An Open Letter Concerning the
St. Johns Wood Proposed Re-Development
To: The Reston Planning &
Zoning Committee, Reston Design Review Board, Fairfax County Department of
Planning and Zoning, Fairfax County Supervisors, and all affected community
members-
A
plea for adequate time for public review and comment on the next round of
developer changes to its St. Johns Wood re-development proposal.
The undersigned residents of the
North Point area of Reston seek your attention and assistance regarding anticipated changes to plans for
redevelopment of the St. Johns Wood apartment complex. The property is located at the intersection
of Reston Parkway and Center Harbor Road. Please assure that Bozzuto Development Company, Inc. (Bozzuto)
provides all affected reviewing authorities and the public-at-large sufficient
time and information to review the revised plans that the developer has
indicated will be made.
The numerous submissions by
Bozzuto for redevelopment of the property, seeking to convert 250 multi-family
garden apartments in nine-three story buildings to 467 new apartments and forty-four
townhomes, have undergone many changes over several years. County Supervisor Hudgins currently advises on
her website, “Bozzuto is in the
process of revising their plan; therefore, the public hearing was deferred
until May 25, 2017.” This postponement by County Planning follows
deferral of review by the Reston Design Review Board in October 2016 and a
statement of non-support for the Bozzuto application by the Reston Association
in September 2016.
More recently, the Reston
Planning & Zoning Committee calendared the review of a yet-to-be publically
released revision of the developer’s redevelopment plans for St. Johns Wood. That
meeting is scheduled for March 27.
Despite the rapidly approaching dates for Reston Planning
& Zoning Committee review and the County Planning public hearing, to date
Bozzuto has not provided the public with any information about changes to its
application.
If the changes are not significant, it is unconscionable to
withhold public scrutiny of this potentially neighborhood-altering project. If
as is suspected the changes to the application are significant, it is even more
imperative that the public be provided meaningful opportunity to examine and
comment. This is particularly important
given the troubling deficiencies cited by the Reston Design Review Board and
the Reston Association.
The St. Johns Wood project will so greatly affect the
quality of life, environment, safety, and property values of the North Point
area of Reston that the project must be reviewed in the most transparent manner
possible. Please help!
Susan Barse
Stephen Canner
Mark Clyman
Arlene Krieger
Patricia Lentz
John Mooney
Dabney Narvaez
Linda Platt
Jeanne Vasterling
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your comments are welcome and encouraged as long as they are relevant, constructive, and decent.