A McMansion? Or a McHotel? That’s the question facing our community as a property owner in the Seven Corners area has applied for a building permit to construct a new “house” with 13 bedrooms and 13 bathrooms on a lot that currently holds a 1950s-style brick and frame rambler. The actual number of bedrooms is a question. It could be only nine or 10.
The proposed plans also include a home theatre, two offices, and a guest room. With 13 bedrooms, why would you need a guest room? The plans submitted to the county indicate that one bathroom has four sinks in it. Sounds like a college dorm, doesn’t it? The plans also show a two-car garage. Two cars for 13 bedrooms? This one doesn’t pass the giggle test.
The Fairfax County Zoning Ordinance, adopted in 1978 and amended throughout the years, contains specific requirements for land usage on residential, commercial, and industrial properties. In the case noted above, the R-3 designation (maximum of three dwelling units to the acre permitted) includes side setbacks from the property line of 12 feet, front setback of 30 feet, and rear setback of 25 feet. The setbacks define the potential building footprint. In past years, larger yards and smaller houses were the norm, and setbacks rarely were an issue. Today, large homes and small yards seem to be desirable, and the building footprint often rests right on the setback line, putting the structure closer to the property line, and to neighboring houses, than has been the custom. It’s legal, but it often violates the spirit of neighborhood harmony.
The “McHotel” proposal is under review by both the county’s Zoning Office and the Permits Division. Thanks should go to some savvy neighbors who started asking questions of the owner/contractor and the Zoning office. This one should be nipped in the bud.
A Household Hazardous Waste Collection event will be held this Saturday, September 8, from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. at the parking lot of the Mason District Govern-mental Center, 6507 Columbia Pike in Annandale. Only household hazardous waste, such as acids, gasoline, fluorescent bulbs, fungicides, herbicides, insecticides, mercury products, oil-based paint, paint thinner, pesticides, poisons, pool chemicals, and rechargeable batteries, will be accepted, and proof of residency (driver’s license, utility bill, etc.) as a Fairfax County resident is required. No business or commercial waste will be accepted. At the same event, you also can shred up to five boxes of personal and sensitive paper documents at NO CHARGE! Fairfax County Solid and Hazardous Waste Management, Safeguard Shredding, and my office have teamed up to provide this one-stop opportunity to rid your home of unwanted “stuff.” For more information, call 703/324-5230, or visit the Web site at www.fairfaxcounty.gov/recycling.
Fairfax County public schools began the new school year Tuesday. Passing a school bus whose red lights are flashing is against the law. Please remember that speed limits in school zones are reduced, and enforced, and heed the crossing guard’s instructions at school intersections. Let’s keep our students safe!