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TAKOMA PARK, MARYLAND • SILVER SPRING, MARYLAND

Features: Speaking of Silver Spring


Golden Opportunity?

Tiny carryout restaurant hangs tough against development

In downtown Silver Spring, a tiny Tudor cottage sprouts from the asphalt like a demure daisy. The Golden House--a diminutive Chinese takeout kitchen at the intersection of Wayne Avenue and Fenton Street--smiles at passing cars with its white vinyl siding, and winks at the sun with its bright yellow roof.

But this quaint, cozy shack is no ingénue. It is 800 square feet of defiance against design, development and county planners, making the little Golden House the biggest badass on the block.

Built in 1974, the structure originally housed a Little Tavern restaurant, explains Jerry McCoy, president of the Silver Spring Historical Society. As part of a regional chain of hamburger stands, it encouraged customers to "buy 'em by the bag." Competition from larger fast-food chains ate away at Little Tavern's business, and by 1991, the Wayne Avenue kitchen was closed.

(Its 24-hour sibling on Georgia Avenue and Ripley Street closed in 1999 and later was demolished to make room for the Pyramid Atlantic Art Center.)

In 1992, the building was reincarnated as the Golden House Chinese kitchen. Its interior is a steaming bowl of conformity: a light-gray Formica counter, countless cartons stacked on a stainless-steel shelf, the same full-color photos of orange chicken and happy family that appear in pictorial menus throughout the county.

On the outside, however, the hut wages architectural warfare with its neighbors. The exterior sports a gold gabled roof and mod vinyl siding in an estranged marriage between Old World and old school. The delivery car--a gold Honda Civic with a black front fender--rests in the parking lot and serves as landscaping.

Moreover, with only one floor, the Golden House stands out as the shortest building on that stretch of Wayne Avenue. Across the street, the year-old Courtyard Marriott hotel has ten floors. A nearby public garage measures seven stories. To the west, the Crescent condominium under construction has roughly 14 floors.

While the Golden House's appearance garners public admiration (and scrutiny), the 7,200-square-foot lot it occupies beckons real-estate developers and county planners. In September 2001, Montgomery County officials announced the relocation of the Silver Spring public library and the additional construction of a 160-unit apartment building. The proposed site: the southwest corner of Wayne Avenue and Fenton Street, currently occupied, in part, by the Golden House.

"We have seven pieces [of land] to acquire," says Gary Stith, director of the Silver Spring Regional Center.

Property owners have already been offered prices based on county-commissioned appraisal, he explains. Last summer, the state department of assessments and taxation estimated the value of the Golden House lot to be $332,500, or $46 per square foot. By comparison, the neighboring Crescent condominium lot was assessed prior to construction at $3.4 million, or $165 per square foot.

Montgomery County's capital budget has placed the library's relocation on a tight schedule, with design submissions to begin in 2008 and construction completed in 2010. That schedule may chage, Stith says, but the county is prepared to claim eminent domain if property owners' reluctance to sell blocks development.

"The county has the ability to condemn the property and go to court to acquire it," Stith says. However,he admits that it would be an option of last resort.

So far, property owners--including the owner of the Golden House lot--have rejected the county's offers, Stith says. Instead, they have decided to seek appraisals from other parties.

"Sometimes these things drag out," he says. "Hopefully, we can settle fairly quickly."

Numerous attempts to speak with the management of Golden House were made. In true badass fashion, none of the calls were ever returned.


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