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Cycling Route in Four Corners, Maryland, United States of America

Historic Homes and Urban Nature Trails Ride

14
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13 km
Distance
78 m
Ascent
95 m
Descent
-:-- h
Duration
-- km/h
Avg. Speed
--- m
Max. Elevation

About This Route

A fairly flat leisurely route through Silver Spring neighborhoods and local parks. Most of the route is paved, but some stretches are dirt or gravel.

Start at Four Corners Local Park. Pick up Royalton Road on the north corner of the park and turn right. Turn right again onto Dennis, which turns into Lockridge Drive. Take the first right, then right again, and right again onto Mountain Quail Road. Walk the bike up Kinsman View Circle a little way. On the right is Holly View, the oldest house in Silver Spring, dating from 1783. Continue along Mountain Quail Road and turn left onto Eastwood Avenue and right onto Southwood. Take the first left onto Sutherland.

Here in the Northwood Park neighborhood, between 1938 and 1939, developers drawing inspiration from the upcoming 1939 World’s Fair constructed a number of state-of-the-art homes.

Stop at the intersection of Edgewood Avenue and Sutherland Road. On your right, immediately after the intersection with Edgewood Avenue sits a brick Tudor Revival home. It was built in 1938 as a Washington Gas Light Company model home. Turn right onto Sutherland and check out the Colonial Revival Cape Cod house to your left: this is an exact copy of the 1939 World’s Fair “Town of Tomorrow” demonstration home No. 15, the “Triple Insulated Home”.

Turn right on Timberwood and then left on Lorain, then cross University Boulevard at the crosswalk. Turn left at Lanark Way and then right on Sutherland Road past the concrete homes of the Polychrome Historic District.

The Polychrome houses are 9919, 9923, and 9925 Sutherland Road (and behind them at 9900 and 9904 Colesville Road). These homes were built by John Joseph Earley in 1934 and 1935. Earley used precast concrete panels with brightly colored aggregate to produce the polychrome effect, with Art Deco details. Earley was interested in the use of mass-production techniques to produce small, inexpensive houses, paralleling Frank Lloyd Wright's Usonian house concepts.

Follow Sutherland as it becomes Forest Glen Road, past Forest Glen Deli and South Four Corners Park.

After passing the Schweinhaut Senior Center and reaching Argyle Park on your left, turn right onto Godwin, then cross Sligo Creek Parkway and pick up the Sligo Creek Trail heading north.

Cycle upstream. The route crosses Sligo Creek Parkway at a small parking lot and (if you can find the entrance - it's about twenty yards to the south) you can pick up the Northwood Chesapeake Bay Trail heading northeast here, but if you fancy a bite to eat, carry on upstream on the Sligo Creek Trail and cross University Boulevard again. After about 200 yards you'll see an outdoor mall on the right of the trail: here you can stop for a meal at one of the eateries, or keep going through the mall and past Kemp Mill Urban Park. Keep going straight onto Lamberton Drive. Stay on this road until it ends at the entrance to the Northwest Branch Trail. This is basically a hiking trail - but it is possible to cycle along it from here. However, it may be best to dismount and walk with the bike if it gets too rough. Across the creek is the Rachel Carson Greenway Trail. Just half a mile east of here sits Rachel Carson's home, where she wrote "Silent Spring", the book that started the modern environmental movement. Head downstream as the Northwest Branch widens and becomes the Burnt Mills Reservoir. At the southern end of the reservoir is a dam (you'll need to walk the bike here – sometimes fallen trees block the trail), and on the other side of Colesville Road there is an old mill building.

The Burnt Mills Dam has a long history. The original dam and mill were built here in the 1700s. The mill burned down in 1788, hence the name Burnt Mills. Shortly thereafter a new mill was built and modified quite a few times over the years. Eventually a concrete dam was built in the present location with a mill race that delivered water under Colesville Road to the mill building located on the south side. The mill, which produced flour and ground corn meal, stayed in continuous use until about 1920. After the mill closed the surrounding land was donated to the Boy Scouts of America where they established a camp named for President Woodrow Wilson. For a time the boy scouts used the old mill building as a meeting hall.

If you have time, south of the dam across Colesville Road, beyond the Robert B. Morse Water Filtration Plant, which was built between 1934 and 1936, there is a hiking trail. It is not suitable for bicycles and is not easy walking but if you park the bike you will find that there is a fine gorge and series of water falls located there. It was this sort of location that proved a perfect site for a mill as the rapid drop off of water through the gorge provided ample water power to drive a mill wheel.

After seeing the dam, head back a little way along the trail, there is a path here that takes you back to Lockridge Drive, which turns into Dennis Avenue. Four Corners Park, where you started, is on the left.

This cycling route is ideal for: City bike

You will cycle on the following surfaces: Paved Unpaved Gravel

Highlights Along The Route

POI Photo 1: Ian Brett Cooper

Point of Interest

Schweinhaut Senior Center.

POI Photo 2: Ian Brett Cooper

Point of Interest

Cafes, Restaurants.

POI Photo 3: Ian Brett Cooper

Point of Interest

Four Corners Deli.

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