Friday, June 26, 2015

9 cars broken into in E. Bethesda & Chevy Chase, assault at Suburban Hospital + more - Crime update

Here's a roundup of crimes reported across Bethesda on June 23, according to crime data:

Vehicle burglary. 4600 block Rosedale Avenue.

Vehicle burglary. 4600 block Rosedale Avenue.

Vehicle burglary. 4300 block Lynbrook Drive.

Vehicle burglary. 4300 block Chestnut Street.

Vehicle burglary. 7300 block Meadow Lane.

Assault. Suburban Hospital.

Vehicle burglary. 3900 block Virgilia Street.

Vehicle burglary. 3900 block Virgilia Street.

Vehicle burglary. 3700 block Williams Lane (Chevy Chase Section 5).

Drug arrest. Curtis Street at East-West Highway.

Theft. Wisconsin Circle.

Theft. 5300 block Friendship Boulevard.

Vehicle burglary. 3400 block Cummings Lane.

Theft. 8900 block Ridge Place.

Theft. 10200 block Tyburn Terrace.

The final day of one of Bethesda's last gas stations (Photos)

The Shell gas station at Old Georgetown Road and Woodmont Avenue closed permanently yesterday. Roped off to vehicle traffic, it and the law office next door await final approval for demolition from Montgomery County. Inside the station's convenience store structure, empty cigarette racks await removal.

Both will be replaced by a small TD Bank building, with drive-thru facilities. As I reported ten days ago, the closure of this station leaves only 4 places to buy gas in downtown Bethesda. One of those, the Sunoco at Battery Lane and Wisconsin Avenue, is slated for redevelopment in the coming years, as well.













New hours for Bethesda Circulator July 1 (Photo)

The free Bethesda Circulator bus will have a new schedule starting on July 1. Hours will be:

Monday-Thursday: 7 AM - 11 PM

Friday: 7 AM - 12 AM

Saturday: 10 AM to 12 AM.

For more information on the Circulator and its route, visit Bethesda Urban Partnership's website.

Transportation, schools, parks are primary concerns at White Flint 2 sector plan launch meeting in Bethesda (Photos)

Residents, activists and landowners gathered at Luxmanor Elementary School last night for the launch of the White Flint 2 sector plan process. The plan will determine much of the redevelopment future of properties located roughly between Twinbrook Parkway and Montrose Parkway. Now that Montgomery County has established the Pike District will be a high-density growth area, and Rockville is preparing its own higher-density plan for Rockville Pike north of White Flint 2, this area is also primed for a taller and denser future. 

So while the larger question over urban vs. suburban density appears to be moot, residents remain concerned about the impacts on schools and transportation. Green space is a priority for current residents, as well.

Those concerned about overcrowding said the community "needs schools, not a plan for schools," as one attendee wrote on the Feedback Wall after the presentation. Specifying a site for a future school in the Walter Johnson cluster was also cited as important by some. How to pay for the schools was another question. One resident asked a member of the planning staff if the plan could require developers to build a new school. That is not the current policy in Montgomery County, however, where developers today pay a fee to cover what the projected impact of their project will be on the school cluster in question. But that arrangement has failed to produce enough revenue to cover the current school construction needs in the county.

Redistricting also looms large in the minds of current and future public school parents. Will only the new children be districted outside of the Walter Johnson cluster? Many attendees felt that cluster was already too crowded to handle any additional capacity.

Alternatively, one commenter echoed a talking point being promoted by some county officials, saying planners need to "determine what future parents consider an acceptable school design, especially millennials. Do they continue to expect stand-alone buildings, or are there other alternatives?" This likely refers to the suggestion by those officials, and an architect hired by a developer, that the school of the future might be small in footprint, urban in design, could be in a building with other uses, and be located in an industrial area. That's going to be a hard sell for most parents, I expect.

The one comment that summed sentiments up best was, "Show me the school!!!"
"Show me the school!!!"
Many expressed wishes that the two sections of the Pike District be cohesive and well connected for pedestrian and bike traffic. Among the ideas for transportation were shuttles between the new residential developments and commercial centers, an additional entrance to the White Flint Metro station at Old Georgetown Road, and smaller blocks to improve walking conditions. However, some said intersections were so bad as it is that there would have to be a plan to deal with the additional cars that would be added to the area.

