Showing posts with label WMAL tower site. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WMAL tower site. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 23, 2022

Model homes open at new Toll Brothers development in Bethesda


Toll Brothers
has opened model homes to the public at its new Amalyn development, now under construction on the former site of the WMAL transmission towers in North Bethesda. All homes in the development are priced over $1 million. The 75 acre community will include a 4,000-square-foot clubhouse, indoor and outdoor fitness facilities, club rooms for social events, a swimming pool with private cabanas, and more. Tours of the model homes are available at the Amalyn sales center, located at 6940 Greyswood Road.

"Our new Amalyn community is a rare find; it’s luxury living at its finest with expertly crafted homes and a resort-style living experience that home buyers have come to expect from Toll Brothers," Toll Brothers D.C. Metro Regional President Eric Anderson said in a statement. "Our Fairlane and Florin model homes showcase the refined modern finishes that truly distinguish this boutique community of luxury homes in Bethesda."

Photo courtesy Toll Brothers

Friday, February 28, 2020

WMAL radio towers demolition preparations underway in Bethesda

The landmark WMAL radio towers at 7115 Greentree Road aren't likely to be there too much longer. Workers have been active at the site over the last week, erecting demolition fencing, and going over the site with ride-on lawn mowers. The popular unofficial dog park and outdoor activity center for the neighborhood will be much-missed by residents, but is set to be replaced with a new Toll Brothers housing development. Few residents in the golden age of radio would have imagined that such a powerful and highly-rated station would no longer need its Bethesda transmitters.
Toll Brothers has officially requested demolition permits from the County, and their applications were officially accepted on February 21. County records indicate that the permits have not yet been issued by the Department of Permitting Services.

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

Toll Brothers seeks extension for WMAL tower site project in Bethesda

Developer Toll Brothers is asking the Montgomery County Planning Board to postpone review of its site plan for the WMAL radio transmitter site at 7115 Greentree Road in Bethesda. The company has proposed building 330 homes on the grassy site, which WMAL Radio's ownership has determined it no longer needs for signal transmission purposes.

Although a public hearing on the site plan must legally be held within 120 days of Toll Brothers' submission of the plan to the County on October 25, 2017, the company says there were too many issues raised by the County Development Review Commission. They cannot address all of these by the previously-scheduled hearing date of February 22, 2018. they said in a letter to planning staff.

Therefore, Toll is seeking a three-month extension, which would postpone the public hearing until May. Planning staff is recommending approval of the extension. The Board will take up the extension request at its January 25 meeting.

Monday, June 12, 2017

Residents furious as WMAL tower site preliminary plan reaches Planning Board Thusday

Developer Toll Brothers hasn't lived up to its promises, and the Montgomery County Council and Planning Board aren't holding them accountable, neighbors of the WMAL tower site in Bethesda say. The preliminary plan to redevelop that property at 7115 Greentree Road with 310 homes will go before the Planning Board this Thursday, June 15, and planners are recommending its approval.

The already-jammed roads and schools that serve the area have been concerns from the beginning, but much like the Westbard sector plan, there are virtually no amenities or infrastructure projects provided for in this plan. WMAL's property has served as a de facto park for residents for decades. Yet, much of the green space provided in the new development will simply be required stormwater management facilities, or other environmental/conservation features not necessarily usable by residents.

"Am I upset?
YES!"

Residents are also concerned about the "island" nature of the tower site, and its minimal roadway connections to major routes - and how those factors will impact their neighborhood streets. They've reached out to the County Council, but were told to buzz off by Councilmember George Leventhal, who is currently seeking to be their next County Executive. "The County Council has no role in the approval of Toll Brothers' application," Leventhal replied to one email from residents, arguing that he has "no mechanism" to take action on the proposal. In reality, Leventhal and the Council have the ultimate mechanisms - they appoint the Planning Board, and provide a vast quantity of taxpayer funds they could threaten to cut off at any time.

"Am I upset? Yes," resident Eleni Martin wrote to planner Patrick Butler, in regard to the Planning Board having rezoned the WMAL site with minimal resident input in that decision. "It infuriates me that there wasn't any targeted outreach effort to raise awareness about what was being done...But seeking real honest input ahead of actions doesn't seem to be how Montgomery County works."

