Rochow v. Maryland National Capital Park & Planning Commission

827 A.2d 927, 151 Md. App. 558, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 80, 2003 WL 21471800
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 27, 2003
Docket0744, Sept. Term, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 827 A.2d 927 (Rochow v. Maryland National Capital Park & Planning Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rochow v. Maryland National Capital Park & Planning Commission, 827 A.2d 927, 151 Md. App. 558, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 80, 2003 WL 21471800 (Md. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

ADKINS, J.

We are asked to vacate the approval of a preliminary subdivision plan for “National Harbor,” an ambitious proposal to build an “urban destination resort” along the shores of the Potomac River. We shall do so because (1) the plan generates traffic that exceeds a limit on development that the Prince George’s County District Council imposed as conditions on the zoning map amendment and the conceptual site plan for this unique site, and (2) the developer did not submit required data regarding the noise impact of the project on neighboring residential communities.

FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

Zoning Map Amendment And Conditions

Since the mid-1960’s, developers and Prince George’s County planners have explored prospects for building a waterfront complex along the Potomac River, at the foot of the Woodrow Wilson Bridge at Smoot Bay. See Eglogff v. Dist. Council of *565 Prince George’s County, 130 Md.App. 113, 118-19, 744 A.2d 1083 (2000). In 1983, a development proposal called “Bay of Americas” envisioned a mixed use project encompassing retail, hotel, and residential uses. See id at 119, 744 A.2d 1083.

With hopes of duplicating some of Baltimore’s development successes at its Inner Harbor, the Prince George’s County Council, sitting as the District Council (the “District Council”), 1 enacted a 1983 zoning map amendment. 2 As a condition of that rezoning, the District Council required prospective developers to submit a “comprehensive concept plan” showing certain details of the proposed development concept. It also required the Planning Board to require, “as a condition of its final approval of the comprehensive concept plan,” that the District Council must review and approve that plan.

In 1988, the District Council responded to a successor proposal to develop the site as “PortAmerica.” See id The Council modified some of the conditions that it had attached to the 1983 zoning map amendment, but retained the condition requiring the Prince George’s County Planning Board (the “Planning Board”) 3 to refer any comprehensive concept plan *566 for developing this property to the District Council for its review and approval.

National Harbor

During the ensuing years, PortAmerica died on the development grapevine. Ten years after the District Council last rezoned the site, in 1998, The Peterson Companies, L.C. (“Peterson”) offered a conceptual site plan for National Harbor. Peterson asked for permission to proceed with building plans for a 469 acre “Waterfront Parcel” along the Potomac 4 and on a non-contiguous 64.7 acre “Beltway Parcel” situated next to the Capital Beltway, the Woodrow Wilson Bridge, and Oxon Hill Road. 5

*567 The Board, and then the District Council, approved Peterson’s conceptual site plan (the “CSP”). Both treated Peterson’s CSP as the “comprehensive concept plan” that was required by the 1983 and 1988 zoning map amendments. In doing so, both also conditioned their approval of the CSP by listing certain requirements that had to be satisfied at various stages of development.

One of these conditions addressed the concern of planners and residents that the bridge, Beltway, and local roads could not handle unlimited new development. To ensure traffic adequacy, the Planning Board and District Council restricted development of the Beltway Parcel to the 200,000 square feet of office space and 725,000 square feet of retail space that had been proposed in the CSP, or alternatively, to any use configuration that generated 1,226 or fewer “peak hour trips” in the morning (the “AM trip cap”), and 2,565 peak hour trips in the afternoon. These “trip caps” reflected levels of traffic that, according to Peterson’s 1998 traffic study, would be generated by its Beltway Parcel proposal.

Three years later, in May 2001, Peterson asked the Board to approve the next stage of the National Harbor project—a preliminary subdivision plan (the “PSP”). 6 But Peterson’s PSP differed from the CSP that the District Council approved in 1998. There was a significant change in the Beltway Parcel. Instead of a predominantly retail development of 725,000 square feet, with only 200,000 square feet of office space, the revised plan called for 1.22 million square feet of office space with only 200,000 square feet of retail space.

*568 In support of its PSP, Petersoñ submitted a new traffic study. Engineers in the Transportation Planning section of the Maryland National Capital Park and Planning Commission (“MNCPPC”) reviewed the PSP and the traffic study. In ■addition to questioning the methodology used in Peterson’s new study, transportation engineers also quickly pointed out the obvious—that Peterson’s reconfigured subdivision plan for the Beltway Parcel “raised a trip cap issue.”

What the traffic study conclusively showed was that the PSP exceeded the alternative square footage and the AM traffic cap conditions imposed by both the Planning Board and the District Council. Using Prince George’s County trip rates that “more accurately reflect the estimated number of trips within the County,” MNCPPC engineers concluded that “[t]he proposed new land uses, compared to the approved Conceptual Site Plan, would generate an additional 1,872 ... peak hour trips during the morning[.]” Even using Peterson’s more favorable trip rates, however, the PSP still “exceed[ed] the conceptual plan cap by 1,476 trips.” 7

MNCPPC engineers interpreted the trip cap as a “traffic adequacy” ceiling on developing the Beltway Parcel. In the staffs view, the Planning Board could not finally approve Peterson’s PSP without impermissibly ignoring or revising an explicit condition that the District Council imposed in the exercise of the review and approval authority that it reserved in condition 3 to the 1988 zoning map amendment. The staff reasoned that the AM trip cap, because it was “imposed at the *569 time of an earlier [traffic] adequacy study which was reviewed and affirmed by the District Council[,] would not be subject to revision unless the subsequent cap were also subject to review by the District Council.”

In response, Peterson attempted to persuade MNCPPC staff that this trip cap should not be literally construed or strictly enforced. Because the purpose of the trip caps was to ensure traffic adequacy, it reasoned, the District Council intended the trip caps to be, in effect, a merely directory benchmark meaning that there had to be adequate transportation facilities for the Beltway Parcel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
827 A.2d 927, 151 Md. App. 558, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 80, 2003 WL 21471800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rochow-v-maryland-national-capital-park-planning-commission-mdctspecapp-2003.