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Chevy Chase Lake

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Chevy Chase Lake Sector Plan Goes to County Executive Jan. 31

The Chevy Chase Lake Sector Plan will go to the county executive and Council on Jan. 31, The Gazette reported.

The Montgomery County Planning Board's draft of the Chevy Chase Lake Sector Plan will be presented to the county executive and Council on Jan. 31, 2013—only a couple months behind schedule, The Gazette reported. Additional work sessions are scheduled for Jan. 10, 17 and 31, "when the board is scheduled to approve its draft version of the plan," The Gazette added. Once County Executive Ike Leggett provides commentary on the draft, the draft will be passed to the County Council, which will hold a public hearing before approving a final sector plan, The Gazette reported. Read more about the process by which the planning board's draft could become the new plan for the sector on The Gazette's website. Last September, county planning staff …

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Planning Board OKs 150-Ft. Building for Chevy Chase Lake

Planning of the Chevy Chase Lake sector's redevelopment is behind schedule, The Gazette reported.

A building adjacent to the proposed Purple Line could be as tall as 150 feet in the redevelopment of the Chevy Chase Lake sector, The Gazette, The Washington Examiner and Bethesda Now reported. In a meeting earlier this month, the Montgomery County Planning Board approved the 150-foot height limit for a building adjacent to the proposed light rail line, provided the rail line is funded, The Gazette reported. The Connecticut Avenue Corridor Commission, which represents many of the municipalities and neighborhoods near Chevy Chase Lake, had requested a 90-foot height limit for that building, The Examiner reported. Still, the county council has the final say on building heights in the Chevy Chase Lake sector, The Gazette added, so some county…

Thursday, October 25, 2012

HOC Requests Density Increase in Chevy Chase Lake

The commission seeks to nearly double the number of apartment units at its Chevy Chase Lake property.

Buildings, trails and roads circle the 68 garden-style units of the Chevy Chase Lake Apartments. A proposed Purple Line station—and a steady increase in the area's population—is projected to increase the area's housing demand. The only way for the complex—which offers one-quarter of its units as affordable housing—to significantly increase its density is to build up, according to the executive director of the Housing Opportunities Commission. The commission has requested that the property of the Chevy Chase Lake Apartments be re-zoned as part of the Chevy Chase Lake Sector Plan. The commission wants to increase density because, according to the Maryland State Data Center, the population of Montgomery County is projected to increase by more…

Monday, September 17, 2012

Planners Envision Chevy Chase Lake Sector Development

County planning staff presented the planning board with drawings of what the Chevy Chase Lake sector could look like if built up according to staff-recommended densities and heights, or according to property owners' requested densities and heights.

At a Sept. 6 Montgomery County Planning Board work session, county planning staff presented drawings of what the Chevy Chase Lake sector could look like if built up according to staff recommendations for height and density. Planning staff also presented drawings illustrating what the sector could look like if built up according to the heights and densities requested by property owners in the Chevy Chase Lake sector. Property owners—the Chevy Chase Land Company, the Housing Opportunities Commission (which owns the Chevy Chase Lake Apartments), the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the owners of the Newdale Mews Apartments along Newdale Road—all have asked for additional building density and height, according to the staff's work session …

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John

5:49 pm on Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Well Clemcia, I don't think your suggestion would satisfy Valerie Erwin. She recently proposed a bill to for the County to spend $1,000,000 for a third rapid transportation study, and for it to be a no-bid study. It may be that she wants one of the lanes on Connecticut Ave. and/or Jones Bridge to become a dedicated bus lane. Regardless of whether her proposed study pertains to Connecticut Ave., …   more ›

Monday, August 27, 2012

Speak Out: Is Parking in Chevy Chase Lake a Problem?

What do you think of parking availability on residential streets in Chevy Chase Lake?

Now that Walter Reed National Military Medical Center is across the street from the National Institutes of Health, traffic on Jones Bridge Road between Chevy Chase and Bethesda shows no signs of letting up. But, with a free shuttle bus (leaving from 8401 Connecticut Ave., 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., Monday through Friday) connecting Chevy Chase Lake to the Bethesda Metro station, Patch reported, the fear is that some commuters to the medical center may park along the residential streets of Chevy Chase Lake and take the bus to Bethesda (where it's only a quick, one-stop Metro ride to the medical center, or a slightly longer Metro ride into downtown Washington, DC). Patch wants to know: Have you noticed parking to be a problem in the Chevy Chase Lake …

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Laura L Thornton

12:33 pm on Thursday, August 30, 2012

Thanks, Lewis! I'm slowly (but surely...) gathering info on this issue, so will put together a story on it soon, I hope...!   more ›

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Planners Suggest 'Traditional' Look for Chevy Chase Lake

County planners suggest the Chevy Chase Lake Sector be developed in an architectural style that reinterprets the traditional, red-brick-and-white-trim look of the mid-Atlantic region.

