Shady
Grove Sector Plan
Transportation Focus Group II - November 19, 2002
Attendees:
John Compton, Mayor, Washington Grove
Shelley Winkler, Washington Grove Resident
Scott Kubly, WMATA
Pam Lindstrom, Gaithersburg resident
Sandra Marks, City of Rockville
Ollie Mumpower, City of Gaithersburg
Terrence Hancock, State Highway Administration
Gary Erenrich, Montgomery County, DPWT
Sue Edwards,
Karen Kumm, Claudia Kousoulas, Sandy Tallant, Community-Based
Planning
Tom Harrington, Dan Hardy, Transportation
The meeting was a continuation of the October 22 Transportation
Focus Group discussion. It began with a review of the planning
process and transportation issues in the planning area.
Transportation and Land Use in Shady Grove
There
is a continuing change in center point of jobs in the region.
Jobs are no longer focused on downtown and are moving to mid-County,
I-270 area. Trip lengths are getting shorter, even if time
is getting longer. A downtown-focused transit system will
not adequately serve future needs.
Does it
make sense to assign a jobs/housing ratio in an artificially
defined place like the Shady Grove Planning area? Shouldn't
the jobs across the street at the King Farm be considered?
(The relatively small Shady Grove Planning Area has a jobs/housing
ratio of 5.4, 13,576 jobs and 2,548 housing units.)
Land use
and transportation decision in the I-270 Corridor are having
an effect on traffic patterns.
Need to
carve a niche out of existing uses at Shady Grove to create
an urban village that is supported by and supports transit
improvements.
What are
the transportation goals in Shady Grove, moving people to,
from and through the area? These goals should be defined and
kept in mind through the planning process.
(The Shady Grove Purpose and Outreach Report outlines some
of these goals.)
An end of the line station has certain strengths, bringing
riders to the core, and that should be considered in land
use decisions. Regardless of land use, people will still drive
to station, but nearby residents are more likely to use Metro.
The challenge
of this plan will be resolving the tension between established
industrial uses and the demand to put housing in this location.
The Plan needs to determine what Shady Grove should be.
What is
the market demand for housing and the need for affordable
housing? (According to participants in the Housing Focus Group,
there is high demand for affordable and lower priced market
rate housing.)
Transit Efforts
County
DPWT's transit effort is focused on capturing long distance
commuters onto transit as soon as possible after they enter
the County. They are trying to coordinate and expand park-and-ride
lots with bus service.
Residents
want to reduce the traffic commuting through the area. Expanded
Metro service (not necessarily a rail expansion) to Metropolitan
Grove connecting with the CCT should be an actively studied
option in this Plan.
MARC service
is limited and doesn't effectively extend the line beyond
Shady Grove. However, it would be efficient to extend along
that line, supplementing trains with buses to provide midday
service.
MARC operations
should be reengineered to meet potential service demands.
MTA is doing a MARC master plan. Improved service creates
a real transit option that supports an urban village development
pattern.
County
DPWT is reviewing the WMATA CIP and believes the plan is inadequate
since it doesn't solve the turn-back problems at Grosvenor
Station, doesn't recognize the CCT or the inner purple line,
and places Maryland priorities at the Wilson Bridge to PG
County.
Metro's
10-year CIP calls for expanding yard and shop space at the
Shady Grove Station. But should end-of-line yards be the standard?
Are there innovative construction techniques that use less
land (reserving it for other uses) while still allowing maximum
use of train cars?
An end-of-line
yard minimizes "dead-head" hours (non-revenue generating
trips), and the maintenance yard is already in place at Shady
Grove. Expanding there keeps industrial use in one area.
Need also
to consider parking: garages at Metro and for residents. Should
apply rail-volution ideas in this plan, such as shared parking
and techniques to reduce parking demand.
Consider
orienting and connecting bus/HOV lanes along ICC and I-370
directly to Metro station, over Shady Grove Road, creating
a direct link for riders and giving them a time advantage
over single occupancy vehicles. Consider also a similar route
for general traffic, with a parking deck over Metro yards.
ICC and Regional Road Options in Shady Grove
Among
the various options for east-west road improvements between
Norbeck and Shady Grove, a new ICC right-of-way is the only
option that improves local traffic in the Shady Grove area.
Using existing roads to handle increased traffic flow only
worsens congestion on local roads. All the alternatives, however,
are equally alarming.
Since
Shady Grove would be an access to the ICC at I-370, Shady
Grove Road would carry more traffic.
This plan
should make direct statements and proposals to deal with the
ICC's impact on the already limited capacity of local roads.
SHA is
making a number of transportation improvements, including
the CCT study and some intersection improvements in the area.
The Gude Drive intersection improvement for congestion relief
is being considered for study as a full-fledged interchange.
Currently Gude carries a lot of east/west traffic, but has
no connection to I-270. Though it seems like it's working,
should it be a priority? Is it worthwhile to build an interchange.
The County
is widening Shady Grove to six lanes, to be completed by June
2004. A noise wall study has been discussed, but there is
little room to install the walls.
Local Road Issues
Vehicles
speed along Shady Grove Road.
The idea
of MD 355 as a boulevard is good, but in reality it serves
as a through route and through movement needs to be maintained.
However, it should be viewed as a slow, urban road and its
design should not encourage fast traffic. The Plan should
examine the engineering feasibility of running MD 355 as an
underpass at King Farm Boulevard, and consider the same for
portions of Shady Grove Road. Undergrounding is the most expensive
option.
Through
Gaithersburg, MD 355 is be redesigned to better accommodate
pedestrians. The redesign creates an urban boulevard with
a median replacing the center left turn lane. It is also planned
to have urban-style sidewalks, an eight-foot bikeway on the
west side, and lights timed to ease pedestrian crossings.
So far, these improvements have been made site-by-site as
properties redevelop. The City is exploring the best way to
complete the renovation. They want to make it a state priority.
City of
Rockville has been working with SHA on pedestrian-friendly
signal timing on MD 355, which has been a challenging balance
of local and regional interests.
It's almost
impossible for pedestrians to cross Shady Grove Road and MD
355 at the King Farm due to light timing.
All new
grid streets proposed in the 2000 charrette should be built
with a slow design speed: raised intersections, narrow lanes,
neck-downs, and other pedestrian-friendly, traffic calming
devices.
Bicycle and Pedestrian Environment
County
DPWT is working with WMATA to make bike connections to Metro
and is looking at bike improvements along Shady Grove Road.
Need serious
treatment of bike access to Metro, including from the west
side of the Station, along and across MD 355 from the King
Farm, and from Derwood to the Rock Creek Trail.
Within
the King Farm there are bike routes along King Farm Boulevard
and a series of other routes that connect to the Millennium
Trail, Rockville's "bicycle beltway. "
Also need
to provide bike facilities in the short term, rather than
waiting for 10 or 20-year life of master plan. Bike facilities
also need to be provided up front as an incentive to change
behavior. They should be given primary attention in timing,
safety, and convenience to encourage use. The Plan should
create a short-term action list of bicycle improvements.
Metro
stations with good bike access make a measurable increase
in Metro/bike use. In-place trails build use. Falls Church
Station in Arlington has one percent of riders coming in on
bikes, which is a significant number of users. It is surrounded
by an extensive system of trails and doesn't need a large
parking garage, though it isn't an end-of-the-line station.
Consider
turning I-370 into a surface road with bikeways and an intersection
with Crabbs Branch, making it the start of a comprehensive
bike system and creating an east/west connection through the
station for bike, pedestrians, and vehicles.
Also make
bike connections to the residential community along Crabbs
Branch south of Redland Road.
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