Parks were on the minds of many. One future park site suggested was the current Park and Ride lot. Overall, people said they wanted sizable parks, not pocket parks. "No one wants to live in Cement City," one commenter wrote. "Would like to be able to walk to a park, rest, relax, and play with my dog," wrote another, who noted that Cabin John Park was the closest significant park right now.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Hogan approves Purple Line

Maryland Governor Larry Hogan has approved the Purple Line light rail project that will connect Bethesda and New Carrollton. But he said the state's contribution to the project will be $168 million instead of $700 million. That will greatly increase the cost to Montgomery and Prince George's Counties.

In his press conference today, Hogan also announced about $2 billion in funding for roads and bridges. That will include funds for widening Interstate 270.

1 hour fugitive recaptured in Chevy Chase, assault at Walter Reed + more - Bethesda crime update

A man who allegedly fled the scene of a traffic accident in Chevy Chase was recaptured after escaping from police custody early Monday morning. The suspect was described in radio communications by Montgomery County Police as a Hispanic male, 5'9", with black hair spiked in front, and wearing a dark grey turtleneck t-shirt, jeans and loafers.

The accident apparently occurred near the intersection of Jones Bridge Road and Montgomery Avenue, but whether more than one vehicle was involved was not immediately clear. A female passenger was transported to the trauma center at Suburban Hospital, according to scanner reports. To my knowledge, no report on the condition of that patient has been released to the public.

Those same scanner transmissions indicated that the suspect managed to escape in handcuffs from the rear of a patrol car. K9 units were called in as police searched the area, eventually joined by Chevy Chase Village Police officers. According to radio reports, police originally arrested the suspect for allegedly fleeing the scene of an accident, and for having materials for manufacturing fake IDs in his vehicle.

Police officers appeared to have created an effective perimeter in boxing-in the temporary fugitive, as he eventually was apprehended on Jones Bridge Road near the original scene. "We got him," an officer radioed about an hour after the manhunt began.

Here's a roundup of other crimes reported across Bethesda on June 22, according to crime data:

Burglary. 4300 block East-West Highway.

Theft. 7300 block Maple Avenue.

Assault. Walter Reed National Military Medical Center at 12:13 PM.

Assault. 8500 block Connecticut Avenue at 11:30 PM.

Theft. 5400 block Wisconsin Avenue.

Drug arrest. Rockville Pike at Pooks Hill Road.

Burglary. 8700 block Fernwood Road.

Vehicle burglary. 9100 block Friars Road (Green Tree Manor).

Theft. 6800 block Algonquin Avenue (Cohasset).

Theft. 10500 block Rockville Pike (Grosvenor).

Burglary. 10400 block Farnham Drive at 4:12 PM (Wildwood Manor).

Vehicle burglary. 5800 block Oxford Road (Glen Echo).

Burglary. 5000 block Nicholson Lane.

Theft. 7100 block Democracy Boulevard.

Theft from vehicle. 11600 block Old Georgetown Road (Pike District).

Drug arrest. Westlake Drive at Westlake Terrace.

Vehicle burglary. 6900 block Seven Locks Road (Cabin John).

Bradley Shopping Center exploring future redevelopment options

Owners of the venerable Bradley Shopping Center in Bethesda are actively exploring options for redeveloping their property, their attorney Jody Kline said at last night's public hearing on the Bethesda Downtown sector plan. While Kline said they have no immediate plans to redevelop the site, they have retained Bethesda real estate firm Streetsense to study their options.

"We've found a niche there [with] neighborhood serving" retail, Kline said on behalf of the shopping center. Home to popular retailers like Strosniders Hardware, Bradley Care Drugs and Bradley Food and Beverage - to name only a few - the property sits near the edge of the area covered under the sector plan.

So far, Kline said, one option identified is to put residential above the stores, doubling the 51,000 SF site's density. But Kline argued the property must be allowed more density than the draft plan provides for to successfully redevelop. "The property can handle more density, and certainly more commercial density," Kline said.

