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Columbia, Maryland

Columbia is a census-designated place in Howard County, Maryland, United States. It is one of the principal communities of the Baltimore–Washington metropolitan area. It is a planned community consisting of 10 self-contained villages.

Columbia, Maryland
Columbia Town Center along Lake Kittamaqundi
Motto: 
"The Next America!"[1]
Location of Columbia, Maryland
Columbia
Columbia
Coordinates: 39°12′13″N 76°51′25″W / 39.20361°N 76.85694°W / 39.20361; -76.85694Coordinates: 39°12′13″N 76°51′25″W / 39.20361°N 76.85694°W / 39.20361; -76.85694
Country United States
State Maryland
CountyHoward
FoundedJune 21, 1967[2]
Founded byJames Rouse
Named forColumbia (personification)
Area
 • Total32.19 sq mi (83.37 km2)
 • Land31.93 sq mi (82.71 km2)
 • Water0.26 sq mi (0.66 km2)
Elevation
407 ft (124 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total104,681
 • Density3,278.04/sq mi (1,265.68/km2)
 The CDP includes areas not part of Columbia proper as defined by the Columbia Association.
Time zoneUTC−5 (Eastern (EST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP codes
21044-21046
Area codes410, 443, 667
FIPS code24-19125
GNIS feature ID0590002
HighwaysI-95, US 29, MD 32, MD 100, MD 108, MD 175
Websitecolumbiaassociation.com

Columbia began with the idea that a city could enhance its residents' quality of life. Creator and developer James W. Rouse saw the new community in terms of human values, rather than merely economics and engineering. Opened in 1967, Columbia was intended to not only eliminate the inconveniences of then-current subdivision design, but also eliminate racial, religious and class segregation.[4]

Columbia proper consists only of that territory governed by the Columbia Association, but larger areas are included under its name by the U.S. Postal Service and the Census Bureau. These include several other communities which predate Columbia, including Simpsonville, Atholton, and in the case of the census, part of Clarksville. The census-designated place had a population of 104,681 at the 2020 United States Census.[5] It is the second most populous community in Maryland after Baltimore.[6]

History

Origins

Columbia was founded by James W. Rouse (1914-1996), a native of Easton, Maryland. In 1935, Rouse obtained a job in Baltimore with the Federal Housing Administration, a New Deal agency whose purpose was to promote home ownership and home construction. This position exposed Rouse to all phases of the housing industry.[7] Later in the 1930s he co-founded a Baltimore mortgage banking business, the Moss-Rouse Company. In the 1950s his company, by then known as James W. Rouse and Company, branched out into developing shopping centers and malls. In 1957, Rouse formed Community Research and Development, Inc. (CRD) for the purpose of building, owning and operating shopping centers throughout the country. Community Research and Development, Inc., which was managed by James W. Rouse and Company, became a publicly traded company in 1961. In 1966, Community Research and Development, Inc. changed its name to The Rouse Company, after it had acquired James W. Rouse and Company in exchange for company stock.[8][9]

By the early 1950s Rouse was also active in organizations whose goals were to combat blight and promote urban renewal. Along the way, he came to recognize the importance of comprehensive planning and action to address housing issues. A talented public speaker, Rouse's speeches on housing matters attracted media attention. By the mid-1950s he was espousing his belief that in order to be successful, cities had to be places where people succeeded. In a 1959 speech he declared that the purpose of cities is for people, and that the objective of city planning should be to make a city into neighborhoods where men, women, and their families can live and work, and, most importantly, grow in character, personality, religious fulfillment, brotherhood, and the capacity for joyous living.[citation needed]

In the early 1960s, Rouse decided to develop a new model city. Rouse's ideas about what a new model city should be like were informed by a number of factors, including his personal Christian faith as well as the goal for his company to earn a profit, influences that he did not consider to be incompatible with one another.[10] After exploring possible new city locations near Atlanta, Georgia, and Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, Rouse focused his attention between Baltimore and Washington, D.C., in Howard County, Maryland.

Howard County land acquisition

In April 1962, Mel Berman, a longtime Howard County resident who was also a member of the CRD's Board of Directors, saw a sign on Cedar Lane in Howard County advertising 1,309 acres (530 ha) for sale. Berman reported the option to the CRD and a decision was made to purchase the land. This was the first of 165 land purchases made by Rouse over the next year-and-a-half. In order to keep land costs low, Jack Jones, an attorney from Rouse's firm of Piper Marbury, set up a grid system to secretly buy land through dummy corporations like the "Alaska Iron Mines Company".[11][12] Some of these straw purchasers included Columbia Industrial Development Corporation, 95-32 Corporation, 95-216 Corporation, Premble, Inc., Columbia Mall, Inc., Oakland Ridge Industrial Development Corporation, and Columbia Development Corporation. Robert Moxley's firm Security Realty Company (now Security Development Group Inc),[13] negotiated many of the land deals for Jones, becoming his best client.[13][14]: 57  [15] CRD accumulated 14,178 acres (57.38 km2), 10 percent of Howard County, from 140 separate owners. Rouse was turned down in financing from David Rockefeller, who had recently cancelled a planned Rouse "Village" concept called Pocantico Hills.[14]: 58  The $19,122,622 acquisition was then funded by Rouse's former employer Connecticut General Life Insurance in October 1962 at an average price of $1,500 per acre ($0.37/m2). The town center land of Oakland Manor was purchased from Isadore Guldesky who was turned down from building high-rises on the site by Rob Moxley's brother, County Commissioner and land developer Norman E. Moxley. Sensing that he had a key property, he requested $5 million for his 1,000 acres (400 ha), signing an agreement by hand on a land plat.[16] The competition between Rouse and Guldesky carried over to the competing Tysons Corner Center and Tysons Galleria projects, with each hiring their competitor's employees.[17]

