There are a few more boxes and pallets to unpack at MOD Pizza at the Montrose Crossing shopping center on Rockville Pike, and the pizzeria should be ready to open. All decor, furniture, and light fixtures are in place. The patio out front is also set up.
Bethesda news, restaurants, nightlife, events and openings, real estate, crime reports and more - the way only a lifelong Bethesda resident like Robert Dyer can bring it to you. Everything you want and need to know about Bethesda, plus special investigative reports you won't find anywhere else. The must-read blog for breaking Bethesda news, when you want to be the first to know.
Thursday, August 15, 2019
DoubleTree Bethesda conversion to The Bethesdan continues (Photos)
Painters changing the exterior color of the DoubleTree Bethesda have moved to the front of the hotel, which is being rebranded as The Bethesdan Hotel. The property will remain in the Hilton hotel group, but is switching to its Tapestry Collection portfolio.
Wednesday, August 14, 2019
Police think same man burglarized Bethesda, Silver Spring businesses
Montgomery County police detectives believe the same suspect may have burglarized businesses in downtown Bethesda and Silver Spring. They have released new surveillance footage that appears to show the same man, who pried open the door at each business.
The suspect allegedly struck first at Penney Group Design at 8120 Woodmont Avenue in Bethesda on May 24 at 4:15 PM, taking two laptops and fleeing on a bicycle parked out in front of the building. He allegedly then burglarized the Q Lux Spa at 1111 Spring Street in Silver Spring on July 25 at 5:21 PM, stealing cash from the business.
Anyone with information regarding these burglaries or the suspect involved is asked to call the 3rd District Investigative Section at 240-773-6870. Those who wish to remain anonymous may call Crime Solvers of Montgomery County toll-free at 1-866-411-TIPS (8477). Crime Solvers will pay a cash reward of up to $10,000 for information provided to them that leads to an arrest in this case.
The suspect allegedly struck first at Penney Group Design at 8120 Woodmont Avenue in Bethesda on May 24 at 4:15 PM, taking two laptops and fleeing on a bicycle parked out in front of the building. He allegedly then burglarized the Q Lux Spa at 1111 Spring Street in Silver Spring on July 25 at 5:21 PM, stealing cash from the business.
Anyone with information regarding these burglaries or the suspect involved is asked to call the 3rd District Investigative Section at 240-773-6870. Those who wish to remain anonymous may call Crime Solvers of Montgomery County toll-free at 1-866-411-TIPS (8477). Crime Solvers will pay a cash reward of up to $10,000 for information provided to them that leads to an arrest in this case.
Sidewalk reopens at 4747 Bethesda Avenue construction site (Photos)
The sidewalk has reopened in front of 4747 Bethesda Avenue at JBG Smith's Class A office building construction site. That's welcome news for pedestrians, who no longer have to detour to the other side of the street.
We're also getting our closest look yet at the sleek lobby, including the security desk having been installed, and the parking garage entrance. Interior construction continues, but at this point presents no danger to those walking on the sidewalk below.
We're also getting our closest look yet at the sleek lobby, including the security desk having been installed, and the parking garage entrance. Interior construction continues, but at this point presents no danger to those walking on the sidewalk below.
Tuesday, August 13, 2019
Rappaport imagines "Bethesda Market" use for vacant Bethesda Place Safeway store
The former Safeway grocery store space under the Bethesda Place apartments continues to sit vacant month after month at 7625 Old Georgetown Road. It's quite odd, considering there is a captive audience upstairs for groceries, as well as many other residential buildings surrounding the site. There are parking spaces reserved for retail use at the building, so that shouldn't be the issue. Perhaps some retailers find the visibility somewhat lacking for drivers passing by.
Real estate firm Rappaport Co. is now trying to re-energize the demand for the space with new marketing materials. They present a vision of a Bethesda Market.
Do grocery stores consider there is too much competition right now, with another grocery store on the way next year at 7900 Wisconsin Avenue, just two blocks away? Walmart has a Neighborhood Market format that fits this space exactly (~40,000 SF), but has closed at least nine of those stores this year, it must be noted. Lidl stores are only 20,000 SF, so one would fit here, as well.