It's unlikely the ultimate development would simply put residential above the existing retail footprint. That structure couldn't support additional floors above, and probably occupies barely half of the entire property. The county's new development guidelines emphasize structured or rear parking, and retail that fronts onto the street.

Many real estate observers, who have no stake in the property, have previously marveled at the potential development that could result if the shopping center joined its property with EuroMotorcars. Such a development would virtually rival Bethesda Row in size, and essentially adjoin it at Arlington Road and Bethesda Avenue. Neighbors behind the Roosevelt-era apartments behind the site would likely have something to say about the potential height and density of such a development, however.

I think what most community members would find important is - how many of those retailers will stay, or be "allowed" to stay in regard to rents, in any redevelopment of the property? That could be a big part of getting community buy-in for more density there.

Bethesda residents rally against Metro plaza building, road through Battery Lane park at Downtown Plan hearing

What height buildings should be on which streets continues to draw a wide variety of opinions. But Bethesda residents speaking at Wednesday's Bethesda Downtown sector plan hearings were pretty clear on two points - they don't want a new building on the plaza at the Bethesda Metro Center, and they don't want a new road paved through Battery Lane Park. Both proposals are recommended by Montgomery County planners in the current plan draft. The Montgomery County Planning Board took testimony from the public at two sessions yesterday.

Bob Eisenberg made a point that speaks to both the past and future uses of the Metro Center plaza, and downtown Bethesda in general. He noted that he and his family "all too often have to look outside of Bethesda" for larger scale events. Other than the Taste of Bethesda and several street festivals that are primarily arts-related, we've continued to lack a St. Patrick's Day parade and an Oktoberfest, for example. And in the past, the Metro plaza was used for larger gatherings such as Fourth of July fireworks, and a Christmas tree lighting. Eisenberg said he opposed "eliminating this key public space," and also chastised planners for including a specific footprint for a 29-story building on it. He noted that master plans don't typically include building footprints, and asked them to remove the footprint shown on page 97 of the draft.

Another downtown resident recalled the golden age of the plaza, as well. Once home to a food court, the plaza was ideal for "lunchtime enjoyment" by workers. He said the ideal plaza would be one that continued to have an open design. With insular plazas, he argued, you're "not sure you’re safe there." Ultimately, he said, "plazas make the development. The development is not going to make the plaza."

"When my friends come to visit Bethesda, I want them to see a vibrant park area," a third resident said. "I’d like to see Metro plaza return to what it was originally designed for," he said.

Bethesda resident Nellie Wild also opposed the building on the plaza, calling for "vibrant public open spaces," and "larger public spaces, not micro parks."

An issue that drew equally-strong emotions from residents was the proposal to run a new road through Battery Lane Park.

Sandra Purohit brought a petition signed by 70 downtown residents who oppose the park road plan. Her observation that, if roads enhanced parks, the green space along I-95 would be the most popular on the east coast, drew chuckles from the crowd. Speaking to the county officials' frequent calls to make Montgomery more friendly to young professionals, Purohit advised "If you’re looking for millennials, they’re in Battery Park." One commenter on this blog previously noted there is a bocce league popular with young people that uses the park.

Purohit noted that Bethesda residents are "progressive, [and] want to live in a place that reflects progressive views," including on the environment. Water quality in Bethesda streams is already "poor to fair" as it is, she said. "We don’t just need park acres, we need quality park acres," she argued.

Another 25-year resident of Battery Lane said she and 12 other residents also oppose the park road plan. She said many mature trees would be lost, and air quality would suffer. A road would represent "loss of a green, quiet oasis," she said. Battery Lane Park is a "well used park all hours of the day, she reported, noting that people “stroll through, they don’t hurry through, they’re not dodging traffic," as they would if a road was added.

Ana Maria Mutter, resident manager of Battery Gardens, concurred with her neighbors in opposition to the park plan.

A number of other resident and developer concerns were raised during the hearing.

Attorney Jody Kline said the plan as drafted would not facilitate the redevelopment his clients proposed for the north side of East-West Highway between Our Lady of Lourdes and Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School. Their vision for street frontage along East-West is threatened by less-than-sufficient density recommendations for their sites, Kline said.

