Intercounty Connector Limited Functional Master Plan Amendment
Intercounty Connector Limited Functional Master Plan Amendment
M-NCPPC 1
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PLANNING BOARD DRAFT
An Amendment to the Countywide Bikeways Functional Master Plan and the Master Plan of Highways
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Planning Board Draft of the INtercounty connector limited functional
master Plan amendment
Bikeways and INterchanges
An Amendment to the Countywide Bikeways Functional Master Plan and the Master Plan of Highways
ABSTRACT
The text and maps of this amendment are intended to make agreed upon solutions consistent with the County’s
relevant master plans. It is a comprehensive amendment to the approved and adopted Master Plan of Highways
within Montgomery County, and the approved and adopted 2005 Countywide Bikeways Functional
Master Plan. It also amends the approved and adopted 1998 Countywide Park Trails Plan, as well as On Wedges
and Corridors, the General Plan for the Maryland-Washington Regional District in Montgomery and Prince
George’s Counties, as amended.
This Plan Amendment recommends select changes to the shared-use path identified as SP-40 in the Countywide
Bikeways Functional Master Plan (CBFMP) by recommending changes to the ICC roadway alignment and interchang-
es to reflect the selected highway alternative now under construction. The proposed amendments to the CBFMP
delete certain sections of SP-40 through the most environmentally sensitive portions of stream valley parks and the
US 29 interchange. The amendment also proposes changes to the Countywide Park Trails Plan to provide connections
that serve recreational andtransportation purposes, including hiking and equestrian uses, in the Northwest Branch
and Upper Paint Branch Stream Valley Parks. Amendments to the Master Plan of Highways include adding a partial
interchange at Briggs Chaney Road, revising limits of Midcounty Highway and its interchange with the ICC, and revis-
ing the ICC alignment to reflect Rock Creek Option C (with Olde Mill Run Grade Separation) and to reflect Northwest
Branch Option A.
SOURCE OF COPIES
The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
8787 Georgia Avenue
Silver Spring, MD 20910-3760
The Maryland-National Capital Park
and Planning Commission encourages T H E M A RY L A N D - N AT I O N A L C A P IT A L P A R K A N D P L A N N I N G C O M M I S S I O N
the involvement and participation of
individuals with disabilities, and its The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission is a bi-county agency created by the General Assembly of Maryland in 1927.
facilities are accessible. For assistance The Commission’s geographic authority extends to the great majority of Montgomery and Prince George’s Counties; the Maryland-Washington
Regional District (M-NCPPC planning jurisdiction) comprises 1,001 square miles, while the Metropolitan District (parks) comprises 919 square
with special needs (e.g., large print miles, in the two counties.
materials, listening devices, sign
language interpretation, etc.), please The Commission is charged with preparing, adopting, and amending or extending On Wedges and Corridors, the general plan for the physical
contact the Community Outreach and development of the Maryland-Washington Regional District.
Media Relations Division, 301-495- The Commission operates in each county through Planning Boards appointed by the county government. The Boards are responsible for all local
4600 or TDD 301-495-1331. plans, zoning amendments, subdivision regulations, and administration of parks.
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CERTIFICATION OF APPROVAL AND ADOPTION
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ELECTED AND APPOINTED OFFICIALS
COUNTY COUNCIL
COUNTY EXECUTIVE
Isiah Leggett
COMMISSIONERS
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A plan provides comprehensive recommendations for the use of publicly and privately owned land. Each plan
reflects a vision of the future that responds to the unique character of the local community within the context of a
countywide perspective.
Together with relevant policies, plans should be referred to by public officials and private individuals when making
land use decisions.
The PUBLIC HEARING DRAFT PLAN is the formal proposal to amend an adopted master plan or sector plan.
Its recommendations are not necessarily those of the Planning Board; it is prepared for the purpose of receiving
public testimony. The Planning Board holds a public hearing and receives testimony, after which they hold public
worksessions to review the testimony and revise the Public Hearing Draft Plan as appropriate. When the Planning
Board’s changes are made, the document becomes the Planning Board Draft Plan.
The PLANNING BOARD DRAFT PLAN is the Board’s recommended Plan and reflects their revisions to the Public
Hearing Draft Plan. The Regional District Act requires the Planning Board to transmit a sector plan to the County
Council with copies to the County Executive who must, within sixty days, prepare and transmit a fiscal impact analysis
of the Planning Board Draft Plan to the County Council. The County Executive may also forward to the County
Council other comments and recommendations.
After receiving the Executive’s fiscal impact analysis and comments, the County Council holds a public hearing to
receive public testimony. After the hearing record is closed, the Council’s Planning, Housing, and Economic Develop
ment (PHED) Committee holds public worksessions to review the testimony and makes recommendations to the
County Council. The Council holds its own worksessions, then adopts a resolution approving the Planning Board
Draft Plan, as revised.
After Council approval the plan is forwarded to the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission for
adoption. Once adopted by the Commission, the plan officially amends the master plans, functional plans, and
sector plans cited in the Commission’s adoption resolution.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
B A C K G R O U N D 9
I S S U E S , A N A L Y S I S A N D R E C O M M E N D A T I O N S 13
Highway Elements 13
Bikeway Elements 14
Study Area A: Needwood Road and Vicinity 14
Study Area B: Emory Lane/Georgia Avenue and Vicinity 21
Study Area C: Northwest Branch Stream Valley Park and Vicinity 22
Study Area D: Upper Paint Branch Stream Valley Park and Vicinity 29
Study Area E: US 29 and Vicinity 34
County Bike Path—Before and After 37
Park Trails—Before and After 38
L I S T O F F I G U R E S
APPENDIX
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BACKGROUND
In May 2006, the Federal Highway Administration approved the Record of Decision (ROD) for the Intercounty
Connector (ICC), which established the highway’s alignment and interchange locations, and identified impacts and
mitigation measures. The ROD also recommended related master plan elements that would be implemented along
with the highway project, including parks, bikeways and sidewalks, particularly the seven miles of master planned
ICC shared use path (SP-40 in the Countywide Bikeways Functional Master Plan).
However, certain alignment and implementation decisions in the ROD are inconsistent with master plan guidance.
This ICC Limited Functional Master Plan Amendment (ICCLFMPA) amends County master plans to reflect the ROD
decisions. It also evaluates alternative alignments for the County bike path (CBP) along the ICC, in the context of
County agencies’ affirmation of Planning Board recommendations to remove the path from sensitive environmental
areas. The amendment analyzes the State’s alternative path routes along parallel roads and recommends changes to
master plans needed to upgrade or enhance the routes to meet the needs of all users.
The ICCLFMPA will reconcile the ROD’s highway, bicycle, pedestrian, and pathway facilities with the related elements
in the County’s master plans. This report describes the history, vision, and prior master plan guidance for the
highway and path, including past decisions by the Planning Board, the County Council, and the Maryland
Department of Transportation that were incorporated in the ROD.
This amendment updates the Master Plan of Highways to modify the ICC alignment to reflect the ROD and to
establish interchange locations at Briggs Chaney Road and Midcounty Highway. It also evaluates cross-County
bicycle and trails in the ICC corridor to connect to destinations and fill in gaps, timing portions of the path to be built
with the highway project.
The interchange at Briggs Chaney Road is procedural. The ROD identified the interchange location and this
amendment affirms prior decisions. The interchange at Midcounty Highway must be studied further because the
selected ICC alignment used portions of the right-of-way intended for Midcounty Highway, and thus shifted the
location of a future interchange further north and west.
Purposes
THIS AMENDMENT:
• determines appropriate uses for master planned right-of-way not used by the highway project, with a particular
focus on evaluating parkland for future bikeways or trails
• proposes new alignment(s) for the master planned bicycle and pedestrian facilities in the ICC Corridor
• reconciles approved highway design elements with master plan guidance for interchange locations.
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The ICCLFMPA examines the Countywide Bikeways Functional Master Plan (CBFMP) and the Countywide Park Trails Plan (CPTP)
to clarify the County’s vision for bicycle and pedestrian mobility and access in the corridor, consistent with the Planning Board
request when planning staff presented the ICC Bikeways Implementation Strategy in January 2007.
