Miniso has opened at 19745 Frederick Road, in the Fox Chapel Center in Germantown. The Japanese-inspired Chinese lifestyle goods chain offers toys, health and organization products. Some characters are licensed, like Marvel and Coca-Cola, while others are original intellectual property of the growing international company. You may find stuffed animals or pillows in one aisle, kitchenware or fitness equipment in the next, and face masks and hand sanitizer in yet another.
News that affects your neighborhood in upper Montgomery County. * Gaithersburg * Crown * Rio * Montgomery Village * Goshen * Germantown * Clarksburg * Damascus * Boyds * Poolesville * Hyattstown * Laytonsville * Dickerson
Thursday, July 31, 2025
Miniso opens in Germantown
Miniso has opened at 19745 Frederick Road, in the Fox Chapel Center in Germantown. The Japanese-inspired Chinese lifestyle goods chain offers toys, health and organization products. Some characters are licensed, like Marvel and Coca-Cola, while others are original intellectual property of the growing international company. You may find stuffed animals or pillows in one aisle, kitchenware or fitness equipment in the next, and face masks and hand sanitizer in yet another.
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Signage installed at Onekick Martial Arts in Gaithersburg
Permanent signage has been installed above the storefront of the newest Montgomery County location of Onekick Martial Arts in Gaithersburg. It is already connected and lit up at night. Onekick is located at 255 Kentlands Boulevard at Kentlands Market Square. To register for courses and learn more about the programs they offer, visit their Kentlands location website.
Tuesday, July 29, 2025
Rowan opening at Downtown Crown in Gaithersburg
Rowan is coming soon to Downtown Crown in Gaithersburg. The piercing studio will be located at 126 Crown Park Avenue, between Ideal Image and Bath & Body Works. All piercing procedures at Rowan are performed by "licensed nurses," and are hypoallergenic. Rowan has an existing Montgomery County location at The Shoppes of Bethesda.
Monday, July 28, 2025
Contents of former California Tortilla in Gaithersburg to be auctioned off
The contents of the former California Tortilla restaurant at 255 Spectrum Avenue at Spectrum Town Center in Gaithersburg will be auctioned off this November. According to the online auction listing, the auction will begin closing on Saturday, November 22, 2025. That's a lot farther in the future than these auctions are typically held. Also unlike most restaurant auctions, there isn't anything here for the prospective collector of branded items from the business in question. This auction will primarily appeal to the restaurateur seeking potential bargains on kitchen equipment and dining room furniture.
Friday, July 25, 2025
Koi Sushi update at Rio Lakefront in Gaithersburg
"Coming soon" signage appeared last fall at the future location of Koi Sushi at 201 Boardwalk Place at Rio Lakefront in Gaithersburg. With the fall of 2025 rapidly approaching, the interior fit-out has proceeded at a snail's pace over the last nine months. Despite having a liquor license hearing earlier this month, the progress inside suggests opening day is still quite a ways off. Check it out:
Thursday, July 24, 2025
Virginia wins AstraZeneca megafactory over Maryland
"There's going to be so much losing, you'll get tired of losing." We're definitely tired of losing in Montgomery County and Maryland, but Virginia just handed us another big L. Pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca has announced it plans to build its largest global drug manufacturing facility yet in Virginia. The loss is even harder to take when you consider that AstraZeneca already has a substantial presence here in Montgomery County. How did we lose this one?
AstraZeneca's announcement is the latest victory for President Donald Trump's trade strategy, which is in part designed to bring jobs back to America. GE Appliances recently announced it would relocate some of its China manufacturing footprint to the massive factory complex at Appliance Park in Louisville, Kentucky. AstraZeneca's move is to avoid high tariffs Trump proposed for drug imports.
Montgomery County isn't a total loser in the $50 billion investment AstraZeneca plans to make in the U.S. over the next five years: the company said it also plans to expand its Gaithersburg manufacturing facility, and to add a cell therapy manufacturing facility in Rockville. But it's simply cheaper to do business in Virginia, and the Commonwealth is quickly catching up in the regional biotech race, which has been the sole bright spot in Montgomery County's otherwise-moribund economy.
