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Moving Destinations in Maryland
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Moving - Columbia, Maryland
Moving into or out of Columbia, MD? Let
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To inform you Columbia, MD, here is a brief history you can
read that will give you a glimpse into the past of the
community.
A Brief History of Columbia, Maryland
In October 1963, the Rouse Company
announced to the citizens of Howard County, Maryland, that
it had acquired more than 21 square miles --one tenth of the
county's total land area--for the
purpose of building a new city.
In disclosing his company's plans to a rural Howard County
citizenry, James W. Rouse, Chairman of The Rouse Company
Board of Directors, described his vision for the new city.
Columbia, because it would be planned from the beginning,
would avoid the sprawl, waste and inconveniences that have
come to typify small scale development. The new city, he
said, would provide jobs and recreation, shopping and health
care, commercial and industrial development, along with a
broad range of housing choices.
Long before construction began in Columbia, the city's first
planners met with a group of 18 educators and sociologists,
all experts in their fields, to help determine what the
city's social
objectives should be and how they might be reflected in the
physical plan. Columbia was also thought of as a group of
neighborhoods within villages, almost like a system of small
towns, a city that is open to everyone-people of all ethnic
and socio-economic backgrounds.
Actually, by the time the land was acquired, the city itself
still had no name. Columbia was chosen because it already
appeared on roadmaps in the form of "Columbia Pike." In
addition, James Rouse said, "it embraced both Maryland and
Washington, D.C. and, Columbia had kind of a hallelujah
sound."
From October 1963 to November 1964, company planners created
a general plan for the city, detailing land uses, densities,
development pace, and economics. In November 1964 the
Columbia plan was presented to the people and government of
Howard County, along with a request for a new kind of zoning
which would permit higher residential densities and greater
flexibility in mixing land uses. In August 1965, the County
adopted a "New Town District" zoning ordinance and
granted zoning for Columbia's development.
Months later, in January 1966, construction began on
Columbia's first village-Wilde Lake. The first residents
moved to Columbia in 1967. When Columbia is completed, there
will be approximately 100,000 people living in a series of
villages around the city's downtown.
Columbia, a bold hope at ground-breaking in 1966, is now a
city giving shape and meaning to its original
goals--physical, social and economic. Columbia residents
have reacted to the new environment with initiative and
vitality, bringing in a broad and continually expanding list
of education, recreation, entertainment, civic and political
activities.

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