OTHER ISSUES
• Identify a funding mechanism through the Local Area Transportation Review that would permit private sector participation
in funding trail and path routes.
• Determine the feasibility of interim use by mountain bikers and equestrians of route segments adjacent to highway right-of-
way where the CBP will eventually be built.
Refined Objectives
The specific objectives above where shaped by four questions that emerged through community discussion during
public meetings in March and April 2008.
• Does the County agree with the State’s recommendations for routing the CBP along existing bikeways, sidewalks, and paths
as recommended in the SHA Bike Plan?
• What improvements are needed along these roads to accommodate cyclists and pedestrians, and address the needs of all
potential user groups?
• Should trail routes through environmentally sensitive areas in parkland be removed from master plans?
• What related master plan amendments are required to achieve recommendations that result from the above questions?
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Figure 1 ICC Corridor Study Area
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Figure 2 Midcounty Highway Interchange
ICC Alignment
Issue Areas
ICC Alignment
Proposed Roads
Wetlands
Floodplain
Parks
Property lines
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ISSUES, ANALYSIS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Highway Elements
This amendment adopts the three roadway options to the master plan alternative that were analyzed
in the DEIS and included in the ROD:
The Planning Board supported these options in their review of the DEIS in February 2005, as
described below.
The proposed southern extension of M-83 provides a direct connection between existing Midcounty Highway at
Shady Grove Road and points east along the ICC. In 1985 and 2004, the Upper Rock Creek Area master plan
identified two alignments for the portion of M-83 between Redland Road and the ICC. Rock Creek Option C also
reduces the length of the unbuilt portion of M-83 extended.
This amendment preserves right-of-way options for future M-83 ramp connections to the ICC. Figure 2, excerpted
from the ICC Contract A Request for Proposals identifies a conceptual extension of M-83 to the ICC and identifies
the residential property displacements associated with Rock Creek Option C. These properties are now owned by the
State of Maryland. The alignment of the eastbound M-83 ramp shown in figure 2 would likely require three
additional residential property displacements on Garrett Court in the Olde Mill Run community.
NO R T H W E S T B R A N C H O P T I O N A
The ICC DEIS compared two alignments within Northwest Branch Stream Valley Park. Even though Option B (the
master planned alignment) is shorter and straighter, Option A, which is more curvilinear and requires more
designated parkland, was chosen to minimize impacts on environmental resources.
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BRIGGS CHANEY ROAD INTERCHANGE
The ROD includes a partial interchange at Briggs Chaney Road, which is not included in the Fairland Master Plan.
This interchange includes ramps to and from the east along the ICC. A Briggs Chaney Road interchange is needed
to provide local business access to and from the east on the ICC because close interchange spacing precludes these
connections from occurring via US 29.
Bikeway Elements
In master plans, the Countywide Bike Path is defined as a shared-use, off-road bicycle facility in the highway right-
of-way. The SHA Bicycle and Pedestrian Plan defines existing or proposed bicycle facilities—both off-road and on
road—that are recommended as alternatives to the Countywide Bike Path to avoid environmentally sensitive areas
and parkland impacts. Recognizing that the alternative doesn’t implement the master planned facility in the highway
right-of-way, the State has committed to work with the local governments to accelerate construction portions of the
SHA Bicycle and Pedestrian Plan in County master plans. This amendment’s revisions to the SHA Plan are
expected to provide a continuous shared-use path that meets the needs of novice and experienced bicyclists and
pedestrians.
For bikeway issues, the ICCLFMPA subdivided the study area into five subareas:
A. Needwood Road and Vicinity
B. Emory Lane/Georgia Avenue and Vicinity
C. Northwest Branch Stream Valley Park and Vicinity
D. Upper Paint Branch Stream Valley Park and Vicinity
E. US 29 and Vicinity
• Deciding whether to eliminate the master planned alignment through the park in favor of a parallel route to the
master planned highway alignment not selected in the ROD.
DISCUSSION
This CBP segment provides a critical pathway connection between the I-270 Corridor and Georgia Avenue
communities. The selected alternative highway alignment for this area—Rock Creek Option C—avoids sensitive
natural resources but does not accommodate the trail connection, primarily because the highway was designed with
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