Sun Gazette Fairfax, April 14, 2016

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Fairfax jobless rate still among lowest in Va. – See Page 9

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VOLUME 37 NO. 34

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G R E AT FA L L S • M c L E A N • O A K T O N • T Y S O N S • V I E N N A

APRIL 14-20, 2016

Tysons Turns Another Page Toward Future

Supervisors OK First Condos as They Debate Affordable Housing BRIAN TROMPETER Staff Writer

2016 James C. Macdonald Scholarship winners included Jamie Goodson, Josh Delgado, Nicole Sheehan, Eric Lin, Lauren Cain and Xiyou Wang. They are shown with McLean Community Center Governing Board chair Paul Kohlenberger. LISA HELFERT PHOTOGRAPHY

Students Shine in McLean Competition Six local high-school students have earned scholarships for successfully competing in the 2016 James C. Macdonald Performing Arts Competition, sponsored by the Alden Theatre of the McLean Community Center. Following the final competition, held March 16, awards were presented by MCC Governing Board chair Paul Kohlenberger and the Alden’s director of youth programs, Kathleen Herr. The James C. Macdonald Performing Arts Scholarship Competition encourages artistic achievement and promotes study in the arts by high-school students who reside or attend

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school in the McLean small-tax district. Scholarship prizes of $1,200 are awarded to students placing first in each of four categories: dance, instrumental music, theater and vocal music. Secondplace finishers are awarded $800 and third-place finishers win $400. (This year’s competition showcased vocal music and instrumental music; there were not enough applicants in the dance and theater categories to allow for a fair competition.) Award recipients included: Instrumental music: Eric Lin, sophomore, Thomas Jefferson

High School for Science & Technology, first place; Lauren Cain, freshman, Langley High School, second place; and Xiyou Wang, senior, McLean High School, third place. Vocal music: Josh Delgado, senior, McLean High School, first place; Jamie Goodson, junior, Langley High School, second place; and Nicole Sheehan, senior, McLean High School, third place. Theater director Wendy Conte; freelance violinist and orchestral contractor Pamela Lassell; singer, pianist and actor Jim Scopeletis; and baritone Ethan Watermeier served as judges.

The Board of Supervisors on April 5 broke from the years-long trend of approving high-rise rental-apartment buildings and gave the thumbs-up to a proposal by Cityline Partners LLC to build between 100 and 140 condominium units in a tower up to 25 stories or 300 feet tall. “This application represents an opportunity to diversify the housing choices within Tysons by providing a for-sale building,” said Lynne Strobel, an attorney representing Renaissance, the property’s contract purchaser. The building will be constructed on 2 acres at West Park Drive and the extension of Jones Branch Drive, part of the 2.6 million-square-foot Arbor Row project, which supervisors approved in 2012. There will be a maximum of 202,974 square feet of development, including 6,028 square feet of retail. The site now has an office building and

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surface parking, which would be removed to accommodate the new development. Cityline earlier had received supervisors’ approval to build a 162,000-square-foot hotel and 8,000 square feet of retail space at the site. The hotel would have been up to 200 feet tall and had a maximum of 250 rooms. The new residential development likely will produce fewer vehicle trips than the planned hotel and will feature a “pocket park” near the rear of the site, which is preferable to the freestanding parking structure that would have accompanied the hotel, county planning staff said. The development also will have a 7,000-square-foot landscaped terrace and a courtyard with an outdoor pool. Most of the residential units will have private balconies, county officials said. The Fairfax County Planning Commission on March 16 recommended supervi-


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