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Development On Old Farm By Gaithersburg Opposed

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  • Development On Old Farm By Gaithersburg Opposed

    DEVELOPMENT ON OLD FARM BY GAITHERSBURG OPPOSED
    by: Nancy Trejos, Washington Post Staff Writer

    The Washington Post
    April 13, 2006 Thursday
    Final Edition

    Just outside Gaithersburg, off Interstate 270, is a 182-acre parcel
    filled with grass, broken-limbed trees and a few paint-chipped houses
    and barns. Crown Farm, as it is known, is one of the last large pieces
    of undeveloped land in central Montgomery County.

    That could all change under a plan by Gaithersburg businessman Aris
    Mardirossian to turn it into a bustling residential and commercial
    center with up to 2,250 homes and 320,000 square feet for shops and
    office buildings.

    But with the County Council scheduled to begin considering the
    proposal Tuesday, some residents and civic groups are gearing up
    for a fight. They said the development -- east of Sam Eig Highway,
    south of Fields Road and west of Omega Drive -- would cause school
    overcrowding and too much traffic.

    "These folks have been used to a 180-acre farm in that area," said
    Jim Humphrey, a Montgomery County Civic Federation official. "Let's
    make sure this project can be accommodated by the infrastructure
    before we go approving it."

    If approved, the development would include condos, townhouses,
    single-family homes and high-rises, some as tall as 20 stories. About
    400 or 500 of those units would be above stores or offices, maximizing
    space for parks and pedestrian walkways. Mardirossian, who leads a
    development team that bought the property from the Crown family over
    the summer, said he and the builders, who include Los Angeles-based
    KB Home, plan to run buses from the homes to the nearest Metro
    station. "It'll be like Connecticut Avenue. A real urbanist design,"
    Mardirossian said.

    Mardirossian has asked the city of Gaithersburg, which has its own
    council and mayor, to annex the property. Because his plan would
    require rezoning, it must go to the County Council first. County
    planners and city officials have been scrambling to hammer out the
    details of what would be one of the city's most significant projects
    in years.

    Last week, the County Council's Planning, Housing and Economic
    Development Committee -- made up of Nancy Floreen (D-At Large),
    Marilyn Praisner (D-Eastern County) and Steven A. Silverman (D-At
    Large), who chairs the panel -- voted to require that 12.5 percent
    of the homes be set aside as affordable housing.

    Because Crown Farm is in a location designated as a "receiving area"
    -- or a place where the county encourages development -- Mardirossian
    ordinarily would be required to pay transferable development rights
    to a farmer in the agricultural reserve. But the council committee
    recommended instead that he be exempted in lieu of a $1 million payment
    to the county's agricultural easement program, a fund for preserving
    open space.

    Because the donation would be much less than what he would probably
    pay in development rights, Mardirossian has offered to donate 34
    acres for a new high school.

    "To let a developer off the hook is just what they don't need to do,"
    said Pamela Lindstrom, a Gaithersburg resident who has been vocal in
    opposing the project.

    Silverman estimated that the transferable development rights would
    cost Mardirossian about $11 million, far below what it would cost
    to buy land for a school. "If you have a developer who's prepared to
    give us a high school site for free and save the taxpayers 60 or 70
    million dollars, we ought to take the deal," he said.

    Praisner said she did not agree with the exemption. "I'm not
    necessarily opposed to the annexation," she said. "My point is that I
    think it's moving too fast and there are certainly complexities that
    need to be worked out."

    Opponents say Mardirossian's deep pockets and political connections
    are driving the project.

    Since January 2003, Mardirossian has donated $750 to council member
    Tom Perez (D-Silver Spring) and $500 to Floreen, Board of Elections
    records show. One of his companies, Aris Mardirossian Inc., donated
    $2,500 to council Chairman George L. Leventhal (D-At Large).

    Farm Development Coop, a company Mardirossian manages, donated $4,000
    to Silverman. The company gave $2,000 to Floreen and $2,000 to council
    member Michael Knapp (D-Upcounty), records show.

    Mardirossian acknowledged that he and his family have given money to
    candidates. "They cannot see that I came from Armenia and I created
    something wonderful from this country and I can express my ideas,"
    he said of his critics.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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