The Future Is Now, an email from a Maryland resident

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The following is text in its entirety from an email that the Maryland Department of Planning received on September 7, 2011 during the public comment period for the PlanMaryland draft. The writer is a resident of southern Carroll County. Name has been withheld.

Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011
To: [email protected]
Subject: The Future Is Now

My husband and I are retiring, frugal folk.  We came to an isolated corner of southern Carroll County back when interest rates were way down.  Today’s pundits would tell you that we were following the American Dream of our generation: a big house on a big lot, far from the madding crowd.  We were more interested in the family-friendly community we found here—and that low mortgage payment.

A typical sprawl area in central Maryland.

Obviously, we contributed to the sprawl that plagues our county today.   Thankfully, our children have chosen not to follow our example. Their version of the American Dream reads more like a page out of PlanMaryland.  Let me explain. More

Video: National Planning Award for Governor O’Malley

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This is the video the American Planning Association produced to announce the “National Planning Excellence Award for Planning Advocate” that it gave to Governor Martin O’Malley this spring. He was the first governor so honored in nearly a decade by the national professional planning organization.

A planner, a developer and a land-use advocate walk into a … study

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The National Center for Smart Growth at the University of Maryland, College Park, issued a report this week that concluded the smart growth framework that Maryland put in place  more than a decade ago has been insufficient and offered suggestions for improvement.

“Barriers to Development Inside Priority Funding Areas: Perspectives of Planners, Developers, and Advocates” was based on interviews with 47 Maryland planners, developers and land-use advocates.  More

Why I’m at today’s forum?

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By Richard E. Hall, Maryland Secretary of Planning

Duck hunting on Eastern Shore, Maryland

Plenty of people have urged me not to attend today’s forum about PlanMaryland sponsored by the Carroll County Commissioners at the Pikesville Hilton. People who concur with us that PlanMaryland is a long-overdue idea, and even some who are less enthused, say the event is one-sided, not a public meeting and not worth our time. Their concern is that my attendance would legitimize the commissioners’ invited speakers, whose views against smart growth and climate change are well-documented.  Even the executive director of the Maryland Association of Counties, a group that has voiced many concerns about PlanMaryland but has continued to work very seriously with us on it, said of today’s forum , “The potential for negative repercussions from this event … is very significant.”

The reason I’m accepting my invitation is simple: I’d rather engage than not.

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Governor O’Malley on “the war on sprawl”

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Govenor O'Malley at PlanMaryland forum

Governor O’Malley discussed PlanMaryland with The Atlantic Cities blog, which describes itself as exploring “the most innovative ideas and pressing issues facing today’s global cities and neighborhoods.” A sample from today’s interview:

PlanMaryland isn’t something we’re doing for current residents. PlanMaryland is something we’re doing for our children. If 40 years ago we had actually implemented a statewide development plan, you might have a very different state now. You’d have a very different Baltimore city right now. You’d have a Chesapeake Bay that’s not fighting for her health year after year. This is something we have to do in order for our kids to be able to enjoy a quality of life here, and be part of this living system called the Chesapeake Bay.

Read more of Eric Jaffe’s interview.

Steve Jobs and Smart Growth

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Steve Jobs 1955-2011

I only got to spend a few minutes with Steve Jobs. It was at a press conference for the introduction of the first Apple store in 2001 in Tyson’s Corner, Va. Steve got on the press shuttle bus for the short trip between the press conference at a hotel and the store unveiling, and somehow, probably due to some pushiness on my part, I wound up in the seat next to him.  I recall him being soft-spoken, not especially gregarious for a man about to unveil a big idea, a little anxious around the press — all traits his eulogies today described. More

Back at the crib

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Architect Jeffery Broadhurst at The Crib

Architect Jeffery Broadhurst at "The Crib" at Strathmore Music Center

… Not a second blog post about The Crib?, you may be saying.  Hey, I didn’t get to see it the first time I posted about it, so sue me. But it was something cool to see and it’s a credit to the folks at Strathmore Music Center that they viewed their mission broadly about using art — in this case, architecture — to make people feel something/think something. Why The Crib project has relevance for a blog titled “Smart Growth Maryland” is because a Rockville architect sought to bring style and livability to a space no larger than a one-car garage.  We’re not suggesting folks start choosing to live in dwellings of 400 square feet, but Maryland since 1950 has been consuming land at twice the rate of housing unit growth and triple the rate of population growth so we’re using much larger spaces to live and that has a price even though it’s hard to realize. The result is that communities push farther and farther out, which greatly increases commute times, environmental impact and the public bill for roads, schools, etc. to serve a spreading populace. I’m pretty sure that Jeffery Broadhurst, the architect who designed The Crib, wouldn’t even suggest living in his shelter long-term. He designed it at the request of a potential client in Southern Maryland who wanted to replace an old weekend fishing shack with something better. The economy put that particular job on hold. But the architect — armed with a simple tool that the iPad will never replace, a cocktail napkin — forged ahead to design the shelter as a “kit” house that anyone could purchase for use most anywhere. If IKEA sold tree houses, it might look like this. All the materials needed to build the structure — 8,300 pounds of galvanized steel; 3,000 pounds of polycarbonate, translucent panels; precut, heat-treated poplar slats — fit on a single tractor-trailer. (That’s another “green” feature, Broadhurst said, since subcontractors wouldn’t have to keep burning fuel driving back and forth to deliver materials.) It took three workers from Added Dimensions Inc., a Takoma Park general contracting company, about two and a half weeks to assemble and finish The Crib.  

On the grounds of Strathmore, the structure, cantilevered in a hollow between some trees, feels serene even though it’s surrounded by the whoosh of Rockville Pike, a couple of smoke-belching earthmovers creating luxury townhomes nearby and the huge modern concert hall that looms large behind it. The Crib’s downside? For minimalist living, it isn’t cheap. The kit runs from $60,000 up to $125,000 with added amenities. Assembly, foundation and electrical work could run another $40,000 or so. You could easily buy a couple-bedroom townhouse for that. Still, the architect says, the reaction at Strathmore has been positive: “Most people come in and their jaws drop. They don’t expect a finished space.”  The most impressive feature of The Crib at Strathmore may not be its look, however, but its feel: It seems larger and more secluded than it is. A rollup garage door forms most of the rear wall, for instance, so when the shelter is open, the room naturally feels larger.

Inside The Crib

Inside The Crib

The structure made me think that a major key to making smart growth work is better design; that is, finding ways to give homeowners the “sense” of more space and privacy without actually consuming so much space. In fact, when the Maryland Department of Planning met with residents last year before drafting the State Growth Plan known as PlanMaryland, they were a little surprised (and pleasantly so) that residents ranked “community design” as high as they did among Maryland’s 12 Planning Visions. (The General Assembly in 2009 defined community design as “compact, mixed–use, walkable design, consistent with existing community character and located near available or planned transit options, (and) encouraged to ensure efficient use of land and transportation resources.”)

Suburbanites are reluctant to give up their space but, especially as they age, don’t necessarily want to have to maintain so much of it.  In short, the thinking that went into designing The Crib should in a broader sense go into designing our communities.  

It opens for public viewing today at Strathmore, 10701 Rockville Pike, North Bethesda.

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