What else is about 40,000 SF that would fit here? Dave & Buster's. Maybe that could give downtown Bethesda's dead nightlife a small shot in the arm.
Rendering via Rappaport Co.
All rights reserved.
Real estate firm Rappaport Co. is now trying to re-energize the demand for the space with new marketing materials. They present a vision of a Bethesda Market.
Do grocery stores consider there is too much competition right now, with another grocery store on the way next year at 7900 Wisconsin Avenue, just two blocks away? Walmart has a Neighborhood Market format that fits this space exactly (~40,000 SF), but has closed at least nine of those stores this year, it must be noted. Lidl stores are only 20,000 SF, so one would fit here, as well.
What else is about 40,000 SF that would fit here? Dave & Buster's. Maybe that could give downtown Bethesda's dead nightlife a small shot in the arm.
Rendering via Rappaport Co.
All rights reserved.
New building proposed for 4824 Edgemoor Lane
A new residential building has been proposed for a single-family home site at 4824 Edgemoor Lane in downtown Bethesda. The precise dimensions of the building have not been made public yet, but the property is 8000 SF in size, and is currently zoned with a 120' maximum height. That is quite low for a property literally across the street from a Metro station. But at the same time, residents of The Chase whose windows and balconies face that way will likely be concerned about the distance between their building and the new one, as well as the height of it.
Currently, the home on the site has been leased for business purposes. A home directly across Edgemoor is already slated for redevelopment into the Edgemont II. For that reason, a pedestrian safety concern here would be both sidewalks of Edgemoor being shut down at once, on a primary walking route for both transit commuters and Bethesda Elementary School students.
A public meeting on the proposed 4824 Edgemoor development has been scheduled for Tuesday, August 20, 2019 at 7:00 PM at the Bethesda-Chevy Chase Regional Services Center at 4805 Edgemoor Lane..
![]() |
Google Maps satellite view of the corner property, which is surrounded to the south and west by The Chase and a garage entrance for The Chase |
A public meeting on the proposed 4824 Edgemoor development has been scheduled for Tuesday, August 20, 2019 at 7:00 PM at the Bethesda-Chevy Chase Regional Services Center at 4805 Edgemoor Lane..
Monday, August 12, 2019
Bethesda nightlife is on life-support
Bethesda experienced something increasingly rare as July became August this year - nice summer weather without non-stop rain. I did some spot checks on the old "Barnes & Noble" plaza at the corner of Bethesda and Woodmont Avenues in the 9:00 and 10:00 PM hours. These were ideal nights, because the weather was perfect, and no one had gone back to school or college yet. In years past, one would find a large crowd hanging out, the night air filled with music and many conversations.
This year?
Nothing. Dead. One night there was literally no one on the plaza. The next night was captured here on film. Such a sad scene was inconceivable just a few years ago. Of course, downtown Bethesda is not the place it was a few years ago.
This decade got off to a bad start with the Montgomery County Council's disastrous Nighttime Economy Initiative, spearheaded by Councilmember Hans Riemer after his election in 2010. At the time, Bethesda actually had nightlife, with mobs of people outside of popular bars and nightclubs on both sides of downtown. In fact, Bethesda nightlife was even booming back in the 1980s and 1990s, with venues like Twist and Shout, the Yacht Club of Bethesda, and the Shark Club.
We should have been taking the next step by attracting upscale, Las Vegas-style nightclubs to downtown Bethesda, adding standard civic events like Mardi Gras & St. Patrick's Day parades or an Oktoberfest to Bethesda's staid and outdated holiday calendar, and finally ending the archaic Montgomery County government monopoly on liquor sales that restricts economic growth and revenue.
But that's not what Riemer and his vaunted Nighttime Economy Task Force did. Instead of "making us hip," as Riemer promised his cheerleaders in the local media, it ended up tanking the nighttime economy. By the time the smoke had cleared, a record 17 nightspots had closed, the food truck industry in Montgomery County had been completely wiped out, and Riemer and the Council had actually strengthened the County liquor monopoly to preserve it.
Now the streets of downtown Bethesda are dark and deserted after 9 or 10 at night, even in summer. Gone are the crowds on sidewalks where bars used to be, with those spaces still vacant or filled with less vibrant uses.
