

The community is adjacent to the Strathmore Music Center and Mansion, ergo the mellifluous name. Streetscape paid $5m plus "additional consideration" for the land, donating 5 acres back to Montgomery County for public open space, to include an amphitheater and "from scratch" forest. In addition to

The developer described the finishes as "real materials" - brick and stone and solid wood doors. The design team tried to evoke the appearance of Georgetown, and Boston's back bay, a "sophisticated" community, according to Kaplan. The project is backed by Lubert-Adler Partners, LP. The land once belonged to the American Speech Language Hearing Association (ASHA) and had been under contract with residential developer

North Bethesda, Maryland real estate development news
6 comments:
Built with "real materials"? $10 says these are cheap wood frames with a thin veneer of stone or pavers on the front. I guess plywood is a real material.
I'm looking forward to seeing this come to fruition. Should be a great addition to the neighborhood. I only wish they would have incorporated a small neighborhood market within the development.
The design of the individual town homes seem nice. The overall master plan, however, is awful.
They created a cul-de-sac subdivision with one entry/exit point. The homes don't face the street, and are oriented towards exterior parking lots. I think a lot of folks who buy early will be deceived by the elevation renderings and will very disappointed with the end product.
yeah, agree- the master plan is an abomination.
oh well...opportunity lost.
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