"People will die"

"It is a strong desire of the communities to improve the ratio of parkland to the proposed and very dense preliminary plan," George Wolfand, President of the West Fernwood Citizens Association wrote to the Planning Board in March.

Resident Karin Krchnak suggested Planning Director Gwen Wright and the County Council live with her for a day, "to see what we have to handle on Fernwood Road," which many Bethesda residents know is a disaster during rush hour as it is. Krchnak called the traffic study done for the project "a complete joke."

"A complete joke"

But in addition to the impact on the main thoroughfares, there is equal concern about what the poor traffic circulation to the site will do to neighborhood streets. Dan Spiro, who has lived in Stratton Woods since 1962, warned the Planning Board in a letter last week that "people will die if Renita [Lane] is opened to through traffic, as the plan suggests," because of the narrow road, street parking, and blind curves.

To sign up to testify on Thursday, click here.

One resident, Brian Krantz, delivered some visual testimony on traffic issues in the neighborhood:

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

West Fernwood Citizens Association launches petition to delay WMAL site redevelopment in Bethesda

The West Fernwood Citizens Association has posted an online petition for residents and "neighbors" of the community (the petition requires name and address to verify you live nearby) to sign, which asks the Montgomery County Council and Planning Board to halt redevelopment of the WMAL radio tower site at 7115 Greentree Road in Bethesda until several concerns are addressed. Developer Toll Brothers has a plan to construct 328 homes with recreation trails, and a clubhouse with a pool and fitness center on the property, which currently houses transmission towers for the radio station.

Concerns summarized on the petition are:


  • Traffic - Residents are concerned about both the added impact of the new cars the development will bring, as well as the notoriously-inaccurate methods the County uses to gauge road capacity. The petition notes that the tougher standard of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments rates Fernwood Road (which some residents refer to as "Fernlock" due to its rush hour backups) "Heavily Congested. Weaker County standards don't jibe with "the reality experienced by citizens," an issue that has come up in the controversial Westbard sector plan, as well
  • Schools in the Walter Johnson cluster, and in North Bethesda generally, are already "bursting at the seams" with overcrowding
  • Lack of vehicular access routes to the tower site. Currently there is only one way in. Toll Brothers' plan anticipates a second gateway via Greyswood Road, and fire access via Renita Lane
  • The only close-by bus line, Ride On 47, is more than half-a-mile from the center of the tower site
  • The tower site is about 3 miles from the nearest Metro station, the WFCA calculated
  • Limited pedestrian access to shopping, services and amenities
Toll Brothers submitted its preliminary plan to Montgomery County in late May, and has a public information website about its plans for the WMAL property.

Friday, April 15, 2016

The WMAL transmitter site in Bethesda - as you've never seen it before (Video)

Check out this drone video of the WMAL transmitter site on Greentree Road in Bethesda. It will be gone in a couple of years, if the Montgomery County Planning Board approves the Toll Brothers residential project planned to replace it.

The towers will be relocated to Germantown.

Photo: Robert Dyer

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Toll Bros. unveils plan for WMAL site; residents want data on traffic, schools (Photos)

Representatives of Toll Brothers promised to deliver a "rich and varied neighborhood" filled with winding trails, forests and a clubhouse with pool and fitness center on the WMAL transmitter site in Bethesda yesterday morning, at a community meeting held in the North Bethesda Middle School cafeteria.

328 units will be split between single-family homes and townhomes, with 42 affordable units. It will be a "neighborhood designed around the pedestrian," they said. Residents who packed the room were more concerned about the other way of getting around - cars - and how they would impact already-congested roads nearby. The site is located at 7115 Greentree Road.

What will be done about the "traffic that's gonna get dumped onto Greentree, Newbold [Drive], Michaels [Drive] and other neighborhood streets" like Fernwood Road, one resident asked. Nancy Randall, principal associate with Wells & Associates, said the traffic study has not been completed yet. "How many automobiles?" asked another resident. Randall said the estimates show 209 additional peak A.M. trips, and 271 peak P.M. trips, would be generated by the new development. "Oh, come on!" shouted an incredulous resident from the back of the room.