Bar and club owners had taken it on the chin again. Now it was the regular restaurants' turn.
Despite warnings from myself in 2014, the Montgomery County Council and Planning Board allowed the Regal Cinemas Bethesda 10 to be evicted from 7272 Wisconsin Avenue and demolished, without requiring the developer to provide a replacement cineplex. That reduced the number of people coming to downtown Bethesda by up to 20,000 per weekend, according to a study of the impact of cineplexes on urban centers.
Not only did the loss of foot traffic lead to many restaurant closures, but there was a decline simply in the number of people present on sidewalks and the plaza.
The Council wasn't done yet.
In 2017, they passed a $15 minimum wage bill. During public testimony, the Council was warned by the Restaurant Association of Maryland that the dining sector in Montgomery was already flat by this point, compared to surging growth in adjacent Frederick County, the District and Northern Virginia. A representative of the Maryland Retailers Association noted that Montgomery County had already suffered a net loss of over 2100 retail jobs since the turn of the century. $15 an hour? "That's a lot of extra Slurpees to sell," a convenience store owner mused bitterly.
The two public garages at Bethesda Row began to have more vacant parking spaces, including the one that regularly would say "FULL" at peak dinner time in even the recent past.
But the plaza outside of Barnes & Noble was the last to go. The quasi-public gathering space was fueled by the bookstore, where local celebrities like David Brooks, John King, and Wolf Blitzer would seek out intellectual tomes. Or one could simply browse, socialize, get a coffee at the Starbucks upstairs, study or charge your phone if the power in your apartment went out.
Barnes & Noble reportedly wanted a lower rent to renew. We can't know exactly what was said in those negotiations, but what is known for sure is that Barnes & Noble closed in January 2018, to be replaced by Anthropologie & Co.
This was literally the last straw. The public garages in the summers of 2018 and 2019 regularly showed hundreds of vacant parking spaces available at peak dinner times. It became so embarrassing that the numeric digital readout of spaces available was finally disabled at the garage entrance by Nando's Peri-Peri.
Everyone waited to see what would happen on the Bethesda Row plaza over the first summer with Anthropologie. The answer that quickly became clear in June was - nothing. A few stragglers sitting even at peak dinner hours. A few returning buskers playing to few ears. One enterprising new musical duo tried to relocate the action to Amazon Books down the street last summer, when the store had just opened. That lasted exactly one night. There's hardly anyone in Amazon Books at night, and the store appears to be a vanity project for Jeff Bezos at this point.
The collapse of the nighttime economy, the loss of 20000 people per weekend with the theater closure, and the departure of community favorite Barnes & Noble was a collective weight that already-teetering businesses could not support. Major anchor restaurants closed around Bethesda Row, including American Tap Room, Redwood, and Lebanese Taverna, all of which had lasted many years.
Regular readers of this news site are well-informed about the cratering of nightlife, and, of course, residents are living through it. But our elected officials, who know little about how business works (as proven by Montgomery County having the worst economic development numbers in the region), still can't admit anything is wrong or that they have failed.
Just as my years and years of warnings about our moribund economy eventually were picked up on by the Washington Post, near-victorious County Executive candidate David Blair, and even former Riemer chief-of-staff Adam Pagnucco, the nightlife problem (which is actually countywide) may also be reaching a point so low it can't be ignored any longer.
When Tapp'd Bethesda closed recently, one of its owners told reporter Charlie Wright of Bethesda Magazine that the collapse of nightlife in Bethesda was the culprit. "Co-owner Johnny Natoli said the declining downtown Bethesda scene led to the downfall of Tapp’d," Wright wrote. "Natoli likened the area to the Ocean City boardwalk when Union Jack’s opened in 2005, but added that it’s fallen off drastically since then. 'There’s no action down there, there’s nothing going on...I see a lot of for lease signs down there,'” Natoli noted.