Jad Donohoe of The Donohoe Companies, who is also Vice Chair of the Western Montgomery County Citizens Advisory Board and grew up in Bethesda, commended planners for their recommendation to convert one-way streets into two-way thoroughfares. The change would be "a good thing for building owners, merchants, and pedestrians," Donohoe said. He wasn't as positive about the plan's density recommendation for Donohoe's property at 7400 Wisconsin Avenue, the historic post office. Donohoe noted that the property is "directly atop Metro, but we haven’t received any increase in density in this plan." He also said there are insufficient incentives in the current plan draft for developers to utilize density transfers, which Donohoe has done in the past.

Joseph Allen of the Washington Area Bicyclist Association endorsed the plan's bike improvements, but said NIH and Walter Reed need better bike facilities for their large number of employees.

Deborah Ingram said the 250' building height proposed along Wisconsin from Waverly to Willow was incompatible with the established, single-family home residential neighborhoods behind them.

A resident who lives near the proposed park across from Bethesda Elementary School had several concerns about the plans for that site. She said adding seating would attract adults and loiterers to the park, and pose a threat to children. The plan to demolish a county-owned home right next to two other occupied homes would divide the neighborhood, she predicted. She also opposed plans to light the park for night use, arguing the park should close at dusk.

An environmental advocate who said she represented 20 people found the plan's environmental goals and recommendations lacking, with little enforcement mechanism to effect actual change. The new standards were "pretty much business as usual," she said. "Mere recommendations and business as usual will not” solve the problems, she declared.

Finally, a resident of Nottingham Drive in Chevy Chase West said she opposed the proposed redevelopment of the Bethesda Fire Department station that borders her neighborhood. "I feel strongly that Bethesda downtown should end at Bradley Boulevard. CR zoning…has vast uses, and would be inappropriate for this edge property."

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Waterwall inside The Flats at Bethesda Ave. is an attention getter (Video)

Apartment buildings in the post-recession real estate boom are under enormous pressure to stand out from the competition. The Flats at Bethesda Avenue has what may be the most interesting and attention-grabbing lobby set piece in downtown Bethesda.

This floor-to-ceiling double waterwall across from the front desk provides a calming environment for visitors and residents alike. I'd like to see more water features, or animated elements, like this in future buildings.

Are Fortune 500 companies overrated in economic development?

Montgomery County has failed to attract a single major corporation to relocate here in over a decade. Much less draw a Fortune 500 company. The county's elected officials have yet to be called on that record of failure by the local media. But in public comments on economic development, many of those officials - and their political operatives - have argued that we don't need Fortune 500 companies in our future. Instead, they've said they're focused on small ventures in small offices. Indeed, a recent economic development effort to fill vacant office space in the county was limited to small companies only.

Are Fortune 500 companies "overrated", as these folks suggest?

I would say the answer is clearly, "no." Large corporate headquarters are not only sources of high-wage jobs, but also generate economic activity in other sectors around them, from hospitality to finance to real estate. More importantly, Fortune 500s can serve as halo companies, economic development trophies that can attract companies of similar caliber or aspirations.

But enough about what I think. There was a great article by Ana Swanson in the Washington Post Business section recently that backs up what I've been writing about economic development and Fortune 500 companies since 2006.

Rather than becoming outmoded dinosaurs, Fortune 500 companies "are more vital to the U.S. economy than ever," Swanson wrote. "In 2014, the Fortune 500 companies together had revenue that equalled 72% of U.S. gross domestic product, up from nearly 59% in the 1990s," she added.

The county has also struggled to attract and foster startups. It recently booted several startups from a facility it owned in Rockville to make way for a cybersecurity center there. That won't build trust in Montgomery County among entrepreneurs. Should you commit to an incubator you might get kicked to the curb from next year?

And how strong is Montgomery County as a cybersecurity brand around the world? Councilmember Hans Riemer has talked a lot about cybersecurity. But then it was revealed that the county government was running on Windows 2000 last year, four years after cybersecurity "guru" Riemer took office. A county that runs on perhaps the most vulnerable operating system in the world should probably not be talking about cybersecurity.

Is the information economy bigger than Fortune 500s? Not quite.

"For all the buzz about start-ups and small business in the United States, the massive corporations of the Fortune 500 are actually more important to the economy than ever," Swanson reported.

