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Staring out from the top of any tall building in MoCo, like
Georgian Towers The Georgian, the most compelling part of the view is the trees, forming an
almost-uninterrupted carpet of green across the landscape. It's comforting to know that, no matter how busy the ground looks, there's still a tree canopy here.
I was reminded of this when Evan Glass
(pictured above), president of the
South Silver Spring Neighborhood Association and friend of
JUTP, sent me
sixty-eight photos he'd taken while flying over the county with the Leadership Montgomery program a few weeks ago. Slower than a jumbo jet and far closer to the ground, flying in a twin-engine plane gives you a far more intimate look at what's happening below. And if you wave at your apartment building from the window of a Cessna 337, chances are someone will wave back.
Check out this selection of Evan's photos from East County, though there are plenty more from across MoCo that I love, including the
Travilah Quarry in Rockville,
Northwest High School in Germantown, and
the Lakelands in Gaithersburg.
Construction at the Silver Spring Transit Center. |
Summit Hills apartments at East-West Highway and 16th Street. |
The Red Line tracks cross Georgia Avenue in Downtown Silver Spring. |
South Silver Spring with Northwest D.C. in the background. |
The Mormon Temple (left) and Capital Beltway (right) in Kensington. |
Montgomery Blair High School in Four Corners. |
The interchange at Cherry Hill Road and Columbia Pike. |
Work continues on the Food and Drug Administration's campus in White Oak. |
Construction of the InterCounty Connector at Route 29, looking west.
|
Construction of the InterCounty Connector through Longmead Crossing in Layhill. |
4 comments:
Oh my god. Germantown is horribly sprawl-ridden. Those McMansions spread faster than H1N1, didn't they?
This may sound awful but I thought those shots of Germantown were gorgeous, almost like a toy town, and I'm sure the people who live there enjoy how pristine it is (for now). Fortunately Germantown has a pretty big greenbelt keeping the sprawl from spilling out - though, of course, it just ends up in Clarksburg or Urbana.
Neat photo set. I know the they look terrible from the air, but it's somehow fitting that Rockville does actually have quarries.
I think that quarry is really in Potomac, though who knows what is called Potomac these days.
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