Recent development appears to have hurt, rather than helped, the plaza at Bethesda Row. Over 10 years later, Montgomery County never delivered on politicians' promises of a new public space outside Mon Ami Gabi and the Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema (which does not show mainstream blockbusters, for any who are unaware). A low-slung building at 4749 Bethesda Avenue that seemed ideal for restaurant and bar uses, complete with a rooftop deck for dining or club programming, ended up being leased to a bank that ensures it will be dark in the evening.
Speaking of dark, the Lot 31 buildings across the street never did get the illuminated rooflines that would make them attractive at night. Silver is hidden from the plaza up Woodmont Avenue, and while PassionFish seems to be a success, the intersection designed to frustrate drivers ended up creating a veritable ocean of concrete between the plaza and whatever patio activity takes place at the seafood restaurant. New urbanist design would have made a tight, 4-way cross intersection to bring the various developments together.
There is now less light and energy than ever. Lot 31 had more lights than the developments that replaced it. Today, large black hulks loom over the plaza from Lot 31, 4747 Bethesda Avenue, and 7272 Wisconsin Avenue at night. Will 4747 Bethesda get a great restaurant tenant on the ground floor (and will it be visible from the plaza?)? Will 7272 Wisconsin deliver a nicely-illuminated roofline and promised Italian villa staircase behind the Landmark theater? What can be done to revitalize the plaza at Bethesda Row?
The District and Northern Virginia are destroying us in nightlife, as they are in economic development. Montgomery County hasn't attracted a major corporate headquarters in over 20 years. Shockingly, the current Council hasn't moved on either crisis - nor on our traffic congestion and debt crises - since taking office last December.
I ran for the County Council on those issues - and real solutions - last year. The media never reported on my campaign. Most voters didn't seem to bother to research the candidates before voting. And shockingly-anomalous voting results at dozens of precincts suggest their votes might not have counted if they did.
You won't hear Kojo Nnmadi inviting me on his radio show to talk about these issues. Only good news about our elected officials can be heard there. Looking at the non-existent economic numbers and dark streets at night, there isn't much good news to tell these days.
This is a crisis. And a conversation that must be had sooner, rather than later.
This year?
Nothing. Dead. One night there was literally no one on the plaza. The next night was captured here on film. Such a sad scene was inconceivable just a few years ago. Of course, downtown Bethesda is not the place it was a few years ago.
This decade got off to a bad start with the Montgomery County Council's disastrous Nighttime Economy Initiative, spearheaded by Councilmember Hans Riemer after his election in 2010. At the time, Bethesda actually had nightlife, with mobs of people outside of popular bars and nightclubs on both sides of downtown. In fact, Bethesda nightlife was even booming back in the 1980s and 1990s, with venues like Twist and Shout, the Yacht Club of Bethesda, and the Shark Club.
We should have been taking the next step by attracting upscale, Las Vegas-style nightclubs to downtown Bethesda, adding standard civic events like Mardi Gras & St. Patrick's Day parades or an Oktoberfest to Bethesda's staid and outdated holiday calendar, and finally ending the archaic Montgomery County government monopoly on liquor sales that restricts economic growth and revenue.
But that's not what Riemer and his vaunted Nighttime Economy Task Force did. Instead of "making us hip," as Riemer promised his cheerleaders in the local media, it ended up tanking the nighttime economy. By the time the smoke had cleared, a record 17 nightspots had closed, the food truck industry in Montgomery County had been completely wiped out, and Riemer and the Council had actually strengthened the County liquor monopoly to preserve it.
Now the streets of downtown Bethesda are dark and deserted after 9 or 10 at night, even in summer. Gone are the crowds on sidewalks where bars used to be, with those spaces still vacant or filled with less vibrant uses.
Bar and club owners had taken it on the chin again. Now it was the regular restaurants' turn.
Despite warnings from myself in 2014, the Montgomery County Council and Planning Board allowed the Regal Cinemas Bethesda 10 to be evicted from 7272 Wisconsin Avenue and demolished, without requiring the developer to provide a replacement cineplex. That reduced the number of people coming to downtown Bethesda by up to 20,000 per weekend, according to a study of the impact of cineplexes on urban centers.
Not only did the loss of foot traffic lead to many restaurant closures, but there was a decline simply in the number of people present on sidewalks and the plaza.
The Council wasn't done yet.