“I want to thank AstraZeneca for choosing Virginia as the cornerstone for this transformational investment in the United States,” Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin said in a statement. “This project will set the standard for the latest technological advancements in pharmaceutical manufacturing, creating hundreds of highly skilled jobs and helping further strengthen the nation's domestic supply chain. Advanced manufacturing is at the heart of Virginia's dynamic economy, so I am thrilled that AstraZeneca, one of the world's leading pharmaceutical companies, plans to make their largest global manufacturing investment here in the Commonwealth.”
“Today’s announcement underpins our belief in America’s innovation in biopharmaceuticals and our commitment to the millions of patients who need our medicines in America and globally,” AstraZeneca Chief Executive Officer Pascal Soriot said. “It will also support our ambition to reach $80 billion in revenue by 2030. I look forward to partnering with Governor Youngkin and his team to work on our largest single manufacturing investment ever. It reflects the Commonwealth of Virginia’s desire to create highly skilled jobs in science and technology, and will strengthen the country’s domestic supply chain for medicines.”
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
Montgomery County Council rams through ZTA to upzone SFH neighborhoods
The Montgomery County Council took the first major step toward realization of its radical, warmed-over Reaganomics "Thrive 2050" plan yesterday, by approving construction of duplexes, triplexes, quadplexes, and apartment buildings up to four stories tall on lots currently restricted to single-family homes along multiple commuter corridors. True to its form of recent years, the Council simply blew off community opposition, and a crowded hearing room of angry residents. Taunting the crowd at times, the Council's sense of invincibility was hard to hide in both their microexpressions and tone of voice. The "More Housing N.O.W." zoning text amendment - like Thrive 2050 - had no grassroots support, and overwhelming opposition among residents.
Steamrolling ahead, the Council's willingness to outright lie about the intention of the ZTA was astonishing. From the beginning, they have attempted to sell Thrive and this ZTA as addressing housing affordability issues. Councilmember Andrew Friedson specifically cited middle-income "teachers, firefighters, police officers and nurses" as being able to afford the $2 million duplexes and $1 million apartments that the ZTA will produce. This is nothing more than pure, unadulterated malarkey. Incredibly, the reporter from The Washington Post accepted this farcical statement at face value, declining to fact check Friedson, ask tough follow-up questions, or outright declare Friedson's statements as false, as the paper regularly does for Donald Trump. The Post even used the term "missing middle," which doesn't remotely apply to the multimillion-dollar units that will be constructed under this ZTA.
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| Eligible properties (in pink and yellow) in Aspen Hill, Glenmont, and Wheaton |
All this ZTA will do is increase the cost of housing in Montgomery County. If the townhome right next to the parking garage with no backyard at Westbard Square is $1.x million, then the future duplex with half a backyard and half a front yard in Springfield has to go for $2.x million. Now the colonial with the full front yard and backyard and Whitman school district is suddenly $3.x million, and the new-construction McMansion is $4.x million. Heckuva job, Brownie!
Urbanization of the suburbs is the primary goal of the ZTA. For example, the map of eligible properties shows how this ZTA is advancing the plan to urbanize River Road between the D.C. line and the Capital Beltway, which I have warned you about for many years. You can see the many churches, schools, country clubs, and other large properties the Council and their developer sugar daddies imagine will be demolished in the coming years. The speed limit on River Road has already been improperly reduced to 35 MPH, the exact opposite of sound traffic engineering, as the road is designed for speeds up to 55 MPH. Eventually, under the urbanization plan, River Road will be reduced to one lane in each direction, with bus/bike-only lanes seizing the other travel lanes heading east and west. A Purple Line extension to Westbard will be planned to juice density even further. As tall apartment buildings rise along the sides of River Road, the speed limit will drop to 25 MPH. Similar plans are in the works for Georgia Avenue between Olney and downtown Silver Spring, Old Georgetown Road, Veirs Mill Road, Route 29, MD 355, and other major commuter routes countywide.
Here is how each Councilmember voted on the ZTA yesterday. The names under "YES" are the people you will be voting AGAINST on your 2026 ballot, and the names under "NO" are the people you will be voting FOR in the 2026 Democratic primary election.
YES - to approve the ZTA
Gabe Albornoz
Marilyn Balcombe
Natali Fani-Gonzalez
Andrew Friedson
Evan Glass
Dawn Luedtke
Laurie-Anne Sayles
Kate Stewart
NO - to oppose the ZTA
Will Jawando
Sidney Katz
Kristin Mink
















