SILVER SPRING, MD – On Thursday, Dec. 6 at
approximately 3 p.m., the Montgomery County Planning Board will consider whether
a Silver Spring complex of garden apartments, a portion of which is proposed
to be demolished to make way for new high-rise apartment buildings and stores,
should be considered eligible for historic designation.
Called the Falkland Apartments, the complex at
East-West Highway and 16th Street was built between 1936 and 1938 in
the wake of federal New Deal programs that brought an influx of new residents
to the Washington, D.C., region. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt cut the ribbon at
the Falklands dedication in 1937.
The owner of the Falklands property has submitted an
application to the Planning Department to build a mix of apartments and stores
on about a third of the complex on the north part of the site. That parcel, part of Silver Spring’s Central
Business District, allows mixed residential and retail. The project plan
proposes 1,059 residential units, a 50,000-square-foot grocery store and a
15,000-square-foot retail area that might include a restaurant.
The Falklands, already listed on a county inventory
of potential historic sites, is currently protected from demolition. Under the
county’s Preservation Ordinance, the historic inventory identifies properties
that might merit historic designation. Historic preservation staff researches
and makes recommendations on the historic and architectural importance of those
properties. The Historic Preservation Commission, the Planning Board and the
County Council then consider whether to actually designate the properties as
historic landmarks.
On Thursday, the board will evaluate whether the
entire Falklands complex is eligible to be considered for historic status. The
board may find the whole site is significant, only a portion is significant, or
none of it merits designation.
If the board finds all or some of the site eligible,
the Falklands would go through the full historic designation process and, if
deemed worthy by the County Council, would gain historic designation. Properties
on the list are fully protected from significant alterations.
The Historic Preservation Commission, as well as
historic preservation planners, have recommended that the board find the entire
Falklands eligible for historic designation.
Some 25 individuals have signed up to testify before
the board. Chairman Royce Hanson plans to limit testimony to two hours, but
will try to hear from all interested parties in that timeframe.
WHO:
Montgomery County Planning Department
WHAT:
Public hearing on Falklands historic designation
WHEN:
Thursday, December 6, 2007 – approximately 3 p.m.
WHERE:
Park and Planning Headquarters
8787 Georgia Avenue
Silver Spring, Md.