Back To The Drawing Board: CSEG Proposes Chesapeake Park Concept For Crownsville Hospital Site

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By Zach Sparks

Chesapeake Sports and Entertainment Group (CSEG) President Mark Burdett was met with consternation in November 2017 when he shared his organization’s grand plans for Bayhawks Village.

The complex would have brought a 10,000-seat stadium for the Chesapeake Bayhawks lacrosse team, 20 turf fields for youth athletics, a hotel and restaurants to the 544-acre property that was formerly home to Crownsville Hospital Center.

Herald Harbor resident Janet Holbrook told the Voice in February 2018 that “it seemed like they wanted to build Disney World in my neighborhood. I know that sounds like an exaggeration, but it’s a huge complex.”

READ MORE: Chesapeake Bayhawks Announce Ambitious Plan To Build Stadium And Athletic Complex In Crownsville

Burdett, who grew up in Severna Park, said there was a glaring need for fields to accommodate the burgeoning industry of youth sports and for a smaller stadium the Bayhawks could use. The team currently plays its home games in Annapolis at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, which seats more than 34,000 spectators. The Bayhawks averaged 4,169 fans for home games in 2018.

With direction from Bayhawks owner and general manager Brendan Kelly, Burdett and his team noted the community’s feedback and revised the concept, which is now called Chesapeake Park.

Their design expunged the access point from Crownsville Road and Generals Highway, instead asking the state to add an interchange from Interstate 97 to Farm Road as the sole entry point. They added hiking and biking trails bordered by picnic areas. They kept 360 acres of open space, with access to the abutting Bacon Ridge Natural Area. To acknowledge the hospital’s nefarious history of physical and mental experimentation on black patients, CSEG added the Say My Name Memorial.

Removed, for now, are the shops and hotel. Four turf fields were added for a total of 24.

The new plan appeases Anne Arundel County residents, Burdett said, because it means less traffic and more environmental preservation than the old plan. CSEG envisions it serving groups as close as the Green Hornets in Severna Park and as far as Virginia and Delaware.

Yet it’s a stark difference from the solar farm proposed by the Generals Highway Council of Civic Associations, which represents roughly 24 communities. Before taking office as county executive in December, Steuart Pittman championed the solar farm plan.

Burdett praised Pittman’s intent to protect the area. With the state spending about $1 million annually to maintain the site, Burdett also sees a better opportunity.

“He has some uber-green thinking,” Burdett said of Pittman. “We’re all for the parks and the trails, but there has to be some economic engine.”

Burdett said he expects Chesapeake Park to generate, at full operation, more than $40 million annually for the county and state. “It’s no longer going to be a tax burden,” he said.

Pittman wants Anne Arundel County to acquire the property from the state.

“We understand that the state is completing a feasibility study via the Maryland Stadium Authority and we look forward to that report,” Pittman said. “The administration's vision for the property is one that is centered on preservation and passive recreation.”

Speaking on behalf of the Generals Highway Council of Civic Associations, president John Hamm said the Crownsville community does not favor the new plan more than the first one.

“We proposed [the solar farm] at that forum Steuart Pittman ran before the election,” Hamm said. “We had 94 people in attendance, according to Steuart Pittman’s website. To our audience in attendance, we asked who’s in favor and who’s against [Chesapeake Park]. Overwhelmingly, the people came out against this commercial development.”

Hamm doesn’t expect the state to approve the single-use exchange of I-97, the one component CSEG most needs for Chesapeake Park to be built. Without that exit, traffic would be intolerable, Hamm said. In the 12 years he has lived in the Cranberry Woods community, traffic has worsened.

“I can’t get in and out of my neighborhood safely during rush hour,” Hamm said. “I can’t go left. I have to go right and turn around. It takes about 15 extra minutes.”

If the project is approved, the Maryland Stadium Authority could lease the stadium to CSEG. Since 2004, the site and its 69 buildings have been mostly vacant.

“Not only is there an asbestos and lead [problem], but there is a rodent infestation,” Burdett said. “… No one wants to say that out loud.”