Should we be depending on small business to create the high-wage jobs the county has failed to attract over the last decade in the private sector? Not according to Swanson.

"Although politicians often talk about the importance of small business creation, most U.S. jobs do not come from start-ups," Swanson asserted. "According to research from George Mason [University], half of all jobs generated by newly formed companies disappear after five years."

With all of the solid evidence that we are on the wrong track, why are our elected officials so blasé about attracting Fortune 500 companies? The most obvious reason is to distract from their utter failure to attract any. "We don't need them anyway," they'll suggest, hoping to continue to get a free pass from the media.

But a second reason is increasingly becoming clear: corporate headquarters take up large real estate footprints. That's land that developers could make a lot of money on with residential development, not office space.

With the vast majority of councilmembers beholden to the developers who fund their campaigns, it's not surprising they're heading in the direction of making the county the region's ultimate bedroom community. "Live-Work-Play" is rapidly devolving into "Live-Drive-Pay", as more commuters are living in, but working outside of, Montgomery County.

That the "independent" office market report prepared for those officials would echo their call for converting most office space in the county to residential housing is not a surprise. That they can continue to get away with an economic development policy that appears to be at cross-purposes with reality and common sense is.

Look who's talking: Bethesda Downtown Plan hearings speakers list by the numbers

A full two-thirds of the speakers at this afternoon's public hearing on the Bethesda Downtown sector plan will be representing developers. Taking into account the 7:00-9:00 PM hearing, developers will account for 50% of the total speaking slots.

Found yourself shut out of the opportunity to speak at the hearings, and told to submit written testimony instead? You may understand why after studying the speakers lists.

Of course, I am not suggesting landowners and developers shouldn't have their say. To the contrary, they have the right for their interest to be heard. The decisions made by the Montgomery County Planning Board will have direct implications for their property values and redevelopment rights.

But should developers and citizens have to share an arbitrarily limited number of speaking slots? Development attorney Bob Dalrymple, for example, will speak for 27 straight minutes during this afternoon's 2:00-5:00 PM hearing, occupying 9 consecutive speaking slots.

The hearings will be held at the Bethesda-Chevy Chase Services Center in downtown Bethesda.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Pow! Oof! 3 assaults in 36 minutes in Bethesda, sex offense in Pike District + more - Crime update

Here's a roundup of crimes reported across Bethesda on June 20, according to crime data:

Assault. 7700 block Woodmont Avenue at 3:15 AM.

Theft. Elm Street at Arlington Road.

Theft. 4700 block Willard Avenue.

Theft. 5400 block Wisconsin Avenue.

Theft. 5400 block Wisconsin Avenue.

Drug arrest. 6400 block Bells Mill Road.

Theft. 9100 block Kittery Lane.

"Other sexual offense." 5600 block Nicholson Lane at 1:52 PM (Pike District).

Theft. Westfield Montgomery Mall.

Assault. 7300 block Westlake Terrace at 3:39 AM.

Assault. 10500 block Rockville Pike at 3:03 AM.

Urban Heights adds a new touch of Asia to its restaurant (Photos)

Urban Heights, the new rooftop restaurant from Chef Robert Wiedmaier's RW Restaurant Group, has added flags to the exterior. Can you identify the flag? It looks like the flag of the Qing dynasty, the first national flag of China. Chef Cliff Wharton is known for his pan-Asian cuisine, and the cocktails of Garth Hamilton continue the theme.

Urban Heights is located at the corner of Norfolk and Cordell Avenues in Bethesda's Woodmont Triangle.


Freshbikes reopens in Bethesda after flood (Photos)

Freshbikes has reopened its store at 7626 Old Georgetown Road in downtown Bethesda. The store was closed for almost two months after a massive pipe burst in their building and flooded them out of the shop.

WATCH: Pipe explodes, flushes Freshbikes out of their shop

The store has placed an outdoor display on the sidewalk to help passersby notice that they are indeed open again.



Monday, June 22, 2015

Car stolen from Ridge Pl., assault on Tuckerman La. + more - Bethesda crime update

Here's a roundup of crimes reported across Bethesda on June 19, according to crime data:

Theft. 7800 block Woodmont Avenue.

