Falls Church News-Press 7-27-2023

Page 1

July 27 - August 2, 2023

Fa lls Chur c h, V i r g i ni a • ww w. fc np. c om • Fr ee

Fou n d e d 1991 • Vol. XXXIII No. 24

The City of Falls Church’s Independent, Locally-Owned Newspaper of Record, Serving N. Virginia

Va. Tech Piece of West Falls Plan OK’d

KISSES!

Over 40 Acres Now Set For Innovative Development by Nicholas F. Benton

Falls Church News-Press

A week after approving the requested modifications in plans for the mixed use development of WMATA’s land at its West Falls Church Metro station, the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors this Tuesday granted unanimous approval of plans for the spectacular development of the Virginia Tech 7.53-acre site sandwiched between the WMATA site and the 10 acres adjacent the new Meridian High School now under full bore construction in the City of Falls Church. The latest approval sews together three sites into what will emerge as over 40 acres of highly innovative, cutting edge architectural, technological and culturally-centered development, promising to be the most spectacular in the region, eventually eclipsing Merrifield’s new Mosaic district. Fairfax Supervisors Chair Jeff McKay said “there are a lot of moving pieces to this complicated but high quality project that will be a great addition to the region.” Supervisor John Foust, in whose district all but the City of Falls Church’s portion of the three-part project sits, said that one of the two buildings on the Virginia Tech parcel will be “one of the most attractive in Virginia” with its 100,000 square foot solar array propped above the largely glass-enclosed

Continued on Page 3

THIS IS THE SPECIAL SUMMER PET issue of your mighty Falls Church News-Press, and what better introduction can be provided than this photo of puppy love! Enjoy! (Photo: News-Press)

Key Approvals Won for 7 Corners Ring Road by Charlie Clark

Planners of the long-envisioned Seven Corners ring road have officially ruled out disruptive new routes through Falls Church City, according to the latest study of remedies for a major headache for area travelers. But the ambitious project for the broader area is advancing. The urgency? Crash data from the Virginia Roads website plots locations for more than 100 traffic accidents near the Seven Corners central intersection from 20182023. Pedestrians jaywalking across Wilson Blvd. to enter

the Eden Center on crowded Saturdays have raised concern among staff at the AAA office across the street. And commenters on TripAdvisor express a fear of driving through the 1950s-vintage namesake interchange that integrates nonstop traffic entering from both directions on Route 7 and Route 50, Hillwood Ave., Wilson Blvd. and Sleepy Hollow Rd. Help is finally, if slowly, on the way. The Fairfax Transportation Department last month released its “Seven Corners Phasing Study” laying out plans for the new ring road that will traverse parts of Falls Church, Arlington

and Fairfax. The goal is to siphon off a portion of non-local traffic. from the overloaded central intersection. Reflecting public comment from hearings held last November 10-11, the document details a four-phase construction plan to create the ring road designed to improve the roadway and ease bicycle and pedestrian access, as envisioned in the Fairfax County Comprehensive Plan. “We do recognize the danger, and it’s a very complicated interchange to get through, both from pedestrian and vehicle point of view,” Mike Garcia, chief of the Fairfax County Transportation

Planning Section, told the News-Press. “So the plan is to uncomplicate the interchange so it’s easier for people to walk through and bike through as well as navigate by vehicle. We want people to get directly to Route 7 and Route 50 and Wilson Boulevard by choosing a path that is more understandable. But we do not want to disperse them through the area.” The new report, based on the work by project manager Nanditha Paradkar, consultants and traffic forecasts to 2030 and 2045, also reflects planning by a task force that

Continued on Page 4


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.