Most of the tenants are nonprofits or treatment centers — Anne Arundel County Food Bank, Gaudenzia Drug Treatment, Hope House Treatment Center. Under the original Bayhawks Village concept, those groups may have been displaced. CSEG now aspires to accommodate the nonprofits, which Burdett called “vital,” and offer jobs to the people they serve.

“They can literally walk out the door and find a job on campus,” he said.

CSEG is preparing a financial report to present in mid-January. Burdett believes that it will forecast the promising potential of Chesapeake Park.

“The word developer has been created as a negative word,” Burdett said. “There are 800 square feet of existing development on the property today and that environment is fallowed. … There’s parking lots, barns, a sewage treatment plant. Our project is 69 percent of that number. We’re not bringing more development to Crownsville Hospital. We’re bringing less development.”

For Chesapeake Park to have a future, Burdett will have to change the community’s reaction from consternation to excitement.

“If the hospital grounds had to be rezoned and later the Bayhawks have to fault on the deal, the state would be stuck with the property,” Hamm said. “It would be one bad move after another. We’re not against lacrosse. This is just not the right location.”

For more information, visit www.chesapeakepark.com or find Chesapeake Park on Facebook and Twitter.

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  • ewrug3

    Yeah I hear the GOOD intentions of this developer and Whats now seems to COZING UP to Stewart Pittman.. Just remember the adage, "Good intentions pave the way to hell"

    Mr Pittman voted in , he is supposed to be doing the expected job of the County Residents, Not catering to Special interest, I hope he remembers WHO pays his paycheck and how valuable our local resources are as well as the constant pressure on traffic that creates pressures for all county residents. The county has been over developed, we simply DONT NEED ANYMORE...

    Recc Mr, Burdette seek history and profit somewhere else.

    Sunday, January 20, 2019 Report this

  • herodotus

    There are number of substantial issues with the article and the new proposal. Chief among them are:

    1) Bayhawks do not have funding the pay for the new stadium complex. They fully expect AAC, MD, and federal government to pay for the stadium and access roads’

    2) The Bayhawks can not reliably get 5000 people to attend their games in the perfectly acceptable and under utilized Navy-Marine Corp Stadium in Annapolis. Does anyone magically believe that attendance is going to double at a stadium in Crownsville?

    3) the consensus of the community groups around General’s Highway have consistently said they do not want the the noise and traffic associated with the stadium. AAC has stated publicly that I97 is already at capacity. This project would make that worse.

    4) currently the state pays amount $1M a year to maintain the current property. It would cost FAR less to tear down the existing buildings and turn the land into a park and grass sports fields than loan repayment costs for the new stadium per year.

    5) when we asked AAC staff at the community meetings related to this project to produce evidence their were insufficient lacrosse fields they could not provide any evidence of the fact. The Crownsville area already has 3 major parks all of which have land that is either not used or could be modified at relatively low cost into more lacrosse fields. AAC and bayhawks fail to bring this fact up. They instead praise how many new fields would be created. but AAC staff consistently fail to consider the amount in debt payments we will paying for those fields because the citizens would be shouldering the burden for the loan payments and the risk.

    6) their estimates of $40M in taxes to the county and state are not based on reality and when pressed to provide details on how they arrived at that number they could not provide details. Simply stating those are preliminary estimates.

    Studies have consistently shown that sport stadiums are money losers for the communities that build them. While there certainly are some that are a financial success most are not and the citizens not the sports team get stuck footing the bill.

    When I have asked Burdett and the Bayhawks staff at the various community events why don’t they get the entire loan and take all the financial risks. they stuttered and tried to deflect the question. The answer is simple they don’t trust their own numbers. They don’t want to take the risks. Let’s see Mark Burdett and Brendan Kelly put their homes and businesses (not just CESG) but also Brendans other companies like SmartLink up as collateral for the loans.

    The Bayhawks have a perfectly good stadium today. Building their stadium in crownsville is not needed, not wanted and is going to leave the citizens of AAC and State of MD millions of dollars in debt while the the sports team profits. The Bayhawks have not been honest and forthcoming about the true costs and risks of the project.

    If AAC wants more lacrosse fields there are far cheaper and much less risky avenues to pursue to obtain more fields that would citizens tax dollars at risk.

    Monday, January 21, 2019 Report this