Maud Robinson on "Tall" Parking Garages; The End of the Vienna Inn Is Near
From Maud Robinson recently:
"We need to preserve Vienna’s low skyline...that’s an important element of Vienna’s character. At the same time, [I] accept the fact that our height level might need to be increased in certain areas...for a parking garage."
Where does Robinson plan to install the new 5-6 story parking garage? Can you spell V-I-E-N-N-A I-N-N!






Comments
watch for my letter to the ed in the connection on this.
Posted by: anne smith | April 16, 2007 01:12 PM
Will there be green roof tops? Deborah brought up the green initiatives at the NARFE debate.
Up on the ‘green’ roofs in the District
Melissa Frederick
DC Examiner
Apr 16, 2007 3:00 AM
WASHINGTON - When D.C. area businesses and institutions decide it’s time for a new roof, more are making the decision to go green.
The District is second only to Chicago in the square footage devoted to green roofs, according to an annual survey by Green Roofs for Healthy Cities, a Toronto-based industry association. Dulles ranked fourth on the list.
Buildings with green roofs are partially or completely covered with vegetation and soil, which gets planted over a waterproofing layer. The roofs are designed to save energy costs, reduce stormwater run-off and improve air quality.
Green roofs are a trend on the rise, showing more than 25 percent growth during 2006, Steven Peck, the association’s founder, told The Examiner.
Green roofs can be found in the D.C. area atop government buildings such as the U.S. Department of the Interior, educational institutions like the Sidwell Friends School and housing projects like Eastern Village in Silver Spring.
D.C.’s 32 green roof projects cover 301,751 square feet. Dulles’ high ranking was the result of one large-scale project: the 230,000-square-foot green roof at Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s research campus.
The D.C.-based American Society of Landscape Architects finished its own project last April. The group hopes the new roof, which has been retaining 77 percent of all rainfall since its construction, will become a demonstration project that encourages others to follow suit, Executive Vice President Nancy Somerville said Friday.
The structures are generally more costly than ordinary roofs — costing $15 to $20 per square foot rather than $8 to $14 per square foot for conventional roofs, Somerville said. The architect group invested more than $900,000 in its own project, though most of those costs were for a stairwell extension that made the roof accessible, she said.
Posted by: vienna mommy | April 16, 2007 01:20 PM
Is the parking garage going to be where the Vienna Inn is, since that is the only space SHE has designated as the next place to be developed?
Posted by: silly really | April 16, 2007 01:46 PM
Save the Vienna Inn! Vote Maud out of office!
Posted by: A Home Town Girl | April 16, 2007 06:14 PM
WOW I am excited about this. A beautiful parking garage with a new Vienna Inn on a Green roof. Since it will be beautiful can we incorporate a beautiful bridge over Maple Ave. on the bike path through the parking garage?
Posted by: Chilly Dog | April 16, 2007 08:46 PM
Great idea.. How about we ban the Pledge of Allegiance and English classes at all the Vienna schools and, just to make a point, demand OLGC remove religion from their curriculum. Holy cow!!! Everyone knows the Vienna Inn IS Vienna!
Posted by: DonkeyDog | April 18, 2007 04:36 PM
Perhaps, Maud thinks like many other "new" residents (you know, ones not BORN and raised here) that the Vienna Inn is only "cool" if you grew up here.
I actually had some yuppy dude tell me that the other day that the Vienna Inn pretty much sucks unless you've grown up with it.
Those were fightin' words!!
Posted by: vienna mommy | April 19, 2007 09:46 AM