Theft. 4800 block Moorland Lane.

Theft. Norfolk Avenue at Del Ray Avenue.

Theft from vehicle. 8200 block Woodmont Avenue.

Vehicle burglary. 8900 block Ridge Place.

Stolen car. 8900 block Ridge Place.

Vehicle burglary. 6700 block Newbold Drive.

Vehicle burglary. 7000 block Longwood Drive.

Theft. 10400 block Fernwood Road.

Drug arrest. Cabin John Mall.

Assault. 7700 block Tuckerman Lane at 12:25 PM.

King Kong attacks in Bethesda! (Photos)

Watch out for a giant simian clutching a woman high above Cordell Avenue in downtown Bethesda. It's the infamous King Kong, who was revealed to the unsuspecting public when most of the scaffolding was removed in front of the new mural on the future restaurant space at 4848 Cordell Avenue.

Work continues on the interior, and a Greenhill Capital plaque has been installed outside.

The public art mural of New York City was inspired by the New York New York Casino & Hotel in Las Vegas, and is part of the redevelopment of this Greenhill property. A former homeless shelter, it is now planned for a currently-unnamed restaurant tenant. The renovations were designed by the architecture firm of Steven J. Karr, AIA, Inc., and the contractor for the project is Sigal Construction.





Report on MoCo's moribund office market offers the wrong solutions

It's not news to landowners, developers or readers of this blog that Montgomery County's office space market is as moribund as its economy. But the county's Planning Board is scheduled to be briefed on the dire situation during its meeting this Thursday, June 25. An advance copy of consultant Partners for Economic Solutions tells just how bad it is, and makes recommendations of what to do next. Unfortunately, it sounds like the report's authors are mostly telling County officials what they wanted to hear.


  • Montgomery County's office vacancy rate has increased in the last year

  • 11 county office buildings are nearly or totally vacant

  • GSA could vacate 1.1 million square feet of office space in the county over the next 5 years, a devastating blow on the horizon

  • Montgomery County's share of the total jobs in the region has steadily declined over the last 10 years, during which time no major corporation relocated to the county


Some of the report's analysis and suggestions are off base. For example, one approach PES suggests is simply giving up on office space and converting it to residential. While developers and planners have already been taking that approach from Bethesda to Wheaton to Clarksburg, to continue on that path will generate a transportation disaster. Roads and Metrorail already overwhelmed by the current volume of commuters cannot handle a county where all the jobs are in DC and Virginia. Smart growth demands jobs be created, not vacated, across Montgomery County to reduce commuting distance. Instead, according to the report's data, MoCo planners and councilmembers have allowed 558,000 SF of planned office space to be canceled or converted to residential. And notes only a handful of the many planned projects and existing office spaces being converted to residential or canceled. We're literally becoming the DC area's ultimate bedroom community.

Secondly, the impact of telecommuting and shrinking office sizes are grossly overstated. The report attempts to partially blame those trends for vacant office buildings. But the same report acknowledges that the vast majority of jobs created in recent years are in retail and restaurants. You can't fold jeans or make a frappucino over the internet. There were no great numbers of private sector, high-wage jobs added in Montgomery County over the last decade. So you can't say telecommuting is the new normal when few of the new jobs can be done from home.

Thirdly, it also oversells the success of office space in high density urban areas within Montgomery County. While downtown Bethesda and Silver Spring indeed are desirable locations for employers, neither have attracted a major corporate headquarters in over a decade any more than the suburban areas of the county did. Wheaton is right on the Red Line as well, but is also a dead zone for office space.

If transit was the sole determining factor, Wheaton would be doing well. In fact, the report concedes this point on Page 40. It also notes that Wheaton and Glenmont are not convenient to I-270 and I-495, but fails to point out that two planned freeways (Rockville Freeway and Northern Parkway) that would have given both immediate access to the freeway system were canceled by the county decades ago. Whoops.

The report states - contrary to the current County Council's stated "transit-only" future, and its own final recommendations: "Subareas that can offer Metro and good roadway access within a walkable mixed-use environment will be the markets that recover most quickly."