In 2017, they passed a $15 minimum wage bill. During public testimony, the Council was warned by the Restaurant Association of Maryland that the dining sector in Montgomery was already flat by this point, compared to surging growth in adjacent Frederick County, the District and Northern Virginia. A representative of the Maryland Retailers Association noted that Montgomery County had already suffered a net loss of over 2100 retail jobs since the turn of the century. $15 an hour? "That's a lot of extra Slurpees to sell," a convenience store owner mused bitterly.
The two public garages at Bethesda Row began to have more vacant parking spaces, including the one that regularly would say "FULL" at peak dinner time in even the recent past.
But the plaza outside of Barnes & Noble was the last to go. The quasi-public gathering space was fueled by the bookstore, where local celebrities like David Brooks, John King, and Wolf Blitzer would seek out intellectual tomes. Or one could simply browse, socialize, get a coffee at the Starbucks upstairs, study or charge your phone if the power in your apartment went out.
Barnes & Noble reportedly wanted a lower rent to renew. We can't know exactly what was said in those negotiations, but what is known for sure is that Barnes & Noble closed in January 2018, to be replaced by Anthropologie & Co.
This was literally the last straw. The public garages in the summers of 2018 and 2019 regularly showed hundreds of vacant parking spaces available at peak dinner times. It became so embarrassing that the numeric digital readout of spaces available was finally disabled at the garage entrance by Nando's Peri-Peri.
Everyone waited to see what would happen on the Bethesda Row plaza over the first summer with Anthropologie. The answer that quickly became clear in June was - nothing. A few stragglers sitting even at peak dinner hours. A few returning buskers playing to few ears. One enterprising new musical duo tried to relocate the action to Amazon Books down the street last summer, when the store had just opened. That lasted exactly one night. There's hardly anyone in Amazon Books at night, and the store appears to be a vanity project for Jeff Bezos at this point.
The collapse of the nighttime economy, the loss of 20000 people per weekend with the theater closure, and the departure of community favorite Barnes & Noble was a collective weight that already-teetering businesses could not support. Major anchor restaurants closed around Bethesda Row, including American Tap Room, Redwood, and Lebanese Taverna, all of which had lasted many years.
Regular readers of this news site are well-informed about the cratering of nightlife, and, of course, residents are living through it. But our elected officials, who know little about how business works (as proven by Montgomery County having the worst economic development numbers in the region), still can't admit anything is wrong or that they have failed.
Just as my years and years of warnings about our moribund economy eventually were picked up on by the Washington Post, near-victorious County Executive candidate David Blair, and even former Riemer chief-of-staff Adam Pagnucco, the nightlife problem (which is actually countywide) may also be reaching a point so low it can't be ignored any longer.
When Tapp'd Bethesda closed recently, one of its owners told reporter Charlie Wright of Bethesda Magazine that the collapse of nightlife in Bethesda was the culprit. "Co-owner Johnny Natoli said the declining downtown Bethesda scene led to the downfall of Tapp’d," Wright wrote. "Natoli likened the area to the Ocean City boardwalk when Union Jack’s opened in 2005, but added that it’s fallen off drastically since then. 'There’s no action down there, there’s nothing going on...I see a lot of for lease signs down there,'” Natoli noted.
Recent development appears to have hurt, rather than helped, the plaza at Bethesda Row. Over 10 years later, Montgomery County never delivered on politicians' promises of a new public space outside Mon Ami Gabi and the Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema (which does not show mainstream blockbusters, for any who are unaware). A low-slung building at 4749 Bethesda Avenue that seemed ideal for restaurant and bar uses, complete with a rooftop deck for dining or club programming, ended up being leased to a bank that ensures it will be dark in the evening.
Speaking of dark, the Lot 31 buildings across the street never did get the illuminated rooflines that would make them attractive at night. Silver is hidden from the plaza up Woodmont Avenue, and while PassionFish seems to be a success, the intersection designed to frustrate drivers ended up creating a veritable ocean of concrete between the plaza and whatever patio activity takes place at the seafood restaurant. New urbanist design would have made a tight, 4-way cross intersection to bring the various developments together.
There is now less light and energy than ever. Lot 31 had more lights than the developments that replaced it. Today, large black hulks loom over the plaza from Lot 31, 4747 Bethesda Avenue, and 7272 Wisconsin Avenue at night. Will 4747 Bethesda get a great restaurant tenant on the ground floor (and will it be visible from the plaza?)? Will 7272 Wisconsin deliver a nicely-illuminated roofline and promised Italian villa staircase behind the Landmark theater? What can be done to revitalize the plaza at Bethesda Row?
The District and Northern Virginia are destroying us in nightlife, as they are in economic development. Montgomery County hasn't attracted a major corporate headquarters in over 20 years. Shockingly, the current Council hasn't moved on either crisis - nor on our traffic congestion and debt crises - since taking office last December.
I ran for the County Council on those issues - and real solutions - last year. The media never reported on my campaign. Most voters didn't seem to bother to research the candidates before voting. And shockingly-anomalous voting results at dozens of precincts suggest their votes might not have counted if they did.
You won't hear Kojo Nnmadi inviting me on his radio show to talk about these issues. Only good news about our elected officials can be heard there. Looking at the non-existent economic numbers and dark streets at night, there isn't much good news to tell these days.
This is a crisis. And a conversation that must be had sooner, rather than later.
Sunday, August 11, 2019
Super Mario teams up with Sugarfina at Bethesda Row (Photos)
Bethesda Row candy boutique Sugarfina is featuring a limited-edition line of candy and gift products developed in partnership with Nintendo. Super Mario-inspired candies come in collectible Nintendo gift boxes, including the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) Bento Box that plays music from Super Mario Bros. when opened.
Deluxe boxes come with an assortment of treats. And small boxes allow you to purchase individual flavors a la carte, ranging from Princess Peach Princess Pearls to Bowser Chocolate Eggs. Check out the special 8-bit graphics in the storefront window at 4808 Bethesda Avenue, or order online without leaving home.
Deluxe boxes come with an assortment of treats. And small boxes allow you to purchase individual flavors a la carte, ranging from Princess Peach Princess Pearls to Bowser Chocolate Eggs. Check out the special 8-bit graphics in the storefront window at 4808 Bethesda Avenue, or order online without leaving home.
Saturday, August 10, 2019
First major concrete pours to begin Monday at Marriott construction site
A crane is expected to remove the heavy excavation equipment from the construction site of the future Marriott International headquarters today, which is relocating from further north in Bethesda to 7750 Wisconsin Avenue in downtown Bethesda. Excavation is now complete. The first major concrete pours will begin at 5:00 AM on Monday and Tuesday, Marriott's development team says. Pedestrians and drivers should be aware that these pours will bring a large number of cement trucks to and from the site.
Friday, August 09, 2019
AT&T proposes new cell antennas at Westmoreland Circle in Bethesda
AT&T is proposing to add new cell antennas "within" the steeple at the Westmoreland Congregational United Church of Christ, at 1 Westmoreland Circle in Bethesda. Their plan includes adding three new antennas, and three new remote radio heads at 67' above ground level. Public feedback is restricted to any impacts you feel the antennas would have on nearby historic properties. EBI Consulting will receive any comments you have in that regard at 413-281-4650.
7900 Wisconsin close to topping out in Bethesda
JBG Smith's 7900 Wisconsin Avenue mixed-use development project is close to topping out. Concrete for the rooftop has been poured, as you can see in these photos. The 17-story tower (some argue it is 18 stories) counts OrangeTheory Fitness, and a "neighborhood grocer" among its ground floor tenants; a JBG employee accidentally identified the grocer as Trader Joe's in 2014. As a project that was planned before the disastrous Bethesda Downtown sector plan passed in 2017, 7900 Wisconsin does not suffer from the drab, cookie cutter massing and architecture many buildings designed under the plan's mandates share.
Thursday, August 08, 2019
New LED lights brighten corner in Bethesda
The new LED lights installed at the building housing Cafe X-press have brightened up the corner at Del Ray and Norfolk Avenues in the Woodmont Triangle. At a time when the collapse of the nighttime economy has increased the number of lonely, dark streets in downtown Bethesda, pedestrians can appreciate the addition of a more well-lit one.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)