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Prince George鈥檚 Co. leaders consider 2-year pause on townhouse construction in many parts of the county

Sprawling townhouse communities have impacted traffic from Bowie to Brandywine, and efforts to build more of them have influenced recent elections in Prince George鈥檚 County, Maryland.

On Tuesday, a that would put a two-year pause on future townhouse developments that would be built outside of what the county defines as transit hubs.

鈥淲e have most of our townhouse development applications at this point outside of transit-oriented areas, and even outside of some of our local area centers,鈥 said Council member Wala Blegay.

As the county grows, she said, it lacks the needed infrastructure to accommodate that growth, and so people who move into those communities end up complaining about the clogged-up traffic and crowded schools.

It鈥檚 a complaint that is currently lodged at elected leaders on a regular basis.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really about less sprawl and right now Prince George鈥檚 County has a lot of sprawl,鈥 said Blegay. The goal of her bill is to encourage denser developments, such as new townhouse communities to focus on areas like the Blue Line corridor where there鈥檚 already Metro and other planned infrastructure improvements to accommodate the planned revitalization.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 where we need the denser development, that鈥檚 how we鈥檙e going to get the retail we want,鈥 she said.

The bill won鈥檛 stop construction outside of transit-oriented hubs. Instead, developers would have to focus on building single-family homes instead.

鈥淭hat fits the character of the area,鈥 she argued.

鈥淚n the Blue Line corridor, Central Avenue, we have the infrastructure 鈥 so let鈥檚 build the town homes there,鈥 added Blegay.

The two-year pause is 鈥渘ot forever,鈥 she made sure to mention, and the issue will be looked at again in 2025, so the impact of the bill can be assessed.

The county executive鈥檚 office is still reviewing the measure, and some members of the council who have taken different viewpoints on development weren鈥檛 ready to weigh in on the measure yet.

But, Blegay indicated, at least six members of the council support the measure right now.

In a statement, the Prince George’s County Association of Realtors said, “CB 52 is pending a full review by The Prince Georges County Association of REALTORS庐. On the surface, however, we are concerned of the implications that this legislation will have in meeting the County鈥檚 future housing demands. Where we support incentivizing residential development at our transit hubs, we are extremely concerned by this effort to stifle town home development in other areas of the County.

We have a housing shortage in the DC metro area, not to mention, a severe affordable housing shortage. Town homes typically offer a reasonably priced option for first time home buyers and work force housing. Removing this option will drive up the cost of our existing housing stock and lessen opportunity for home ownership and wealth building.”

John Domen

John has been with 海角社区app since 2016 but has spent most of his life living and working in the DMV, covering nearly every kind of story imaginable around the region. He鈥檚 twice been named Best Reporter by the Chesapeake Associated Press Broadcasters Association.聽

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