Publications

Brochures, Reports, and Special Studies

Broad Creek Historic District Preservation Planning Study

Title:

Broad Creek Historic District Preservation Planning Study

Author:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
Prince George's County Planning Department

Publication Date:
06/01/2002
Source of Copies:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772

Number of Pages:
158

The Broad Creek Historic District Preservation Planning Study reflects the results of a series of design workshops conducted in 2001 by staff of the Planning and Preservation Section of the Community Planning Division, Planning Department, M-NCPPC, for property-owners, residents and others interested in the future of the Historic District. The study updates a previous planning study, provides a history and architectural survey, and clarifies county policies for protection of the historic district. The study, illustrated with photographs and maps, is divided into five major sections: Section I, the Introduction, explains a chronology of planning efforts in the community and the purpose of the present study. Section II contains a detailed history of Broad Creek from the period of Native American occupation to the end of the twentieth century. Section III contains the Architectural Character and Significance complete with photographs and individual site plans of all buildings in the district. Section IV, Planning Context, discusses environmental features, land use, zoning, transportation, parkland and trails in the district. Section V, Visioning Process and Goals for the Historic District, comprises a review of the process and results of the three design workshops. Four Appendices contain the 1987 Design Guidelines, the Historic District Advisory Committee Rules of Procedure, the Historic Area Work Permit process and other regulations, and the implementation strategies from the 1995 Broad Creek Historic District Livingston Road Streetscape Guidelines.

Brochures, Reports, and Special Studies

Broad Creek Historic District Livingston Road Streetscape Guidelines and Alternatives

Title:

Broad Creek Historic District Livingston Road Streetscape Guidelines and Alternatives

Author:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
Prince George's County Planning Department

Publication Date:
10/01/1995
Source of Copies:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772

Number of Pages:
66

This report summarizes the visioning process and results of a four-month study focused on maintaining the rural character of the Broad Creek Historic District, specifically the Livingston Road corridor between Old Fort Road to the north and Fort Washington Road to the south. The project was carried out under the Planning Department’s FY 1995 Community Preservation and Design Workshops Work Program. This document was prepared as a supporting element to the original Broad Creek Historic District Design Guidelines. produced by the Historic Preservation Section and Broad Creek Historic District Advisory Committee in 1987 and approved by the District Council in 1988. Included in this report is a set of documents and plans that portray the design ideas and goals of the Broad Creek Historic District Advisory Committees and local residents.

This report is divided into five parts, each containing photographs, charts, drawings and maps produced through the visioning process and pertaining to the Livingston Road Streetscape. Each part contains information which allows the reader to follow the community visioning process from the beginning of brainstorming ideas to Ibe final design proposals and recommended courses of action. A supplemental appendix section provides plant suggestions for the Livingston Road streetscape.

Related Documents:
Brochures, Reports, and Special Studies

Broad Creek Historic District Design Guidelines

Title:

Broad Creek Historic District Design Guidelines

Author:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
Prince George's County Planning Department

Publication Date:
10/01/1987
Source of Copies:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772

Number of Pages:
86

These Design Guidelines were prepared by the Board Creek Advisory Committee and staff to the Historic Perservation Commission.

Brochures, Reports, and Special Studies

Broad Creek Historic District Design Guidelines

Title:

Broad Creek Historic District Design Guidelines

Author:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
Prince George's County Planning Department

Publication Date:
01/01/1987
Source of Copies:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772

Number of Pages:
69

In July 1981, the Prince George’s County Council, in cooperation with the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, approved the Prince George’s County Historic Sites and Districts Plan, a master plan for _he County’s preservation program. In November that year, the County Council also enacted a preservation ordinal Subtitle 29 of the County Code, which established a Historic Preservation Commission (HPC) with the power to: Evaluate historic properties for designation as Historic Sites or Historic Districts; review plans for exterior alteration, demolition, or new construction; and approve property tax credits appropriate renovation of historic structures and for compa1 new construction in historic districts. In addition, the nine-member Commission reviews any legislation, zoning map amendments or other land-use proposals affecting historic resources; assists property owners planning exterior alterations historic buildings; and maintains an ongoing survey and research program. members of the Commission are appointed by the County Executive and must be knowledgeable in such areas as architecture, planning, real estate economics, and historic preservation. The Historic Preservation Commission is also empowered to appoint members to local advisory committees “to assist and advise the Commission in the performance of its functions.”

Brochures, Reports, and Special Studies

Brentwood Historical Survey

Title:

Brentwood Historical Survey

Author:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
Prince George's County Planning Department

Publication Date:
10/01/1992
Source of Copies:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772

Number of Pages:
66

This report summarizes the findings of an historical/ architectural survey of Brentwood, requested by the Mayor and Council of the Town. The goals of the project were to document the earliest of the historic buildings still standing in the Town, and to prepare a written history of the community’s development with emphasis on the early residents. The Town of Brentwood is located in Prince George’s County, just outside the northeast boundary of the District of Columbia. Development of the community began in the 1890s in areas platted by the Holladay and Brentwood Companies. The first residents were families attracted to the area by the easily accessible transportation to and from work in Washington, D. c., offered by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and the City and Suburban streetcar line. The residents of this community incorporated in 1922 as the Town of Brentwood. The report is divided into seven major sections: Pre-Subdivision History, The First Subdivision, The Second Subdivision, Growth and Development of the two Subdivisions, Continued Development, The Development of Community Institutions, and the Period of Incorporation. The report includes background history on the earliest development of the community, and on Captain Wallace A. Bartlett, the principal figure in the development of the first two subdivisions. It describes the expansion of the original subdivision, and the settling of the first families in the newly built homes. It describes and compares the first dwellings erected in the community; it analyzes by building type a representative group of dwellings which survive from the first building period. The report also outlines the establishment of community institutions such as school, church, citizens’ association and firemen’s organization, and describes the community’s development as it approached incorporation in 1922. The report is supplemented by photographs, plats and maps.