Meanwhile, the Pike District of North Bethesda has been designed in the New Urbanism model for smart growth and walkable communities, and is on the Red Line as well. Yet it, too, has failed to attract a major corporate tenant. The only significant addition was a reshuffling of Bank of America/Merrill Lynch from Tower Oaks to Pike & Rose, which is simply rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. Strangely, the report claims a severe drop in the "White Flint" vacancy rate, without providing any data on what specific real estate and leasing moves account for their claim. Highly suspect.

If new urbanism and transit are so hot for employers, why is the Pike District utterly tanking for new corporate office space? Why are a gleaming new Class A office building at 4500 East-West Highway, and a revamped one at 7550 Wisconsin Avenue - both walking distance to the Bethesda Metro station, restaurants and nightlife - mostly vacant?

Finally, the report closes with a waving-the-pom-poms endorsement of the current County talking points for vibrant, walkable urban developments with transit, and infill development. That's great. But if you strip the corporate, government and government contractor jobs out of DC and Northern Virginia, guess what? They would both become ghost towns like the report claims single-use, auto-dependent suburban office parks are now in Montgomery County. All the window dressing and vibrancy in the world doesn't make a difference if you don't have any jobs or affordable housing for young professionals.

Yet the report suggest abandoning current and planned office space in places like Glenmont and the northern I-270 corridor. That suggestion is contrary to smart growth.

I'm not saying it isn't good to have great urban areas. We have them, and they are working well in many respects. But to claim that urbanizing the rest of the county is the magic solution to attracting jobs is disingenuous.

We have to look elsewhere to find the answers. The authors of the report have partially conceded this in briefly referring to road access. They've noted that more successful jurisdictions are offering better incentive packages. It costs too much to operate a company in Montgomery County and the state of Maryland. Gridlocked roads drive up the costs of labor and shipping, among other expenses. There's a reason you get charged your shipping rate by zip code - you pay more when you live in an area with congested roads.

And we need to target industries like defense and aerospace that are never going away. They happen to need the kind of larger square footage that the I-270 corridor and upcounty can provide - research labs and testing and manufacturing facilities won't fit in tiny urban footprints. The report does not even consider those types of employers, much less Fortune 500 companies, and buys into what our local elected officials and Wall Street crooks keep trying to sell the American people on - that the future is only in the "knowledge economy" and small companies. Wall Street outsourcers, Warren Buffett and China certainly are hoping you'll believe them.

Many parts of the report sound as if the writers had been briefed by County officials and politicians, rather than taking a completely detached and independent look at the situation. They should not be referring to the failed Nighttime Economy Task Force at all, much less praising its utter failure. Those apparent communications have tainted the objectivity of the report.

And nowhere does it mention one of the County's major traffic and economic development liabilities - the lack of direct access to Dulles International Airport. It's impossible to take seriously a report that doesn't talk about that at all. You know about the Nighttime Economy Task Force, but say nothing about the competitive disadvantage of lacking access to the preferred airport of international businesspeople and corporations?

Again, this suggests the research process was poisoned by political interference. "Don't you dare talk about Dulles Airport or new Potomac River bridges in this report, do you understand?"

There is a lot of valuable data in this report, but its final recommendations are too tailored to what the Montgomery County political machine and its developer patrons want to hear. A report that tells us to keep going the way we are currently going is not going to bring about change.

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Bethesda construction update - The Lauren ultra-luxury condos (Photos)

Major progress has been made since my last update from the site of the future Lauren ultra-luxury condos at 4901 Hampden Lane in downtown Bethesda.

The Lauren is aiming to be the premier ultra-luxury building in town, with 29 units that have direct access elevators, private wine storage with in-house sommelier, vented fireplaces, standard high-end lighting fixtures and appliances, and - in some cases - roof terraces.

Amenities will include a wine lounge and theater screening room, rooftop terrace, concierge, fitness center, private underground parking (including a car lift if you want to work on your Bentley yourself), and guest suites.

TTR/Sotheby's, 1788 Holdings and Persimmon Capital Partners are the development team, and The Lauren was designed by Robert M. Swedroe architects and Akseizer Design Group (ADG).
You'll be right across
Hampden Lane from
Mike Isabella's new
Kapnos Kouzina restaurant