Leggett calls for less-dense Science City'
But County Executive also wants exceptions' to infrastructure requirements
By curbing one-tenth of the development proposed for 800 acres in Shady Grove, the county's controversial vision for a "Science City" can avoid being stymied by infrastructural hurdles and costs, County Executive Isiah Leggett said in a new report.
Leggett's report came in advance of public hearings this week on the Gaithersburg West Master Plan, the county's blueprint for transforming the Shady Grove Life Sciences Center — already the state's largest node of biotech — into a world-leading research hub where scientists and professors can live and work.
Scaling back construction of research, office, retail, academic and health care space to 18 million square feet — instead of 20 million square feet outlined in the County Planning Board's version of Gaithersburg West released this summer — will eliminate the need to build at least two of the five highway interchanges envisioned for the area, which would cost $250 million and require several homes to be demolished.
However, it would also cut the county's net fiscal benefit from $43 million to $31 million per year, according to the report — from $1.5 billion to $1.1 billion over the next 30 years.
The County Council's first hearing was Tuesday night after Gazette press time. The other hearing is at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the council building, 100 Maryland Ave., Rockville.
Two years have passed since plans first surfaced for catapulting the Life Sciences Center from a suburban-style research park of 6.9 million square feet into a live-work "urban village" of 20 million square feet of commercial and retail space, up to 9,000 residences and more than 40,000 new jobs.
Along the way, Gaithersburg West has rallied the county's economic and scientific community while upsetting residents in nearby neighborhoods.
In his report Friday, Leggett framed Gaithersburg West as a "critical component" to creating a "community of innovation," and to "help carry the County through much of the first half of this century."
"[T]he Gaithersburg West Master Plan is part of an answer to a call to action that cannot go unheeded," Leggett wrote. "Unfortunately, we are losing scientists and we are losing our competitive advantage in the biotechnology industry as a county, as a state and as a nation. This is a loss that we cannot afford."
To expand the Life Sciences Center beyond the 8.2 million square feet already built or approved, the planning board's draft of Gaithersburg West breaks the construction into stages that cannot begin without specific improvements to infrastructure and transportation.
Leggett followed the recommendation of a panel of residents and business leaders, calling on the County Council to create "exceptions" to that staging plan "for projects of strategic economic significance so that the County does not lose economically significant opportunities because of staging restrictions."
For example, under the planning board's version of Gaithersburg West, the third stage cannot begin until two highway interchanges are completed and the other three are funded.
Gaithersburg city leaders say the staging plan is a nonnegotiable prerequisite for their support of Gaithersburg West.
"The only thing that makes this acceptable at any level is the staging," City Councilman Michael A. Sesma said last week as the mayor and council took their stand on Gaithersburg West.
Gaithersburg leaders called for the strongest terms possible to ensure that the County Council include the staging plan in the final version of Gaithersburg West, particularly the funding of the Corridor Cities Transitway. The County Council stripped a similar staging plan from the master plan it recently approved for Germantown.
Even with the staging plan, the mayor and council complained that Gaithersburg West completely alters the suburban feel of surrounding communities.
"The lack of integration of existing suburban neighborhoods — whether they're in the city or outside of the city —across the street, across the large avenues from the Belward Farm and the Life Sciences Center has not been done very well," Sesma said. "And so they're going to create a mixed-use development that basically isolates itself from the other communities that already exist."