Brochures, Reports, and Special Studies

Brandywine Revitalization and Preservation Study

Title:

Brandywine Revitalization and Preservation Study

Author:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
Prince George's County Planning Department

Publication Date:
11/01/2011
Source of Copies:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772

Number of Pages:
52

This study concerns revitalization of an older community in southern Prince George’s County, located between rapidly developing areas adjacent to MD 5/US 301, and the county’s designated Rural Tier. The Brandywine Revitalization and Preservation study area straddles both the Subregion 5 and Subregion 6 master plans, approved in 2009, and responds to recommendations in those plans that a planning study focus on revitalization in this community. While this older Brandywine community has attributes of a small town and a cluster of historic resources, it lacks other characteristics that would distinguish it as such. The threat is that without a definition of the desired community character and strategies for achieving it, new development, when it arrives in old Brandywine, will subsume it into the suburban fabric of the greater community. The strategies and illustrations in this study are intended to be used as an action plan for community stakeholders to improve the look and function of the public realm, focusing on improving the Brandywine Road streetscape, pedestrian circulation and safety.

Document not available for download.
Brochures, Reports, and Special Studies

Purple Line TOD Study, Parts 1-4

Title:

Purple Line TOD Study, Parts 1-4

Author:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
Prince George's County Planning Department

Publication Date:
05/01/2013
Source of Copies:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772

Number of Pages:
532

Final draft of Transit-Oriented Development Planning Study for Five Purple Line Stations
This document contains text, maps, and illustrations that together present general recommendations for future transit-oriented development and pedestrian/bicycle improvements for five Purple Line stations to be located at sites outside of areas covered by recently approved sector and transit district plans. The five stations are Riverdale Road (Beacon Heights), Riverdale Park, M Square (River Road), College Park-University of Maryland, and West Campus (University Hills).

Brochures, Reports, and Special Studies

Priority Preservation Area Functional Master Plan

Title:

Priority Preservation Area Functional Master Plan

Author:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
Prince George's County Planning Department

Publication Date:
07/01/2012
Source of Copies:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772

Number of Pages:
52

The Adopted and Approved Priority Preservation Area Functional Master Plan comprises text, maps, illustrations, and pictures. The plan amends portions of the 2002 Prince George’s County Approved General Plan, as amended, the 2009 Approved Subregion 5 Master Plan; the 2009 Approved Subregion 6 Master Plan, 2010 Approved Subregion 1 Master Plan; 2006 Approved Master Plan for Bowie and Vicinity, and the 1989 Approved Langley Park-College Park-Greenbelt and Vicinity Master Plan. Developed with broad public participation, this document presents background information, and outlines goals, strategies, and action pertaining to the priority preservation area.

Brochures, Reports, and Special Studies

Prince George's Plaza Metro Station Area Pedestrian Safety and Access Study

Title:

Prince George's Plaza Metro Station Area Pedestrian Safety and Access Study

Author:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
Prince George's County Planning Department

Publication Date:
09/01/2019
Source of Copies:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772

Number of Pages:
54

The Prince George’s Plaza Metro Station Area Pedestrian Safety and Access Study report expands on the recommendations from the 2016 Approved Prince George’s Plaza Transit District Development Plan. This report specifies improved connectivity between destinations within the Transit District, improved lighting, surveillance, and wayfinding, and improved walking infrastructure at locations surrounding the Prince George’s Plaza Metro Station. Developed with stakeholder input, including a workshop, this report helps prioritize investments toward a compact, walkable, transit-oriented community around the Metro station.

Related Documents:
Brochures, Reports, and Special Studies

Prince George's County, Primary Healthcare Strategic Plan

Title:

Prince George's County, Primary Healthcare Strategic Plan

Author:

The Prince George's County Government, with support from M-NCPPC

Source of Copies:

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772

Number of Pages:
126

Since taking office, County Executive Baker has committed the County to addressing healthcare disparities and improving the healthcare delivery system and services for County residents. The Primary Healthcare Strategic Plan reflects the ongoing commitment of Prince George’s County to improving the healthcare system and the health of its residents. The plan focuses both on expanding access to patient-centered primary care that is part of an integrated care system and on building a culture of health within the County that will achieve the “triple aim”—improving health outcomes, reducing per capita costs, and improving patient experiences. The Primary Healthcare Strategic Plan fully embraces the concepts of population health and once implemented, in collaboration with all partners and stakeholders, will reach its goals of expanding access and improving resident’s health while contributing to the County’s economic development.

Related Documents: