Density
Hits Home -
Residents respond to county plans to
modify a density “cap,” which is fast approaching.
By Jason Hartke - June 29, 2006 Reston
Connection
Allowable residential development in Reston is an endangered species
that needs saving, county officials told a wary crowd of about 60 people
Tuesday, June 20 at
Langston
Hughes
Intermediate
School
. During a meeting hosted by
Supervisor Catherine Hudgins (D-Hunter Mill) on the future of
residential development, Jim Zook, the county’s director of planning
and zoning, tried to explain the status of a 45-year-old zoning
ordinance that could soon bring residential development in Reston to a
standstill. Most of
Reston
, roughly 6,200 acres, is zoned as a planned residential community
(PRC). The PRC zoning ordinance includes a total residential density
“cap” of 13 persons per acre, which is fast approaching, according
to Zook.
Under the county’s interpretation of the ordinance,
Reston
’s current density is 11.68 persons per acre, which allows for an
additional 4,106 high-rise residential units. Development applications
currently in the pipeline could cut that number in half. “If we
ignored this issue in our office, then at some point in time we would be
shutting down proposals that this community may want,” said Zook, who
outlined plans to retool the ordinance starting in July.
WHILE ZOOK spoke of reprogramming the county ordinance to define rules
for redevelopment in
Reston
, residents pointed to the unchecked glut of high-rises, increased
traffic congestion and the rising burden on public services that the
community already faces. “I
live near the town center, and I think I speak for my neighbors when I
say we are just disgusted with all the high-rises,” said Julie Light,
a resident of Oak Park Condos in
Reston
. She wondered if the
density cap ordinance were modified, how would development be checked?
“This whole community was supposed to be about nature and the walks,
and I think we’re destroying that,” said Light to what may have been
the loudest applause of the night. She
voiced dismay over the recent approval of two high-rise condo buildings
on the Oracle campus at the intersection of
Reston Parkway
and
Sunset Hills Road
. The Planning Commission approved the combined 457-unit development
last month despite strong resistance from the county’s planning and
zoning staff, who called the proposal “very bad” and
“disassociated development.”
Others think the density cap would handcuff
Reston
’s future. Robert E.
Simon,
Reston
’s founder, called for the abolition of the cap, which he said was
obsolete. No one could have predicted that Reston would emerge into the
Silicon Valley
of the East, said Simon. “There
is no way to predict what the future will hold,” he said, adding that
it would be “unreasonable” to subject
Reston
to a density cap.
ZOOK ASSURED the crowd that changes would only be made after several
opportunities for community input. Since
the beginning of the year,
Fairfax
County
’s planning and zoning office has counted and recounted residential
units in Reston, trying to confirm whether or not
Reston
had eclipsed its density cap. Zook
first reported in February that
Reston
was at 12.5 persons per acre and only 1,530 high-rise units away from
hitting the cap, but he added that further analysis was necessary. After
further review, the county reported
Reston
’s density at 11.68 persons per acre.
One focus of the ordinance change, said Zook, would be the formula for
calculating density specified for the PRC.
The ordinance applies density values (called “factors”) to
each form of housing — 3.5 persons per single family detached, 3
persons per single family attached, 2.5 persons per garden apartment and
2 persons per elevator apartment. When
the county inputs these density values,
Reston
’s population comes in at 72,100. Because this figure does not
accurately reflect
Reston
’s true population, which is closer to 62,000, Zook said a good
starting point for amending the ordinance would be revising the density
values to better reflect U.S. Census population data.
IN ADDITION to revising the density values for the four types of
housing, this year’s proposed ordinance change would include rules for
redevelopment in
Reston
. This would have two
benefits, according to Zook. First, it would define the current zoning
of residential neighborhoods to “what’s already been developed
there.” For example, if a cluster currently has 100 homes, but the
site plan allows for 500, the cluster’s official zoning would be set
at 100. This ensures the status quo and the preservation of “stable
residential neighborhoods,” said Zook.
The other benefit of defining redevelopment is that it would
clarify and regulate the process for zoning changes, which would be
subjected to a legislative, community-involved process.
“What I’m trying to do it clarify the rules,” said Zook.
“Developers would argue they are entitled ‘by-right’ to develop
according to the site plan.”
OTHERS ADMITTED they were skeptical of any changes and the rapid
timetable to amend the ordinance. Najwa
Saad of
Reston
felt Zook’s presentation was unclear, a sentiment echoed by many
people. Some audience
members said they left the meeting more confused than when they arrived.
“I’m totally confused,” said Simon at one point late in the
meeting.
Jim Kepler, a Reston resident for 25 years, argued that the
proposed ordinance changes, which may be necessary, bypass the real
question that Hudgins and county staff ought to be asking the community:
what do people think
Reston
’s density should be? “I
think the [density] cap does what [Zook] is proposing to do,” said
Kepler, referring to the preservation of the residential status quo. But
Kepler added that the changes Zook proposes would not only preserve the
status quo, but also open the door for much more redevelopment.
“The point is not that there won’t be change —there will be
change,” said Zook. “The issue is how that change will be
managed.” Mike Corrigan,
president of the Reston Citizens Association, suggested that residents
would be a lot more comfortable with change if
Reston
were a town. The density issue could become another example of how not
being a town could cost Restonians the ability to control their own
future, he argued.
PLANNING AND ZONING staff will seek approval of an ordinance amendment
proposal from the Board of Supervisors in July. Public hearings would be
held in September or October before the board makes its final decision.
At a meeting with Reston’s Planning and Zoning Committee
earlier this month, Zook said another aspect of an ordinance change
could determine whether the
Reston
Town
Center
area deserves special zoning. The
county could begin looking at changing the density cap of 13 persons per
acre as early as September, said Zook. © 2006 Connection Newspapers. All Rights Reserved.
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