One resident noted that the existing neighborhood is not within easy walking distance of any retail or restaurants, which will encourage heavy use of automobiles. Another resident of Greentree said the light at Michaels and Fernwood is already bad. Now, "you're adding another 300 homes." Randall said many options are on the table, including shuttle buses and traffic calming on nearby streets like Greyswood.

A resident of Burdette Road asked if the study would take into account further-away intersections that would be impacted by the additional traffic. He said drivers would likely be seeking to access the Beltway via Burdette Road to River Road, or via Old Georgetown Road. Randall said the study wouldn't extend that far, but would examine intersections like Bradley Boulevard and Burdette, and Democracy Boulevard and Fernwood Road. She said the "layer cake" study Toll is perfoming will not only take into account the traffic impact of its project, but also existing developments, and developments that have been approved but not necessarily built yet.

Resident Brian Thompson said he wanted to second an earlier humorous suggestion to rename Fernwood "Fernlock" for its notorious traffic. "I plan my day around the gridlock on Fernwood," Thompson said.

"I must officially object to you not reporting to us on the traffic plan," another resident said during the question portion of the meeting. With the traffic study being submitted at the same time as the site plan, he said, "we won't have time to look at it." He added that with the proposal to open access via Renita Lane to fire and rescue traffic, and possibly general traffic, "you will have fatalities on that winding road." That proposal actually came from Montgomery County Fire and Rescue, not from Toll Brothers.

"Will you have a [traffic] meeting?" he asked. "I can't commit to Toll Brothers having a meeting," said Adeyinka Ogunlegan, VP of public policy and outreach for Chesapeake Public Strategies, a government and public affairs firm retained by Toll. A hissing sound came from the back of the room.

"Where's the boss?!" someone shouted. "If he's here, why don't you let him come up and talk about it?" he challenged. On cue, Toll Brothers VP John Harris rose from his seat. "I'm the boss, and we will be glad to have another meeting with you," Harris said to applause. Several Toll representatives also promised to provide an email link to residents who signed up for the mailing list (you can get on the list at the project website).

Schools were also a concern, with existing overcrowding in the Walter Johnson cluster. Wendy Calhoun, who will become coordinator for that cluster next year, said the Montgomery County Board of Education had recognized a "deficit of soccer fields since 1978," and requested two fields be built. "I don't see that on this site," she said.

The applicant's attorney, Erica Leatham of Ballard Spahr, LLP, said if a County agency wishes to use 5 acres Toll will make available to the County for purchase for soccer, they have that option. That area is denoted on the map at top in red, at the bottom left corner.

A resident of Brixton Lane termed his children's schools "ridiculously-overcrowded already. How many kids" will the Toll Brothers project generate, he asked.
Leatham said Montgomery County Public Schools calculates those projections, and they have concluded 152 students will be generated. That number was met with laughter in the room. "Can we get realistic numbers?" someone asked. "Isn't this the same MCPS that allowed overcrowding" in the past with lowball projections, another asked. "I can't argue with you," Leatham replied. "These are numbers that have been vetted. These are the numbers we have to use." 

Future residents will "pay a million dollars for a home, and their kids will go to school in a trailer," one resident said.

Some attendees felt the number of homes planned was excessive, with one terming it a "sardine style" development plan. Resident Martha Lewis observed that when she looks at the plan, "it looks like massively-packed houses, as high as you can possibly pack them in."

Construction will be phased due to stormwater management regulations, and will begin at the northern part of the site first. Toll Brothers hopes construction will begin in Fall 2018, and last until 2022. During that time, residents will be able to contact a construction representative with concerns. Greyswood and Fernwood will be bonded for any construction damage from large trucks or heavy equipment during the construction process. A sound barrier will protect homes at the north end from noise generated by the I-270 spur. The existing Beltway sound barrier will be extended west along the south end of the property.

Several residents asked about the environmental impact of developing such a large green space. Toll Brothers assured them that stormwater management after the completion of the project will be "better than it is now, better for the Cheasapeake Bay." Resident Nancy Neff was skeptical. "I am offended by you patting yourselves on the back" for the bioswale plan to manage stormwater. "The best natural drainage is there
right now," she said. She cited the "appalling" drainage systems in King Farm in Rockville, which cause some homes in that community to flood regularly.

