Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sign on to the YIMBY Facebook page. Their goal is to have Langston Blvd lined with high rise apartments from Rosslyn to the East Falls Church. There motto is Arlington for all and the County planning staff is pursuing the same goal. They brush off concerns about overcrowded schools and lack of parks, parking, and green space. Everyone will use an electric bike and put their kids in carts attached to bikes.
Look at the intersection of Washington Blvd and Kirkwood
One 70 unit building was just finished. The huge Modera (seriously they kept that name) is about halfway up and the 250 unit building on the Red Top site is underway.
That’s the future of Langston Blvd, despite there being thousands of vacant units in Arlington, the County is continuing its push for communal living.
This is exactly right. "Density" is a word used with a religious fervor by these people. Activists and county staff are pushing through a zoning change for Langston that, despite the lack of access to Metro, will allow massive development in the area.
There is a plan for more schools but it requires building them in our increasingly overstressed parks. I have some great pictures of my son playing Little League on a park that is now the parking lot for Cardinal Elementary. Another example is Discovery, which was built on the once beautiful Williamsburg site. What remains of the park is now astroturf. It's what the urban planner types think of as heaven.
Anonymous wrote:They’re talking about the area from glebe to Lexington Street on Langston. This is already a busy area, no idea how it will support the traffic. However at least the schools are less crowded in that area.
Anonymous wrote:Sign on to the YIMBY Facebook page. Their goal is to have Langston Blvd lined with high rise apartments from Rosslyn to the East Falls Church. There motto is Arlington for all and the County planning staff is pursuing the same goal. They brush off concerns about overcrowded schools and lack of parks, parking, and green space. Everyone will use an electric bike and put their kids in carts attached to bikes.
Look at the intersection of Washington Blvd and Kirkwood
One 70 unit building was just finished. The huge Modera (seriously they kept that name) is about halfway up and the 250 unit building on the Red Top site is underway.
That’s the future of Langston Blvd, despite there being thousands of vacant units in Arlington, the County is continuing its push for communal living.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where I grew up when a developer built a certain size community, they built schools as part of that development. Why don’t developers put money into APS as part of large projects?
Because the county board treats the schools like an unwanted stepchild. Not their problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where I grew up when a developer built a certain size community, they built schools as part of that development. Why don’t developers put money into APS as part of large projects?
Because the county board treats the schools like an unwanted stepchild. Not their problem.
Anonymous wrote:On another thread there was an allusion to more high rises planned for Langston (do we know which neighborhoods) and Orange Line in general, and that the 4th comprehensive high school is dead in the water.
Are there really that many new high rises planned? I thought demand for communal living had fallen with remote work and COVID, and Arlington is less of a destination? Or are these all affordable housing projects? Either way, a slew of kids could result, and we still don’t have a high school plan!
We were over crowded as it is — is there really that much building in the pipeline? Our DD starts K next year and we are wondering if she will be going to a 5k student WL.
Anonymous wrote:Where I grew up when a developer built a certain size community, they built schools as part of that development. Why don’t developers put money into APS as part of large projects?