As debates about building heights, density and floor-to-area ratios for the Chevy Chase Lake Sector are resolved, a new question arises: What will the new buildings actually look like? Over a year ago, the buildings sketched out by the Chevy Chase Land Company's architects were vaguely futuristic. One public meeting attendee called the sketches a "brave new world," Patch reported. The land company ended up scrapping those plans, and drew together a new team to re-envision something more low-rise and residential in character, Patch reported. Since then, the only clue as to what the development—which spans Connecticut Avenue between Manor Road and Chevy Chase Lake Drive—might look like has been issued by the county planning department. …

ED

6:10 pm on Thursday, July 26, 2012

I think the planner's are just blowing smoke. Developer's will build whatever they want. The County has implemented a "form-based" code (CR suite of zones) with no "form" and little input into the actual architectural "style". The saddest part is that the CRN (CR Neighborhood) zone, the zone that is supposed to be the "transition" zone and protect the neighborhood's, has expanded uses and …   more ›

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Chevy Chase Lake: Is There a Middle Ground for Height?

The Montgomery County Planning Board urged county planning staff to consider higher height limits for some portions of the Chevy Chase Lake Sector plan.

Can a middle ground—or, rather, height—be found for the Chevy Chase Lake Sector? That was the question concerning much of the Montgomery County Planning Board’s meeting last week about the Chevy Chase Lake Sector. At the meeting, county planners recommended 1,000 new dwelling units and 1.3 million more square feet than what is currently existing and approved in the Chevy Chase Lake Sector, which spans Connecticut Avenue between Manor Road and Chevy Chase Lake Drive. At the heart of the sector—near the proposed Purple Line station—would be a “town center” similar to Rockville Town Center, Montgomery County Senior Planner Elza Hisel-McCoy said at the meeting on July 16. (View the recommendations online.) County planners recommended that …

Deborah Lamb-Mechanick

9:21 am on Tuesday, September 18, 2012

As a long-standing resident of the Village of North Chevy Chase,I share the concerns expressed by others about the heights now under consideration. This is simply an excuse to add additional density that Connecticut Avenue Corridor cannot absorb, particularly prior to construction of the Purple Line, which at least has the potential to offset some of the additional traffic density. Also, it is …   more ›

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Chevy Chase Lake Sector Recommendations to Go Before Planning Board

Sign up to speak on July 16 before the county planning board about the planning department's recommendations for the Chevy Chase Lake sector.

For those seeking a chance to tell the county planning board their thoughts about developments at Chevy Chase Lake, the next opportunity is coming soon. On Monday, July 16, county planning staff will present their recommendations—three years in the making—for the Chevy Chase Lake sector to the county planning board. Members of the public will also be able to speak before the board about the plans. To speak, sign up in advance on the planning board's website. (Full testimony on the issue is encouraged at a public hearing to be held before the planning board in September.) The county planning staff's presentation before the planning board will begin at approximately 5 p.m. on July 16 at the Montgomery County Park and Planning Headquarters …

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Kitchen Showroom Comes to Chevy Chase Lake

This fall, a Thos. Somerville bath and kitchen showroom will move into the former Lemon Twist location next to Manoli Canoli in Chevy Chase Lake.

The former Lemon Twist spot (8530 Connecticut Ave., Chevy Chase, MD) near Manoli Canoli in Chevy Chase Lake will have a new occupant this fall: a Thos. Somerville bath and kitchen showroom, Bethesda Magazine reported. That space has been "empty for nearly [two years], ever since Lemon Twist shuttered that location and moved into to a much smaller store across Connecticut Avenue," Marty Chase reported for Chevy Chase Patch last summer. Back then, Mark Rittenberg, a principal and one of the three founders of AMR Commercial LLC—the leasing broker for the space in the Lake West Shopping Center (owned by The Chevy Chase Land Company) into which Thos. Somerville will move, said his Bethesda-based firm was in the final stages of negotiations with…

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Chevy Chase Lake: Human Scale, Pedestrian-Oriented Plans

Montgomery County's planning staff recommends a human scale and pedestrian orientation for the Chevy Chase Lake sector.

County planning staff recommendations for development in the Chevy Chase Lake sector are ready for public review. County planning staff are recommending that the sector—for which property owner Chevy Chase Land Company is planning a development—retain its human scale, and that there be a focus on traditional architecture and pedestrian-oriented, mixed-use development, Montgomery County Senior Planner Elza Hisel-McCoy said at a presentation in Chevy Chase Village last week. The preservation of Coquelin Run, which runs through the sector, is another important part of the development, as is knitting together the shops on the east and west sides of Connecticut Avenue between Jones Bridge Road and Chevy Chase Lake Drive. County planning staff …

Gerri Carr

8:23 am on Wednesday, June 27, 2012

The MC Planning Department has "punted" on the effect that this proposed development will have on traffic; it has made no proposed changes to our already clogged roads.   more ›

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