MoCo exec Ike Leggett’s reps continued to push for a pedestrian bridge between Silver Spring’s new library and the Wayne Avenue garage Thursday night. But some area residents wanted to keep a few more options on the table. (more…)

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Downtown’s new library starts to take shape

Image: The new librarys latest look. Courtesy of Montgomery County department of general services.

Image: The new library's latest look. Courtesy of Montgomery County department of general services.

There was once a dream that was Rome — er, I mean downtown Silver Spring’s new library. You could only whisper it. Anything more than a whisper, and the librarian would shush you.

But after a couple of public meetings on how things will gel on the corner of Wayne Avenue and Fenton Street, the whisper is growing into an audible voice — one talking about zero escalators and a sweet rooftop garden. (more…)

Photo: MoCo exec Ike Leggett at some gig in April. Courtesy of Montgomery County.

Photo: Leggett at some gig in April.

MoCo exec Ike Leggett stuck to his guns Monday and insisted that a pedestrian bridge over Wayne Avenue was the way to go between downtown’s new library and a public garage across the street.

“The primary rationale [behind the bridge] is not one solely of safety,” Leggett wrote in a Jun 8 letter to Silver Spring’s citizens advisory board. “It is primarily one of accessibility and sustainability.” (more…)

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Image: A rendering of the proposed footbridge. Courtesy of MNCPPC.

Image: A rendering of the proposed footbridge. Courtesy of MNCPPC.

Members of the county’s planning board on Thursday couldn’t come to a consensus on whether a pedestrian bridge should connect the Wayne Avenue garage with Silver Spring’s new library.

“This is a classic Montgomery County conundrum,” commish Joe Alfandre told his colleagues. (more…)

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Designs for downtown Silver Spring’s new library take their next step Thursday evening, but plans for a pedestrian bridge over Wayne Avenue are still up in the air.

“This is a critical juncture to determine how parking will impact the building’s design,” David Dise, with the department of general services, told council members Monday morning during a budget work session in Rockville.

If built, the bridge will connect the new library on Fenton Street and Wayne Avenue with a public garage across the street. But county officials, as well as residents, have mixed opinions on whether it can or should be built.

MoCo exec Ike Leggett wants the estimated $600,000 bridge, which will connect the garage’s fourth level with the library’s third floor. That way, the county won’t have to construct pricier underground parking on the library site. Disabled bookworms also are happy to have a bridge because they believe Wayne Avenue traffic is too dicey to dodge.

“We’ve looked at options for [onsite] disabled parking, and cost is a primary factor,” Dise told council members in March. “Some of those costs are prohibitive, and we don’t want to hold up design of the library.”

Preliminary plans drafted by Dise’s department assume the bridge will be built. (Read: There is no plan B.) Those early designs will be revealed Thursday evening during the first of three public forums at the Silver Spring International Middle School.

However, the county’s planning department says a bridge will be inconsistent with Silver Spring’s urban-renewal plan. That document encourages pedestrians to use sidewalks (instead of bridges) to create a bustling cityscape. Some residents also worry the bridge will choke efforts to jump start Fenton Village’s economic health.

So what’s a county to do? So far, the county council has opted to tweak the urban-renewal plan to accommodate the bridge, though that has its own hurdles.

First, the county’s planning board has until May 19, 2009, to pull together its recommendations on the proposed tweakage. Then, the council will hold a public hearing on the matter in early June. It could tackle the issue head on later that month, Essie McGuire, a legislative analyst for the council, explained to her bosses.

If the county council rules that tweakage cannot occur, then it’s back to square one with the designs, general services’ Dise said. The council, in its 2010 budget discussions, already told Dise to get some non-bridge design options cooking if he wants to score the $2 million needed to roll desgins forward in the upcoming fiscal year.

In the meantime, residents will be allowed to throw in their two cents on the library’s exterior design at the public forums.

Photo: A view of the new library site from the Wayne Avenue garage. Credit: J. Deseo/SSP.

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County council members plan to roll forward with a pedestrian bridge between downtown Silver Spring’s new library and the Wayne Avenue garage. But they don’t want to be so quick in rubbing out on-site handicapped parking, either.

At Thursday’s meeting of the council’s human services committee in Rockville, members said they were willing to get cooking on an amendment to Silver Spring’s urban-renewal plan that would allow a foot bridge to be built over Wayne Aveune.

But committee members Roger Berliner (D-District 2) and Duchy Trachtenberg (D-At large) also said they wanted to keep the door open to on-site parking for disabled patrons, plus an on-site spot for dropping off passengers. Those options would serve as plan B in case the amendment to the urban-renewal plan tanks, council staff proposed in related documents.

Adding a drop-off location to the library site is no problem, David Dise, with the department of general services, told the committee. Designers were already on it, he explained. But parking on the library site at Wayne and Fenton Street was another story. 

“We’ve looked at options for disabled parking, and cost is a primary factor,” Dise told Berliner and Trachtenberg. “Some of those costs are prohibitive, and we don’t want to hold up design of the library.”

In February, council member Valerie Ervin (D-District 5) suggested underground handicapped parking at the planned residential building adjacent to the library site. But Gary Stith, who was director of Silver Spring’s regional center at the time, said parking spaces there could cost $60,000 each. That’s $600,000 for ten spots, equal to the lowest cost estimate for foot bridge construction.

Silver Spring’s citizens advisory board also suggested handicapped parking at a lot on the east side of Fenton at Bonifant Street. It’s not known whether anyone beyond advisory board members has given that some deep thought.

The county council will be up to their eyeballs in operating-budget issues for the next few weeks. However, Trachtenberg said she wanted to have all the details on the foot bridge ready for final decision making this summer.

Photo: The view of Wayne Avenue and Fenton Street, as seen from the fourth level of the Wayne Avenue garage. If a bridge is built there, it will connect the garage’s third level with the new library. So I was off by one level when taking the picture. Credit: J. Deseo/SSP.

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