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The Indian Creek valley south of the Washington Beltway and adjacent to
and south of the Greenbelt Metro station
is one of the last natural floodplains inside the Beltway.
This portion of Indian Creek is the sole remaining unchannelized portion of the stream valley within the Beltway. This natural stream valley is threatened by the proposed development of a large shopping mall on properties currently owned by WMATA and A.H. Smith. The site, a total of 240 acres including 128 acres consisting of wetlands, forested flood plain and upland forest, is enclosed by Cherrywood Lane on the east, the Beltway on the north, the MARC/Metro railroad tracks on the west and Greenbelt Road (MD Route 193) on the south. More detailed information about the site and its natural beauties can be found in Kate Spencer's article in the Audubon Naturalist News (Dec. 1998). |
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Current use of the siteThe notheastern portion of the site hosts a commuter parking lot for the Greenbelt Metro station in the north (some 40 acres). The southern part hosts industry, consisting mainly of a gravel pit with a construction waste dump site. The operator, A.H. Smith, has filled portions of the floodplain and wetland in the southern part of the site.The heart of the property is a wetland harboring many species of rare plants (e.g. swamp chestnut oaks, cattail sedge, bog chickweed) and providing essential refuge for wildlife in this suburban environment. The existing wetland of 128 acres constitutes the 100-year floodplain of Indian Creek, a tributary of Paint Branch within the Anacostia Watershed. The floodplain is essential for stormwater control for the downstream communities Berwyn Heights and Riverdale. |
What is being planned?Metroland, a joint enterprise involving WMATA and A.H. Smith and others, plan to construct an upscale retail mall (to include one high-quality retail store), office space, and a retirement community. Although now modified (see below), initial plans called for elimination of the stream valley and creation of a suburban park with an artificial lake and paved riverbank trails. The stream valley will be eliminaed, and the developer plans a suburban park with an artificial lake and paved riverbank trails. The developers are seeking another full interchange on the Beltway between I-95 and Kenilworth Avenue to accommodate the expected traffic and a connector road to Greenbelt Road. This development is expected to generate 90,000 car and truck trips a week by 2012. Full development is not expected to be completed until at least 2020. The development as now planned for the northern portion of the property, directly off the beltway and on the Metro Station parking lot, calls for office, hotel, very little residential, and an enclosed regional shopping mall. The southern portion, the gravel mine operations, is slated to be a mix of apartments, condos, townhouses, senior housing, office and more retail. There is no housing planned within convenient walking distance of the Metro station (within a quarter mile).
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Current legal state of affairs:
The County Council in June 1998 passed CB-35, an law that bypasses
zoning procedures
to allow this specific site (currently zoned heavy industrial)
to be developed into a shopping mall, office space, and
residential community if a so called upscale) retailer
signs a letter of intent to establish a store within the mall.
In turn specific (discount) retailers are banned from the proposed mall.
The proposed mall is designed to attract wealthy shoppers to Prince George's County. Most of these shoppers would be drawn from Montgomery and Howard Counties to boost tax revenue and employ Prince George's County residents, but ... |
Who would reject a retail place with up-scale retailers in his neighborhood? |
Environmental concerns
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Economic and Social concerns: |
Governor Parris Glendening's Smart Growth
policy and related legislation call for concentrating development around
existing infrastructure like Metro stations, but also mandate preserving
streams and ecologically sensitive areas.
We want Smart Growth, including:
Unwise Growth includes: