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Focus
Group Meeting Summary
Technology Focus Group - October 15, 2002
Attendees:
Alfredo Echeverria, Department of Economic Development
Henry Bernstein, Department of Economic Development
Robbie Brewer, Lerch, Early, Brewer
Mike Burgett, Qiagen Sciences, Inc.
Karen
Kumm, Claudia Kousoulas, Sue Edwards, Nkosi Yearwood, John
Carter, Community-Based Planning Division
Fred Peacock, Research Division
The meeting
began with a brief explanation of the planning process and
initial findings about the Shady Grove planning area. The
group then discussed the technology market and its needs,
and the potential for redevelopment of the Shady Grove are
with technology uses.
Representatives
of Human Genome Sciences, BioReliance Corp., Celera, the Maryland
Technology Development Center, and the JBG Companies were
unable to attend. Notes from the discussion follow.
Locating Technology Businesses
Qiagen first looked at the Life Sciences Center, but finally
located in Germantown. Now 25 percent of their employees come
from the north (Frederick, etc.), and some use MARC. Germantown
turns out to be a good location that gives them access to
an expanded pool of employees.
Transit
provides further options and access for all employees, manufacturing
as well as corporate.
Need to
get employees to whatever location. Employer support of transit
helps, also need street-friendly improvements for transit
riders (sidewalks, crosswalks, etc.).
Transportation
is the number one issue in the County, but not when businesses
are locating. It becomes an issue after they are in place.
In looking
for a site, a company's first criteria will be room to expand
and combine functions. R&D, manufacturing, and corporate
tend to combine as a company evolves. Is this expansion possible
in Shady Grove?
The County's
incubator space has a steady list of applicants and is currently
100 percent occupied. Out of 30 companies accommodated, 15
have "graduated" and hundreds of new jobs have been
created in the process. Even though the technology economy
goes in cycles, we need to plan long-term, since Montgomery
County has the base of uses and services to support long-term
tech development.
The County
is aiming to have seven new incubator sites by 2007. Working
on locations in Silver Spring, MD 29, Germantown at Montgomery
College campus, and other strategic sites around the County.
Surrounding
uses are important to locating companies; they want a congenial
environment of similar and compatible uses nearby; not housing.
They also need a mix of facilities to serve varied tech uses
and their potential expansion.
Can't
locate incubator space just anywhere; need to have synergy.
Residential doesn't always add to that synergy. Can mix class
office, retail with housing, harder with potential industrial
tech uses.
The County
should strive to diversify its economy beyond biotech and
allow and other tech businesses to establish themselves. And,
as biotech itself changes, need to allow its evolution.
Consider
development patterns that fully use the existing infrastructure.
Now I-270 runs only half the way, half the time. Redevelopment
can help shift traffic patterns, for example, drawing employees
from down county to northern locations.
The market
is in the County for new tech uses, public sector needs to
provide incentives and opportunities. Demand for biotech will
grow. Montgomery County has a huge potential within the desired
balanced of development. If the space is available, it will
be used.
Residential
development built after existing industrial and commercial
uses often doesn't build in consideration of previously existing
uses, increasing the potential for conflicts.
Shady
Grove Potential
Spec-built start-up space might be good in Shady Grove.
Can/will
the Sector Plan respond to market demand? Or is its role to
identify and offer opportunity?
Transportation
dominates the area. I-270, I-370, and Metro provide access
but also act as barriers. The public uses at the County Service
Park are essential and unlikely to move in the life of the
Sector Plan.
The light
industrial character of the area should be preserved. The
county needs flexible, light industrial space, like Westbard
or Oakmont. Tech companies rely on service providers and suppliers
that also need a place to locate, such as Roberts Oxygen.
Need buildings that are one to three stories, and allow storage
and light manufacturing.
Not too
many sites in the County offer the opportunities that the
Shady Grove area does, proximity to transportation and supporting
light industrial uses.
Housing
development will squeeze industrial expansion. Infill housing
leaves little room for growth to create a new tech park that
will attract new businesses.
Transportation
and housing both need to be affordable. Consider a pattern
than clusters housing around Metro, and leaves larger, outer
ring sites for industry. Housing along Crabbs Branch is not
the best use, need that land for light industrial uses.
Building
and Design Principles
A typical tech building is low-rise development, not the density
needed at a Metro station. Building type and Metro density
don't necessarily align.
Look beyond
I-1 zoning; I-3 provides more flexibility. Or is there another
more appropriate zone, since I-3 could just morph into standard
office uses that a developer can turn around faster than the
desired tech uses.
The R&D
zone requirement for 50 percent R&D uses should be redefined
for more flexibility.
Biotech
park characteristics are changing as companies evolve.
Be aware
of changes in the industry and direct development through
performance zoning that allows a wide range of uses. Need
a different approach. Performance standards can help a mix
of uses co-exist.
Clean
rooms for lab and manufacturing need height for air handling
equipment. I-1 has a three-story limit that limits tech buildings
to two stories. Consider not counting interstitial, mechanical
space in the FAR calculations.
Parking
requirements. Tech businesses have changed from fewer people
in more space to a denser employee population, as lab, manufacturing
and corporate functions combine in one place. However, this
mix of uses doesn't align with the zoning ordinance's parking
requirements. Parking can also evolve from surface to structured.
Should develop a tech business parking standard that recognizes
business evolution.
Amenities.
From a business perspective, the goal is to keep employees
on-site. In isolated campus locations, larger businesses provide
services like convenience retail, food, dry cleaning, atm,
and childcare. Another pattern would locate service components
into a business park to serve a critical mass of employees.
Also need traditional retail visibility and access to ensure
success. Lots of convenience uses are already in place at
Shady Grove.
Tech parks
are a limited initial market, not enough for retail success.
Need either an incentive to draw them or an existing proximity
with the ability to expand when market dictates.
Implementation
Visualize a horizontal city along I-270. Each Metro station
would evolve into a small-scale CBD, with a core density of
mixed office and retail uses within walking distance, surrounded
by industrial, residential, or institutional uses. Each station
center would have its own character and opportunities.
What is
the character of Shady Grove, what should it be? It is being
influenced by the King Farm, but still need to create a sense
of place.
Extend
the King Farm pattern and character to Metro, and extend Metro
Park business area to the north along Crabbs Branch.
The County
has some leverage here if it can offer public land for redevelopment.
For example, consider building on Metro air rights.
Consider
the needs and value of supporting uses. Don't zone out industry,
allow its expansion.
Establish
a strong implementation mechanism.
The needed
housing is in place at the King Farm. Connect it to redevelopment
of Metro and jobs around the station.
Conclusions
Biotechnology will continue to grow and be a major industry
in the I-270 Corridor. However, the County needs to diversify
and encourage a broader range of technology industries and
the services and suppliers that support them. As a technology
business location, Shady Grove has the advantage of Metro
and Road access, but lacks the synergy that exists in other
clusters of tech businesses in the County.
Rezoning
the existing industrial land and displacing current businesses
is not desirable since there is a limited amount of industrially
zoned land in the County. If housing is also needed in the
Metro area, it should be located on sites immediately adjacent
to the Metro and not displace current, viable uses.
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