Water outage causes woe for East Silver Springers

Photo: WSSC crews were on the case Friday night. Courtesy of B. Hefele.

Photo: WSSC crews were on the case Friday night. Courtesy of B. Hefele.

UPDATE — The scene near Nolte Park was something out of Coleridge’s “Rime of the Ancient Mariner”: Water, water everywhere, yet not a drop to drink.

On Friday night, as a summer storm raged outside, residents inside two East Silver Spring apartment complexes were dealing with dry taps and washers that wouldn’t fill.

Blame a busted valve under Easley Street near Cedar Street, Kim Knox, a spokesperson for the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission, said Monday. (more…)

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Community garden proposed for downtown area

County council member Valerie Ervin (D-District 5) and the parks department think one local park is prime planting space for a community garden. But some think otherwise.

At a community meeting in South Silver Spring Thursday night, parks department guy David Vismara explained that a small field in Silver Spring Intermediate Park would be the spot for growing veggies in the downtown area. The sun-soaked patch of grass is smaller than a regulation-sized soccer field and can be divided into about 30 plots for planting, he said.

“In this climate, you can garden year round,” Vismara told about 30 people in attendance. “And if you’re growing year round, we don’t have to till the soil in the spring”

A lottery would be held to pass out the plots, with local urban farmers getting their shot at up to 80 percent of the land, Ben Stutz, a policy analyst for Ervin, spelled out. A golden ticket, plus $45 in annual fees, could have one rolling in the dirt for some organic growing by mid May, Vismara tacked on.

South Silver Spring residents at the meeting seemed to dig the idea. “Community gardening is one of the most rewarding experiences,” Jason Gedeik, a high-rise dweller, told his neighbors. “It brightens a neighborhood and brings it together.”

One resident of Eastern Village cohousing (whose name I didn’t catch — my bad) was also psyched for a community garden. “We’re trying to grow herbs on the roof, and it’s a challenge,” he said. “I’m glad to see Montgomery County is moving in that direction.”

But not everyone was happy about that park being converted into a clusterfarm. Nancy Nickell, an East Silver Spring resident, argued that the downtown area deserved more park land and shouldn’t sacrifice existing green space for the benefit of a few urban farmers.

“This area is used by the public and used by many people,” Nickell told those in attendance. “I’ve seen people doing yoga there. I’ve seen an equinox celebration there. All of that will be gone.”

Other East Silver Springers at the meeting suggested a sunny lawn in front of the third district police station on Sligo Avenue, plus a vacant lot on Bonifant Street near Fenton Street, as prime agricultural spaces. However, both bits of real estate weren’t under the guise of the parks department, council member Ervin said.

Besides, the county already has plans for those lots, Ervin added. The grassy knoll on Bonifant is to be a staging area for construction on downtown Silver Spring’s new library. And the police station is to be converted into something (Ervin didn’t say what) once the third district PD move into their new White Oak digs.

Silver Spring’s citizens advisory board gets a swing at this subject next Monday night.

Photo of a community garden in California courtesy of Flickr user Vicki Moore.

Update: Tweaked to identify Eastern Village, South Silver Spring, as a cohousing complex and not a co-op. — JD (Apr 1, 2009)

Update: The spelling of Nancy Nickell’s last name was corrected (two Ls, not one). — JD (Apr 2, 2009)

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County planners: Purple Line tunnel, anyone?

The county’s planning department wants the state to look into a possible Purple Line tunnel through East Silver Spring, one transportation planner announced Monday night. (more…)

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Sligo Ave dodges Purple Line alignment

Proposed Purple Line alignments

The Purple Line won’t roll down Sligo Avenue, but it could chug along Bonifant Street on its way to Long Branch, according to reps for the state transit administration.

At Monday night’s focus-group meeting in downtown Silver Spring, project manager Mike Madden said a route along Sligo Avenue was no longer under consideration. That alignment would have carried the light-rail line at street level between Long Branch and the Silver Spring Transit Center.

Impacts on the community, as well as the cost of tunneling beneath East Silver Spring to avoid those impacts, dictated the alignment’s elimination, Madden told The Penguin.

Instead, a street-level alignment could snake south from the transit center, then eastward on Bonifant Street. The alignment would turn north on Fenton Street, then eastward on Wayne Avenue. (See map above.)

However, tunneling beneath Bonifant Street won’t be possible, Madden said. From its elevated station at the transit center, the Purple Line would not have enough distance to transition into a tunnel, he explained.

Tunneling would be likely if a proposed east-west route between Thayer and Silver Spring avenues is selected, said Joe Romanowski, a consulting engineer for the state.

However, that alignment would not burrow beneath the proposed Studio Plaza development off Georgia Avenue, Madden said. Instead, it would run beneath Silver Spring Avenue, then turn north near Fenton Street. (See map above.)

Tunneling is also likely if a route is selected from Silver Spring Avenue near Georgia Avenue, directly to Wayne Avenue near Cedar Street. The tunnel would be deep enough so as not to disturb homes or trees on the street surface, Madden said.

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Purple Line tunnel could clear school

Proposed Thayer Avenue route

Editor’s note: The Thayer Avenue route discussed in this article is one of three proposed routes through Silver Spring. No route has been finalized as of this writing. (Mar 22, 2007)

A tunnel for the proposed Purple Line could be extended to avoid an elementary school footpath, state transit officials said.

The tunnel, part of a proposed Thayer Avenue route, would burrow beneath East Silver Spring Elementary School and a popular path off Thayer Avenue (above), engineer Joe Romanowski explained. He and other experts spoke with a neighborhood focus group Wednesday night at Oakview Elementary School.

“They were worried about kids crossing the light-rail tracks as it [the Purple Line] came out of the tunnel,” Mike Madden, of the state transit administration, told the group. “We’ve just extended that tunnel to go under that path.”

The Purple Line would then return to street level just west of the route’s intersection with Thayer Avenue. The tunnel could not be extended further east because of changes in elevation, Romanowski said.

Exactly how a tunnel would be constructed in that area is undecided. Engineers are drilling throughout Silver Spring to assess what lies beneath the street surface, consultant Joel Oppenheimer said. What they’ve found so far is a mixed bag.

“Some areas will have 40 feet of fill [soil], then good rock, then fractured rock,” Oppenheimer told the focus group. “It’s not going to be an easy place to tunnel.”

Two modes of tunnel construction have been proposed. With deep tunneling, machinery would drive through the bedrock without disrupting the street surface. However, engineers must determine whether deep tunneling can be done through Silver Spring’s calico subsurface, Romanowski said.

Tunneling also could be done by the cut-and-cover method. In that approach, the street surface is dug open so that a tunnel could be buried beneath the top soil. Robert Rosenberg, a resident who opposes this method, said it could impact about 60 privately owned lots between Silver Spring and Thayer avenues in East Silver Spring.

“They have no rights over backyard property,” Rosenberg told The Penguin. “We support some kind of deep tunneling through East Silver Spring.”
The costs of deep tunneling and cut-and-cover construction have not yet been compared, Madden, of the transit administration, said.

Image courtesy of the Maryland Transit Administration. Photo by Jennifer Deseo for The Silver Spring Penguin.

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