Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you have an axe to grind. Brookeville is historic. May not be worth $50 million, but to deny history makes you seem petty.
There are a dozen houses there (on Georgia Ave)...and not all of them are historic.
Old Town Kensington is historic and actually has a heavily trafficked town center, yet there is no bypass.
$50 mil to reroute traffic away from a dozen homes seems absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in that area. There are safety reasons for building the bypass. That intersection has a higher accident rate due to no shoulder and limited visibility. Brookeville was the U.S. capitol for a day when the white house was burned by the British. I see no reason to tear down the historic homes. Then developers will build condos. There will be nothing left but overdevelopment in this county.
Yeah there aren't many other cities who were US capital for a day. That's of historic significance for sure.
Also that intersection is pretty dangerous, though I wonder if a traffic light would have solved the problem.
Anonymous wrote:I live in that area. There are safety reasons for building the bypass. That intersection has a higher accident rate due to no shoulder and limited visibility. Brookeville was the U.S. capitol for a day when the white house was burned by the British. I see no reason to tear down the historic homes. Then developers will build condos. There will be nothing left but overdevelopment in this county.
Anonymous wrote:I live in that area. There are safety reasons for building the bypass. That intersection has a higher accident rate due to no shoulder and limited visibility. Brookeville was the U.S. capitol for a day when the white house was burned by the British. I see no reason to tear down the historic homes. Then developers will build condos. There will be nothing left but overdevelopment in this county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in that area. There are safety reasons for building the bypass. That intersection has a higher accident rate due to no shoulder and limited visibility. Brookeville was the U.S. capitol for a day when the white house was burned by the British. I see no reason to tear down the historic homes. Then developers will build condos. There will be nothing left but overdevelopment in this county.
I don't live there, but I've driven through it. And it definitely stuck out as a unsafe area of the road.
In general, I have no problem with redevelopment, but the reroouting of Georgia Ave seems like the best way to deal with those safety issues.
Anonymous wrote:I live in that area. There are safety reasons for building the bypass. That intersection has a higher accident rate due to no shoulder and limited visibility. Brookeville was the U.S. capitol for a day when the white house was burned by the British. I see no reason to tear down the historic homes. Then developers will build condos. There will be nothing left but overdevelopment in this county.

Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you have an axe to grind. Brookeville is historic. May not be worth $50 million, but to deny history makes you seem petty.