
Tired of referring to downtown Silver Spring’s civic building as “downtown Silver Spring’s civic building”? Then slap someone’s name on it, peeps with MoCo exec Ike Leggett’s office suggested.
At Monday night’s citizens advisory board meeting, Chuck Short, a special assistant to Leggett, tossed around the idea of naming the place after James Gleason, Montgomery County’s first exec.
“We need to name an important and substantive building after this first county executive,” Short told the board inside ye olde library’s basement. Gleason, he added, “is a worthy individual to have his name associated with this building.”
So who was James Gleason?
Besides being the first county exec (before him, the county had only a legislative branch), Gleason was a World War II vet and Woodmoor resident. As county exec, he set up a system of regional centers to serve as his boots on the ground outside Rockville (Silver Spring’s was the first). And he could be tough to work with, Short said.
Gleason was also the guy who got the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority to stretch the Red Line past downtown Silver Spring and into Forest Glen, Wheaton and Glenmont, The Washington Post wrote. He managed that in 1977 by withholding $32 million in essential funding until the feds agreed to fund the project.
And Gleason was a Republican, the only one so far to serve as MoCo exec, The Post wrote.
While Gleason’s name has been tossed around Leggett’s office, it hasn’t been officially proposed, nor is it a done deal. “In the end, this is your building,” Short told the board.
A few more names have been floating around. State delegate Jane Lawton, who represented Chevy Chase, Kensington and parts of Silver Spring, is one of them. The Praisners — county council members Marilyn and Donald, who represented the northeastern end of Silver Spring — are also out there, Short said.
And then there’s the idea of naming the place after former county exec Doug Duncan. Some in the hood credit Duncan for the area’s economic revitalization, citizens advisory board member Alan Bowser said. Duncan was also the guy who couldn’t bring The Birchmere music hall to downtown Silver Spring, but managed to take it with him to College Park when he joined the University of Maryland’s administration.
Residents can pitch their own ideas formally to the county, though Short wasn’t sure if naming rights were reserved for publicly elected officials only. Any proposed name then goes through the naming committee wringer.
Short told advisory board members that there was no rush to name the building.
Rendering courtesy of the county’s department of general services.









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“giant hunk of hard and cold concrete” ??? :-)
Editor’s note: I think the idea is to name the building after a person. Is there someone out there who fits the description of “hard, cold concrete”? Donald Rumsfield? — JD (Feb 10, 2009)
Dated modernist crap? ;-)
Should we start a pool to bet on how many meetings this decision will take?
Naming government buildings after people — unless long dead — is a bad idea.
How about simply naming it the Silver Spring Montgomery County Office Building.
.. and the library should be called “Silver Spring Library” The post office should be called “Silver Spring Post Office, the transit center should be “Silver Spring” — leave Mr Sarbanes out of it thank you. As for National Airport …
Agreed, naming buildings after people is lame.
How about, The Used-To-Be-Turf Pavilion? Let the Turf live on forever in our memories!
I’m with WPB and buzz.
How about naming it after what it is supposed to replace, the Silver Spring Armory? It certainly looks more like a fortification than the original 1927 structure ever did.
Hey Jerry, someone at the citizens advisory board meeting said the armory was named after postmaster general Hewitt, and that maybe the new civic building should bear that name.
Do you have any info on Hewitt?
The Goldie Hahn Ben Stein Downcounty Center
Blech. If they’re looking for a person’s name to slap on that ugly bunch of boxes, I say we call it, “The Edsel.”
There has been no Postmaster General named Hewitt.
The high school is already named after a Postmaster General, anyway.