of the late District 1 councilmember Betty Ann Krahnke (R), whom he said "would want to open up the parkway."
Many in attendance also questioned why the parkway now, and in the future, would be reduced to one lane when new development downtown and at Westbard is expected to bring over 10,000 new residents and their cars to the area. Marriott and the Intelligence Community Campus - Bethesda are each bringing over 3000 employees to the same vicinity. It would be the equivalent of declaring you are entering the Olympic decathalon, but first having blockages intentionally installed in your circulation system.
"We are already seeing a tremendous increase in traffic" since the road diet, noted a resident of Hillandale Road. Residents of the road must back out of parking spaces that line the busy cut-through. But the War on Cars in this area is just getting started. Parks officials announced that the increasingly-political Montgomery County Department of Transportation is now studying road diets for both Hillandale and Arlington Road, apparently not realizing how absurd it sounds to suggest a "road diet" for already two-lane Hillandale.
Near the end of the meeting, Frank acknowledged that Parks does not consider traffic flow or throughput as priorities for the parkway, saying the road is only meant to allow access to the park. This attitude is a major concern going forward, as the Planning Board and County Council each included Little Falls Parkway in their traffic volume allowances for the Westbard sector plan. To now say that the road is not a critical artery is fraud of the highest order.
The options available boil down to several concepts. One is to make permanent the current road diet by replacing the bollards with concrete curbs (which doesn't sound very park-like; there are no curbs on the rest of the parkway). Second, is to control the crossing via traffic lights - either at the current crossing site, or by forcing CCT users to walk to existing signaled crossings at either Arlington Road or Hillandale Road.
Third are the Cadillac options: a bridge over the parkway, or a tunnel beneath it. A grade-separated crossing had strong support from the crowd, and was the most-mentioned solution by those who spoke during the comment period. Such a crossing is not popular among the Council and Planning Board, who won't dare charge their developer masters a fee or tax to fund it. It also has little support among anti-car extremists, as a bridge or tunnel would allow drivers to continue on their merry way with no new hardships to navigate.
Fourth are extreme road solutions. A roundabout at Arlington and Little Falls intrigued one commenter, but received dismissive murmuring among the larger crowd. Parks' proposal to entirely close Little Falls Parkway between Arlington and Hillandale was found to be laughably ridiculous. All solutions are likely to include a wide speed hump at the crossing, which Parks is calling a "speed table."
One couldn't help but notice that all solutions allow CCT users to keep doing what they are doing, and what many of them are doing is clearly illegal. A resident who regularly uses the trail declared all of the proposals to be "overkill. The issue is not motorists. The real issue is crazy cyclists. Solving the problem at Little Falls Parkway is not solving the problem of cyclists. Cyclists never stop, particularly those crazy guys in the morning."
Park Police have on one or two occasions ticketed cyclists who blew through the stop signs on either side of the crossing, one attendee said. One resident echoed my sentiment on this page a few weeks back, in suggesting deploying cameras that could ticket cyclists on the trail for speeding and ignoring stop signs. The intersection being discussed is not a safety issue at all, if drivers and trail users follow existing traffic laws. For example, when crossing the four-lane parkway, just because the driver in the nearest lane has stopped doesn't mean a cyclist or pedestrian is to rush forward without looking at who may be approaching in the second lane. It's just common sense.
Instead, we are confronted with government, and the infamous MoCo nanny state, run amok. Special snowflakes must be fully protected from evil drivers, and their own lawbreaking, lest they melt. Indeed, the whole controversy started over a very tragic crash where the driver was determined not to be at fault after striking a recumbent cyclist. In last night's most dramatic moment, the widow of the cyclist addressed the crowd, and blamed a guardrail for her husband and the driver being unable to see each other - though she acknowledged that detectives said it appeared her husband had ignored the stop sign before crossing.
There were a couple of good news items at last night's meeting, however. One is that Parks is planning to install lighting at the crossing - much needed, especially since their "brilliant" idea of erecting dozens of signs and bollards that now obscure the view of trail users crossing in the dark. Second, whatever project is chosen, they plan to fund it by legal means this time. The current "road diet" was funded through illegal means, by using a countywide trail maintenance fund for a road-only project.
Parks officials say they will use last night's public feedback, and additional feedback from a Town Hall message board on their website, to whittle the project options down to 3 or 4. By fall, they will further flesh those concepts out, and obtain more public feedback on them. By winter of 2018 and 2019, they will develop a budget, and present the final option to the Planning Board for approval. They will then (legally!) request inclusion of the project in a future CIP budget.
Roundabout proposal for the intersection of Arlington and Little Falls |
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