"I can assure you, Toll Brothers communities do not have flooded basements." said Tom Mateya, Toll Brothers' Director of Land Development.

Green space includes connected
trails, forested areas, and "The Green," 

 in the center of
the development
 
Bioswales will capture
stormwater throughout
the site
Green lines indicate the trails,
which will be open to the public;
4 sitting/picnic areas, a tot lot, an
"open play area," a clubhouse with pool
and fitness room and a community space
round out the recreation amenities
Packed house at 10:00 AM on a
Saturday, reflecting the depth of
community concerns about the project
 

Timeline of the project
Resident Rachel Berdansky listens
as Toll Brothers representatives
try to answer her question

Friday, March 25, 2016

Toll Brothers to host public meeting on WMAL property preliminary plan April 9

Developer Toll Brothers has announced it will be hosting a community meeting regarding their preliminary plan for the WMAL tower site in Bethesda on Saturday, April 9 at 10:00 AM at North Bethesda Middle School (8935 Bradmoor Drive). Mark Nosal, President of Toll Brothers' Maryland Division, says the preliminary plan will detail the configuration of lots, roads and public space within the development.

Landscaping and amenities will be fleshed out at a future planning stage, Nosal said. The plan that will be unveiled will reflect the ten months of public input Toll Brothers has received, he said, as well as feedback from Montgomery County Government.

The site at 7115 Greentree Road houses four transmitters for WMAL Radio in a partially-forested, parklike setting surrounded by single-family residential neighborhoods. There is limited road access to the site, expected to be remedied by connecting Greentree Road with Greyswood Road, as suggested by an earlier master plan. How Greyswood Road residents might feel about that is another story.

It will be interesting to see the final mix of housing types proposed. At a meeting last year, Toll Brothers predicted there would be a 50/50 mix of single-family houses and townhomes, with 330 homes altogether. Current residents have raised several concerns, including already-overcrowded schools in the Walter Johnson cluster, and traffic, given the overwhelmingly auto-oriented nature of the site.

WMAL is expected to relocate its transmitters to Germantown if the development is approved.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Toll Brothers unveils potential plans for WMAL site in Bethesda (Photos)

330 homes could
replace radio
transmitters

A Toll Brothers representative presented the development firm's early plans for the WMAL transmitter site at 7115 Greentree Road in Bethesda to the Western Montgomery County Citizens Advisory Board last night. Tom Mateya, the company's Director of Development, was introduced by Ellen Bogage of Chespeake Public Strategies, the firm hired by Toll to represent it in the community.
2 potential development
schemes for the WMAL site
Mateya showed four potential configurations for the future neighborhood, which would have 330 homes in a 50/50 mix of single-family homes and townhouses. Prices will range from $900,000 for townhomes, to $1.1 million plus for single-family houses. 42 homes would be affordable MPDUs. Advisory Board member Jordan Cooper asked if the MPDUs would be clustered, or spread throughout the development. Mateya said Toll would disperse them throughout, as they have at their Olney development. He said the affordable homes would be attached units, possibly duplexes disguised to look like single-family homes.
2 more potential
configurations
Toll has retained Torti Gallas and Partners, Inc. as their architecture firm, and says the designs will be new and unique, not like any home designs you've found at other Toll residential developments. Torti Gallas designed King Farm in Rockville.

The firm has already done some geological and utility studies at the 75 acre WMAL site. Water, electric and gas service have been examined. Sewer and water were determined to be adequate in preliminary reviews, but Toll is aware of a 35-foot WSSC pipe section nearby which developer EYA is having difficulty with at their Rock Spring townhome site.

15% of the site is currently forested, and Toll Brothers wants to retain that. Many nearby residents have long used the site as an unofficial park, and have expressed concern about losing the green space. Advisory Board member Tara Flynn asked what plans the firm has to retain any of the green space, and who would control it, HOAs or the County. Mateya said they may reserve some space, potentially for parks and/or a school site. It would be up to the County how they would want to utilize it under that scenario, he said. Toll remains undecided on whether or not to include meeting or recreational facilities for the new community's residents, Mateya said. The company will ultimately decide based upon what it perceives as the current market demand for such shared facilities by its target homebuying audience.

