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1. Presentation of the
Illustrative Concept Plan
and Development Guidelines
2. The Future of Olney Town Center Choices, choices, choices…
3. Today’s Presentation Introduce Committee
Present Master Plan Principals and Recommendations
Present Illustrative Concept Plan and Development Guidelines
Discussion and Feedback
4. The Olney Town Center Advisory Committee Purpose
Create an Illustrative Concept Plan for the town center
Create a concept plan for a civic center/town commons
Review development proposals for parcels within the town center and make recommendations to Montgomery County Planning Board
5. The Olney Town Center Advisory Committee
Members from Civic Organizations
Greater Olney Civic Association—Gina Angiola
The Olney Coalition— Sunita Bhatia
PROJECT CHANGE— Dorothy Kane
Members from Homeowners Associations
Environ HOA—Walter Lee
Hallowell HOA— Nancy DeLalio
Oatland Farm HOA— Jim Smith
Williamsburg Village Civic Assoc.— Mark Feinroth
6. The Olney Town Center Advisory Committee
Members from County Service Agencies
Mid-County Services Center— Helene Rosenheim
Mid-County Recreation Advisory Board—Joe Fritsch
Mid-County Citizens Advisory Board—Eileen Cahill
Outreach Subcommittee Member
Bob Beard, GOCA Executive Vice-President
Members from Business Groups
Olney Chamber of Commerce—Paula Kahla
Freeman Properties—Mike Reilly
Staff from Montgomery County Planning
Khalid Afzal, Community Planner
7. The Olney Town Center Advisory Committee Milestone Events
Formation, March-May 2006
Visited Mixed-Use Centers, June 2006 and Mayor Giammo August 2007
First Development Proposal, July 2006
Logo Contest, selected March 2007
Presentations from Miche Booz December 2006 and June 2007.
Formation: Became acquainted with purpose, goals, work program, elected officers.
Visited mixed-use centers: Market Common in Clarendon; Bowie Town Center; Rockville Town Square.
First development proposal: Paula and Danny Sayag, Hillcrest Avenue property, “Kirk Farm”
Miche Booz: Local Building Traditions Dec 06 and Local Town Centers June 07.
Formation: Became acquainted with purpose, goals, work program, elected officers.
Visited mixed-use centers: Market Common in Clarendon; Bowie Town Center; Rockville Town Square.
First development proposal: Paula and Danny Sayag, Hillcrest Avenue property, “Kirk Farm”
Miche Booz: Local Building Traditions Dec 06 and Local Town Centers June 07.
8. The Olney Town Center Advisory Committee Milestone Events (continued)
Freeman Properties Dec 2006 and July 2007
Qualitative Analysis of Town Center Nov ‘06 to May 2007
Began Collecting Requirements for Civic Center/Town Commons, Feb 2007
Began Illustrative Concept Plan with RTKL March 2007
Met with Bob Simpson with DPWT (Feb 2007) and Engineers at SHA (Oct 2007)
9. Olney Master Plan Process
Began with community-wide survey in July 2001.
20 public meetings of a Master Plan Advisory Group of 40 residents and business owners.
Public hearing before the Planning Board.
Public hearing before the County Council.
Final version adopted April 2005.
10. Olney Master Plan Master Plan Area
11. Olney Town Center Master Plan Town Center Area
12. Olney Town Center Master Plan Goals
Create an economically healthy, attractive, pedestrian-oriented, and well connected Town Center to be the commercial and civic heart of the community. Create a civic center in the Town Center through redevelopment of a major shopping center or a public-private partnership.
13. Olney Town Center Master Plan Vision of Olney Town Center
Town Center as focal point of the community.
Preserve Olney’s semi-rural character by encouraging density and development in the Town Center and discouraging commercial development outside of the Town Center.
Allow for changes that will inevitably come as economy grows.
14. Olney Town Center Master Plan 23 Recommendations Including:
Create civic center and major public open space.
Variety of measures to improve pedestrian circulation and safety.
Create more street connections (e.g. N High to Morningwood and Third Ave to Hwy 108.)
Limit building heights to 70’ in core and 42’ to 56’ at edge. Setbacks above 2nd story on narrow streets.
15. Olney Town Center Master Plan 23 Recommendations Including: (continued)
Front building facades up to sidewalks.
Create “main street” effect on Freeman property with multiple connections to existing streets.
Landscape: wider sidewalks, amenities in public spaces, visual breaks in larger parking lots.
Environmental: stormwater management, protect streams, forest conservation.
16. Illustrative Concept Plan What it is
A general picture of what the town center could look like if most areas redeveloped following master plan recommendations.
Illustrates some opportunities for land owners. What it is NOT
A development blueprint
17.
18. MXTC Zoning Existing conditions vs. full development yield of approximately 2 acre minimum (at 20 units per acre equals 40 units residential.)
Density requires structured parking of 2-3 levels.
Commercial development: 3+ stories.
Office above retail.
19. NW Quadrant Limited opportunity for consolidation due to condominium development.
Explore “flex” or “live-work” development on smaller parcels.
The corner property (at 108 and Georgia Ave.) will be important to redeveloping this quadrant.
20. SW Quadrant Explore potential for consolidating Library/shopping center parcel to facilitate development of signature Public building at gateway.
Mixed-use development on remaining blocks
Consider eventuality of relocating existing light industrial uses.
21. SE Quadrant Orient commercial development along Georgia Avenue and 108 w/ residential development Transitioning to neighborhoods.
Explore mixed-use grocery store model.
Create more vehicular/pedestrian connections.
Small public open space.
22. NE Quadrant Option 1: Internal public space to become the heart of downtown.
Strengthen pedestrian crossings across Route 108.
Phased development of the quadrant.
Development pieces can create a small town mixed use character anchored by a community public space.
23. NE Quadrant Option 2: Public space on Route 108 creates a “window” making the public space more visible.
Strengthen pedestrian crossings across Route 108.
Shows center of quadrant redeveloped (future phase).
Explore “flex” or “live-work” development on smaller parcels.
24. Development Guidelines Part II of document
Establishes quality standards that should be achieved through the Town Center.
Provides guidelines for:
-architectural design
-street design
-parking lots and garages
-streetscape design
-landscape architecture
-signage and screening
-design review process
Guidelines will be used by developers and government.
25. Development Guidelines References two works by local architect Miche Booz:
Report on Local Building Traditions: History and Analysis, Nov. 10, 2006
Report on Local Villages, Towns, and Mixed-Use Centers: Catalog, Analysis, & Critique, June 18, 2007.
26. Acknowledgements Bill Caldwell, Principal
Laura Rydland, Urban Designer
Miche Booz, Architect
Khalid Afzal, Community Planner
27. Your Feedback is Important
Provide comments to plan on Feedback Form
www.olneytowncenter.org
James.Smith@olneytowncenter.org
Olney Town Center Advisory Committee PO Box 1164 Olney, MD 20830