12-Stories at Dunn Loring Metro?
Retail, residential and parking would be added to Dunn Loring/Merrifield
Metro Station
What is now a 15-acre parking lot will become
a mixed-use development with 15-story buildings under a proposal from Trammell
Crow Residential development.
“
We’re trying to fulfill the community vision for the area,” said
Mark Looney, attorney for the developer. Looney was speaking at a meeting
of the Providence District Council on Nov. 14 about the proposal on, currently
Metro’s parking lot. About 30 people attended.
On the one side of Merilee Drive, north of Prosperity, plans call for three
separate residential buildings with about 720 condominium or apartment units
with ground level retail. One building is planned to be four stories tall
while two others along Gallows Road will be 150 feet tall.
On the street level of the parking garage on the other side of Merilee Drive
stores would line an extended Merilee Drive. Metro parking would be stacked
over the stores. Plans call for a free-standing retail building as well for
a total of 80,000-85,000 square feet of retail space.
The plan calls for reshaping the existing
Metro parking, now on roughly seven acres along the northern edge of the
15-acre property, south of the
Dunn Loring station. Metro’s parking lot, which is currently all ground-level
parking, would change into a parking garage. The plan would add 500 spaces
to Metro customers, bringing the total to 1,855.
Metro’s bus loop and Kiss and Ride facilities would be separated. The
bus loop will be reconfigured, but will be in essentially its current location.
The Kiss and Ride will be moved to the west of the bus loop, under the parking.
While this means the kiss and ride will be further (about 400 feet), people
and buses won’t be sharing the same space anymore. “Yes, we’ve
added distance from the Metro, but we’ve made it a safer environment,” said
Chad DuBeau of Trammell Crow.
Metro owns the property. It will continue to own its seven-acre parking lot,
and will sell Trammell Crow the other eight acres for their project. Metro
will lease the retail space under the parking garage to Trammel Crow for
60 years.
DuBeau said construction will be phased in such a way that there will not
be any reduction in the number of available parking spots for Metro riders.
AREA RESIDENTS peppered the two men with questions about parking, pedestrian
access and traffic flow.
Parking will meet the county requirements of 1.6 spaces per unit for the
residential buildings, DuBeau said. Pedestrian access will be maintained
by a series of sidewalks and will incorporate crosswalks on Gallows and Prosperity.
There will be more vehicle access points than are currently available.
Fred Gladeck of the Dover Park Condo Association questioned Metro’s
ability to handle the number of new passengers the project would generate. “You’re
going to be dumping even more people onto Metrorail, or as I call it Metrofail,
and they can’t handle it now,” he said.
The plan is designed to create what the Comprehensive Plan envisioned, Looney
said, and that plan does not take Metro capacity into account. Additionally,
Looney noted that the problem with Metro overcrowding typically happens during
rush hour, where this plan strives to make the area used all day.
Becky Cate, chair of the council asked why there is no stormwater management
facility on the site. The Comprehensive Plan, she said, mandates that such
facilities be placed on site.
Since the entire area is currently pavement, DuBeau said, the project will
not add to the impervious surface. Therefore, county law exempts the project
from stormwater management requirements, since they won’t make things
worse.
However, he said that the developer is currently studying using “low-impact” development
techniques that would reduce the amount of impervious surface, and is considering
implementing some filtration systems to at least treat the water that runs
off the site.
DuBeau is presenting the proposal to neighborhood groups to gather feedback
about the design, he said.
Community members cited other safety concerns. Although police have made
an arrest, residents noted a recent string of assaults in the area.
DuBeau sympathized with the residents and said that the developers would
add ample lighting to help mitigate safety concerns.
The proposal, Looney said, is still in its early stages, and has not yet
been formally accepted by the County’s Department of Planning and Zoning.
At this stage, no dates have yet been set for public hearings on the project.
Time, however is a factor. Metro has a clause which mandates that Trammel
Crow break ground on the project within 22 months, which DuBeau said means
the fall of 2007.
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