Connections from ColumbiaTownCenter.info
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CONNECTIONS…an e-newsletter from General Growth Properties designed to provide information, ideas and communications about downtown Columbia and its future. Please feel free to let us know what you think by emailing us here.

Click here to view Lin Eagan on 
								Straight Up

Lin Eagan has witnessed much change during the 38 years she’s lived in Columbia. While raising her family, developing a very successful real estate career with Long & Foster Real Estate and ultimately becoming president and CEO of Lakeview Title Company, she closely has watched Columbia grow into the community that James Rouse envisioned. But always, community has been Lin’s priority. Over the years, she has served as chair of The Columbia Foundation and the Howard County Board of Appeals and as a member of the Board of Directors of The Columbia Festival of the Arts, the Foreign Information and Referral Network and the Howard County Association of Realtors.

Currently, Lin chairs The Business Alliance’s Town Center Task Force and is a member of the Board of Directors of the Howard County Chamber of Commerce and the Howard County Public School Foundation, Bright Minds. She understands firsthand the needs of businesses in Columbia and envisions a day when a true downtown exists for the benefit of all of Columbia and Howard County.


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James Rouse on Columbia

“Urban growth is our opportunity, not our enemy. It invites us to correct the past, to build places that are productive for business and for the people who live there…”




From Greg Hamm

Lin touched on one of the key issues facing downtown Columbia – its underperforming office sector. This area is a major financial and economic center yet it needs significant enhancements to make it a vibrant, mixed-use environment that attracts new businesses and jobs. The growing office vacancy rate is not a reflection of a lack of business need. It reflects the absence of Class A office space. And this trend is creating a ripple effect – just visit Wilde Lake or Oakland Mills Village Centers to see the empty storefronts.

Downtown Columbia already has many assets that can be enhanced and combined into a dynamic environment. We’ve got a strong retail base, with The Mall attracting more than 15 million shoppers each year. And Merriweather Post Pavilion is a major regional attraction that brings thousands of people to Columbia for shopping and dining before and after concerts. There already exists a strong residential base surrounding downtown Columbia, and the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) program will bring more than 40,000 new jobs to the region. Columbia’s location between Baltimore and Washington also lends itself to economic vitality. Over the next 30 years, Columbia has every chance to become the center of one of the nation’s most prosperous and significant regions of economic growth and human fulfillment.

Although the current mix of amenities in downtown Columbia distinguishes it from other potential business locations in the region, much more is needed to attract the businesses that will keep the community vital and prosperous. To make it happen we must embrace and pursue a common vision. That vision must include all those aspects of life and market success which are going to characterize the winners of the 21st Century, while remaining faithful to the enduring truths and ideals that made Columbia great these past 42 years.

Greg Hamm
Vice President, Master Planned Communities
General Manager, Columbia


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Lin truly is a product of Columbia. She moved here in 1970 specifically to become part of The New America created by Jim Rouse. She was the quintessential young political mother, spending a great amount of time dedicated to local grassroots politics.

Over the years, Lin befriended Jim Rouse. This relationship brought Rouse to her front door when President Jimmy Carter was running for a second term, asking if she would run his statewide campaign. Covering her Kennedy button, she politely declined. However, she and her husband did accept an invitation to the White House for a Valentine’s Day party!


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Lin Eagan on Downtown Columbia

“It [Columbia] should be the hub of the County. It should be the retail hub. It should be the commercial hub. It should be where things are happening.”



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And did you know?

Currently, there are 58 million square feet of commercial space that contain 8,590 businesses and employ more than 130,000 workers in all of Howard County. Columbia, itself, contains 26 million square feet of that commercial space with 5,500 businesses providing more than 63,000 jobs. The 14,000-acre Columbia contains 44% of the County’s commercial space and generates approximately 40% of Howard County’s overall revenue and provides almost 50% of its jobs.


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Calendar of Events

Date: June 25, 2009
Time: 6 p.m.
Event: Planning Board Public Work Session on ZRA 113 and the downtown Columbia General Plan Amendment
Location: County Offices, Ellicott Room 2, 8930 Stanford Blvd., Columbia




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