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A TOUCH OF CLARENDON FOR PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY?
At age 82, developer Herschel Blumberg could be content with memories
of luring Radio City Music Hall architect Edward
Durrell Stone in the early 50s to design three monumental office buildings
at Adelphi Road
and East West Highway in western Prince George's County. But
Blumberg is not content. He now wants to bring jazzy urban streetscapes,
restaurants,
and nightlife to the area.
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Herschel
Blumberg
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As the dynamics of P.G. County started
changing in the late 90s and the consumer market showed signs
of life, with local residents
looking for places to play and shop, Blumberg hired top designer
Parker/Rodriquez to do a new master plan and update the
entire site. In 2000 he
even changed
its name from Prince George's Metro Center to University
Town Center,
taking advantage of the cachet of being less than a mile from
the University of
Maryland in College Park. His mission: Transform a conventional
suburban office park into a 24/7 mixed use environment. A few
years ago that was
a novel idea, but today it’s part of a trend there: EYA is
doing an upscale rowhouse project in Hyattsville, and the University
is building a flashy M Square to house its own researchers
and defense and tech related
companies about a mile and a half away.
Blumberg is now well advanced
in bringing concept to reality. He's already been putting in place residential,
and plans to create
250,000 square feet of stores, theatres, restaurants, and other
retail in the next year
and a half.
His first step was a build-to-suit office building for
the Center for Disease Control and new parking facilities.
Next up was a 16-story
Towers for 910 students from 11 area colleges and universities
that opened in August.
It's now 100% full with a waiting list. More upscale, just framed
out, are 112 adjacent condos, half of which have already sold.
One and two bedrooms
start in the mid-$200's and six penthouses have already been snapped
up for over $400k each—about 30-75% less than you'd pay downtown.
22 two-level lofts of 1000 to 2000 square feet each are due in
the third quarter
of 07; then a 14-screen multiplex in May, and a Lifestyle Safeway sometime
in '08: fancy wood floors, sections of organic vegetables and cheeses,
wide aisles with in-store Starbucks and cleaners. The planned
finale is a central spine
for the area called America's Boulevard in the fall of '08: a pedestrian
friendly avenue with lush landscaping, seating, designer lighting,
public square settings, sculpture pieces and a Reston Town Center-like
ice skating
rink. By the end, 10 restaurants such as Old Dominion Brewery (a
50 beer pub with sushi bar), Wow Wingery (top rated wings
in region), and Kudo Coffee
Beans will be in place, plus Blumberg's negotiating with a major
hotel.
How'd Blumberg find himself in the middle of all this? When
we talked with him the other day, he said he had been building
houses in Montgomery County in the early 50s and a partner of his "told me
he had a piece of ground and wanted to know if I wanted to develop
it. My brother and I
drove around it, and said sure. We bought the ground in 1952, but
had to learn a lot more because we hadn't built office buildings." That's
where Edward Durrell Stone (later to design the Kennedy Center)
came in. "We
flew around the country looking for someone imaginative but dignified.
After Durrell did his plans, we went to park and planning commission
for approval
and they actually urged us to make the building bigger because
they liked it so much."
You can coax memories out of him, but
what he'd rather talk about is the future. He's already designing
a Phase II, to begin within
60 days of the end of Phase I. Would he ever sell? "Make me an offer
I can't refuse," he says, mentioning that speculation that it's worth
more than a billion. Meanwhile, his wife and three children own
it, and he's out there every day.
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