|
Home
About
Us
History
Leasing
Contact Us
News Room
Lake East Redevelopment
Chevy
Chase Center
The
Collection at Chevy Chase
|
Chevy
Chase Land Company >>History
History of the Chevy Chase Land Company
Senator
Francis G. Newlands of Nevada founded The Chevy Chase Land Company
of Montgomery County, Maryland in 1890. Senator Newlands came
to Washington DC with the dream of building a planned settlement
outside of the nation’s capital. Over several years, he
purchased more than 1,700 acres of land from Dupont Circle to
Jones Bridge Road, along what is now Connecticut Avenue. He
named the area Chevy Chase after the Cheviot Hills, his ancestral
homeland. Senator Newlands also established Rock Creek Railway
to serve the new village, graded Connecticut Avenue and built
the first local schoolhouse.
Because Senator Newlands was also considered one of the fathers
of modern irrigation, in the 1930s a fountain was built in Chevy
Chase Circle, (which was considered the gateway to the Federal
City) to memorialize his contributions to this area. To recognize
the 100th anniversary of its founding, the Chevy Chase Land
Company refurbished and repaired the Chevy Chase Circle Memorial
Fountain in 1990, and held a rededication ceremony attended
by members of the community.
Today, The Land Company owns and manages office buildings,
retail and warehouse complexes in Washington, DC, suburban Maryland
and Northern Virginia, residential properties in Montgomery
County, and four office buildings in Richmond, Virginia. The
Land Company built one of suburban Maryland's first strip shopping
centers in the 1950s, Chevy Chase Center Stores and Offices,
which is located on the Montgomery County/District of Columbia
border.
The strip center and adjoining office building, the Chevy
Chase Center, are in the process of being redeveloped. The
Collection at Chevy Chase, 112,000 feet of luxury retail,
will be open in the Fall of 2005. The 200,000 sq. ft.
office building and 100,000 sq. ft. of neighborhood retail
will be open in Spring 2006.
Immediately north of Chevy Chase Center is Saks Fifth Avenue,
the land under which is owned by The Land Company and is under
a long-term lease to Saks. South of Chevy Chase Center and atop
the Friendship Heights Metro Station sits the Chevy Chase Metro
Building, which the Land Company built in 1985 and owns in partnership
with Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company. The Land Company
has other holdings in the District and Montgomery County: strip
shopping centers, small office buildings, rental apartments
and townhouses. There are substantial holdings in Virginia as
well: a warehouse in Manassas, a three-story office building
in Reston and four low-rise office buildings in suburban Richmond.
The 20-acre parcel on the east side of Jones Bridge Road and
Connecticut Avenue which was sold in 1997 to M/I Homes was the
last large, undeveloped parcel in Chevy Chase Land's portfolio
remaining from the original Newlands purchase in the 1890s.
With the proceeds from that sale, the Company acquired the building
site at the corner of Woodmont Avenue and Montgomery Lane in
Bethesda, and opened the Senator Francis G. Newlands Building,
a 15-story Class-A mixed-use office project, in September 1999.
This building is the final component of the Bethesda Metro Center
and consists of 277,633 square feet of rentable space, 22,500
square feet of which is retail.
In 2000, The Land
Company purchased the T.W. Perry site on Connecticut Avenue,
which is adjacent to its Lake East holdings. In 2003, The Land
Company purchased the adjacent Citgo gas station as well. Redevelopment of
this site is currently under study. |