Board member Scott Goldberg asked if pre-settlement solar energy would be utilized in the development. Mateya said there is no demand for solar in this area.

The biggest challenges Toll is dealing with on this project are schools, parks and transportation. Montgomery County planners and Montgomery County Public Schools recently hosted a school capacity community meeting to discuss overcrowding in the Walter Johnson school cluster, which a representative of the West Fernwood community last night said cannot hold another student at the moment. That meeting followed a Rock Spring redevelopment meeting at which residents pushed back on adding residential in an area with already-overcapacity schools.

Virginia Miller, the Board's resident representative, predicted there will be complaints if kids from the same neighborhood are forced to attend different schools. Yet, some Ashburton parents were pushing for redistricting at the aforementioned recent school capacity meeting.

Toll forecasts .575 K-12 students per home, meaning a potential generation of 189 students at the WMAL site. Those first students would arrive in either 2018 or 2019, as the first residents settle in the new neighborhood, Toll estimates.

Transportation is a major concern for nearby residents, but few feasible options exist. Board member John Bowis asked if a direct connection with Democracy Boulevard was possible. Mateya said that, while it is theoretically possible, and that Toll Brothers is still studying such a road, it is not likely. Stratton Park and a Bethesda Fire Department station stand in the way, and there would be engineering challenges regarding turn ratios and adequate space, he said.
WMAL site, with
Greyswood Road
stub at center-right
What do exist are some stub roads, which an earlier master plan indicates could lead to a road connection between Greyswood Road and Greentree. It's unclear at this juncture what existing residents along Greyswood might have to say about that. Toll says earlier development in the neighborhood left the WMAL site as an island.

Mateya said that the company will submit its concept plan for the WMAL site to the Planning Board in November, and a preliminary subdivision plan in January 2016.

Concept plan renderings courtesy Torti Gallas and Partners
All rights reserved

Top photo of WMAL towers: Robert Dyer

Map via Google Maps

Saturday, February 07, 2015

WMAL TOWER SITE BEING SOLD IN BETHESDA (PHOTO)

Remember my report last August on the potential sale of the WMAL radio transmitter site in Bethesda? Jonathan Elbaz of The Sentinel reports that the site is indeed now on the market. As some of the most lucrative land not near a Metro station in Montgomery County, you can expect infill developers to want to put a ton of townhouses on this property, which is located at 7115 Greentree Road near I-270 and the Beltway.

Monday, August 11, 2014

BETHESDA WMAL TOWER SITE COULD BE REDEVELOPED (PHOTOS)

Even if you don't know what they are, you've probably seen the WMAL radio broadcast towers at 7115 Greentree Road near I-270 (and the Beltway) from afar. These towers stand on a massive property that is near some of the most valuable real estate in Bethesda. WMAL's new owner, Cumulus Media, may be on the verge of cashing in on that advantage. According to radio industry journalist Tom Taylor, cited by local broadcasting news authority DCRTV.com, Cumulus is including the property in a potential sell-off of transmitter sites it controls nationwide.

The site would lend itself well to single-family homes, in keeping with the surrounding neighborhood. Don't count out a townhome developer like EYA, which has recently gone on a spending binge on just this sort of potentially-valuable property inside the Beltway. The WMAL site can in no way be described as a "smart growth, transit-oriented" development opportunity, however. Regardless of the outcome, it would be one of the most significant residential neighborhood redevelopments in Bethesda.

DCRTV draws a technically-knowledgeable audience among its readership, and there are many interesting comments on the site regarding the wisdom of WMAL moving its transmission site further out (mentioning Poolesville and Germantown as possibilities considered in the past). The suggestion made by some, is that WMAL is now emphasizing its FM broadcast, making the AM tower site expendable. Its AM signal has been fairly comparable to that of WTOP's legendary strong signals on AM and FM. I fired up my venerable Radio Shack AM/FM transistor radio last night, to test WMAL FM vs. WTOP FM. Both signals came in clearly. But I would have to give WTOP the award for strongest and clearest FM signal. 


All photos ©2014 Robert Dyer