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New Focus in 'McMansion' Fight As County Moves Against Signs

Julie Schoo, with dog Max, is at a lot in Brookdale where a 5,000-square-foot house would replace a smaller one.
Julie Schoo, with dog Max, is at a lot in Brookdale where a 5,000-square-foot house would replace a smaller one. (Photos By Michael Williamson -- The Washington Post)
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Thompson didn't immediately dispute the ACLU's claim.

"The ACLU does a terrific job in the work they do, and they sent us a very thoughtful and researched letter, and we are looking into it," Thompson said.

The battle over the signs is part of a larger struggle playing out across the region as neighbors clash over big new houses that some say are out of scale with those around them.

In Brookdale, a neighborhood of narrow streets and mostly two-story houses near River Road and Western Avenue, the fight has gone from political to personal to legal.

Earlier this year, a limited-liability corporation headed by Eldridge bought a 2,000-square-foot house on Overbrook Drive for $630,00. Despite community opposition, the corporation received a permit in July to raze the house and replace it with one much larger.

"The house itself had a lot of problems," Eldridge said. "I think in close-in development, replacing older houses that have outlived their useful life is sound public policy."

Residents don't dispute that the house -- which had served as a rental unit for decades -- needed to be renovated or replaced.

But they say they never envisioned someone replacing it with one so big, even if it is allowed under the county zoning code.

The old house took up 10 percent of the lot's roughly 6,500 square feet, but the "footprint" of the new house will be about 35 percent.

And although most homes in the neighborhood are 2 1/2 stories, the plans for the new house appear to call for four, counting an attic and a first level that includes a garage and a bedroom. The house also would have a family room, dining room, living room, foyer, library, kitchen and breakfast area.

Residents say the house will be 40 feet at its highest point, although that depends on where it is measured from. The builder, Donald. T. Gibbons, said the house will be 30 feet, according to his calculations, well within the county's 35-foot limit in many residential zones.

"Is it bigger than the house that was there before? Yes," Gibbons said. "But then again, most condominiums are bigger than the house that was on the lot before we took it down."

Gibbons and Eldridge, who works on Capitol Hill, said they made several concessions to the neighbors, including shrinking the attic.

Neighbors, however, have been persistent in trying to try to stop the project, even though they agree that it complies with the law.

In July, they tried to deliver a petition to Eldridge pleading with him to reduce the size. Residents say he refused to accept it.

When the old house was torn down Aug. 1, residents gathered hundreds of signatures on a petition calling for the County Council to approve a moratorium on tear-downs. Last month, the Town of Chevy Chase approved a six-month freeze on the demolition and construction of houses to address residents' angst over mansionization.

Although there is no indication the County Council is willing to go that far, members are considering a proposal to restrict residential building heights to 30 feet.


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