And the per capita income and proportion of lawyers is much higher near Lynnbrook. The original site selection committee ruled out Lynnbrook because the fields are already used by BCC and the streets are narrow and so the traffic issues would be tougher to deal with.
Anonymous wrote:so it's odd to pretend that one site is vastly more important than another as parkland, unless it's your neighborhood, I guess.
The big difference between, Rock Creek Hills Park, North Chevy Chase Park, and the former Lynbrook Elementary School and local park, is exactly that. It is already school property, buildings are falling apart, not a lot of loss of green space, and minimal loss for the local park.
Lynnbrook is already mostly concrete.
so it's odd to pretend that one site is vastly more important than another as parkland, unless it's your neighborhood, I guess.
Anonymous wrote:The argument about 3 old buildings that are near the end of their useful life just somewhat sold the deal for me. If MCPS will need to renovate or tear those building down in the near term, then it seems building a new school on land that was already built on is a greener way to go in that it saves open space. I also like the prior point about MCPS showing some good faith. Asking the public to give up a park when MCPS has land that it owns that would be sufficient to build a building on and would be a higher and better use of the resources does not seem like MCPS is acting in good faith.
If MCPS does not want to use Lynnbrook, I guess I am wondering why. Is there a secret story that we do not know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just out of curiousity, all you Lynnbrook booster(s) - how many of you are there and how many of you live in Rock Creek Hills?
I've been wondering this too!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just out of curiousity, all you Lynnbrook booster(s) - how many of you are there and how many of you live in Rock Creek Hills?
I have no dog in this fight, but I don't see the inherent advantage of Lynnbrook over RCH - if anything, the Kensington neighborhood has less congestion and will be easier to access, plus the site is larger. So what's the hangup?
I don't have a dog in this fight either. I don't live in Kensington, nor do I live near the Lynnbrook site, but after all this discussion I drove by there. I have to concur that it would be a good site for a middle school because as one poster said, it has few trees, a lot of parking lot and a couple (actually I think 3) decrepit buildings. I can't imagine tearing those down would be as much of a loss as building in what is now a park (I drove by RCH park also). I don't understand why the Lynnbrook site was eliminated in the last go round in spring. Why is MCPS protecting that site? Anybody??
The difference is significant. Construction in a park (RCH) takes away genunine natural resources. M-NCPPC wants to avoid losing those vanishing assets, but also is fighting to retain the playing fields (soccer in particular) downcounty. Replacemnt of an aging building (Lynnbrook) by MCPS using its own 3 parcels would be a good sign of things to come in county inter-agency cooperation. Asking Parks to offer their 3 adjoining parcels of Lynnbrook local park may more agreeable solution than RCH. I'm no tree hugger, but anyone should see that increasing devlopment at expense of parkland, woods is poor long-term planning. Agency's need to make the most of what they have. Housing a private daycare and a dozen employees in a former elementary school (Lynnbrook) is poor use of county building.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just out of curiousity, all you Lynnbrook booster(s) - how many of you are there and how many of you live in Rock Creek Hills?
I have no dog in this fight, but I don't see the inherent advantage of Lynnbrook over RCH - if anything, the Kensington neighborhood has less congestion and will be easier to access, plus the site is larger. So what's the hangup?
I don't have a dog in this fight either. I don't live in Kensington, nor do I live near the Lynnbrook site, but after all this discussion I drove by there. I have to concur that it would be a good site for a middle school because as one poster said, it has few trees, a lot of parking lot and a couple (actually I think 3) decrepit buildings. I can't imagine tearing those down would be as much of a loss as building in what is now a park (I drove by RCH park also). I don't understand why the Lynnbrook site was eliminated in the last go round in spring. Why is MCPS protecting that site? Anybody??
Anonymous wrote:Just out of curiousity, all you Lynnbrook booster(s) - how many of you are there and how many of you live in Rock Creek Hills?
I have no dog in this fight, but I don't see the inherent advantage of Lynnbrook over RCH - if anything, the Kensington neighborhood has less congestion and will be easier to access, plus the site is larger. So what's the hangup?
Anonymous wrote:Just out of curiousity, all you Lynnbrook booster(s) - how many of you are there and how many of you live in Rock Creek Hills?