By late 1962, citizens had elected an all-Republican three-member council. J. Hubert Black, Charles E. Miller, and David W. Force who campaigned on a low-density growth ballot, but later approved the Columbia project.[18]  The Howard County Planning Commission Chairman Wilmer Sanner declared, "if this adds to the orderly development of the county, that's what we are looking for."[14]: 56  That July, Sanner sold the majority of his 73-acre (30 ha) Simpsonville farm to Howard Research prior to the public announcement.[19] In October 1963, the acquisition was revealed to the residents of Howard County, putting to rest rumors about the mysterious purchases. These had included theories that the site was to become a medical research laboratory or a giant compost heap. Despite the moniker of being a "planned city", the planning for the city occupied Rouse officials for most of 1964 after the announcement while marketing director Scott Ditch was brought from Baltimore's Cross Keys development to promote the project to community groups.[14]: 56  [20]

In December 1964 the zoning was rejected by planning director Tom Harris Jr. for handing nearly all planning control to the developer. A media push was instituted to approve the zoning by Dorris Thompson of The Howard County Times, Seymour Barondes of the Howard County Civic Association, and Anita Iribe of the League of Women Voters.[14]: 64  In June 1965 zoning was approved for the project, and Howard Research and Development entered into a $37.5 million construction deed backed by the property.[21][22] Development was temporarily stalled in October 1965 when James and Anna Hepding of Simpsonville sued the planning board, stating New Town zoning was a form of spot zoning benefiting a sole property owner. The case was dropped when developer Homer Gudelsky purchased the estate.[23] Ten years later, former Councilman Charles E. Miller stated that if he could do it over again, he wouldn't have voted to approve Columbia. He felt exploited and felt the subsidized housing would become a problem for the rest of the county.[24] Miller had been defeated in the November 1974 Howard County Council elections, in part as a result of the changed political landscape that Columbia's development brought. In early 1976, a Columbia Flier editorial charged that Miller was a fear-mongering reactionary who had a personal vendetta against Columbia, Rouse and Columbia residents.[25]

Unveiling and growth

 
Blandair, a historic plantation located in the center of Columbia

At the unveiling on June 21, 1967, James Rouse described Columbia as a planned new city which would avoid the leap-frog and spot-zoning development threatening the county. The new city would be complete with jobs, schools, shopping, and medical services, and a range of housing choices. Property taxes from commercial development would cover the additional services with which housing would burden the county. The urban planning process for Columbia included not only planners, but also a convened panel of nationally recognized experts in the social sciences, known as the Work Group. The fourteen member group of men and one woman, Antonia Handler Chayes, met for two days, twice a month, for half a year starting in 1963.[14]: 68  The Work Group suggested innovations for planners in education, recreation, religion, and health care, as well as ways of improving social interactions. Columbia's open classrooms, interfaith centers, and the then-novel idea of a health maintenance organization (HMO) with a group practice of medical doctors (the Columbia Medical Plan) sprung from these meetings. The community's physical plan, with neighborhood and village centers, was also decided. Columbia's "New Town District" zoning ordinance gave developers great flexibility about what to put where, without requiring county approval for each specific project.[citation needed]

In 1968, vice-presidential candidate Spiro Agnew referenced Columbia to reporters, saying, "Government should act as a catalyst to encourage the local governments to encourage industry and business to move next to a planned community," and "I want to lessen the density in the ghettos, and concurrently rebuild the ghetto areas."[26] In 1969, County Executive Omar J. Jones felt that the increase in tax base was lagging behind the need for infrastructure as the operating budget doubled to $15 million in three years.[27] Crime rates shot up around the county by 30-50% a year, with hot spots around the development.[28][29] By 1970, the project required additional financing to continue, borrowing $30 million from Connecticut General, Manufacturers Hanover Trust, and Morgan Guaranty. In 1972, amendments to New Town zoning proposing to place a maximum height for buildings and maintain the original density limit of 2.2 units per acre were opposed by Rouse allies including the Columbia Association, the Ellicott City Businessman's Association and the Columbia Democratic Club.[30] By 1974, the amount owed reached $100,000 million,[dubious ] prompting partner Connecticut General to consider bankruptcy. An effort to create a special taxing district in 1978 and an effort to incorporate with a mayor in 1979 failed.[31] In 1985 Cigna (Connecticut General) divested itself of the project for $120 million. By 1990 Howard Research and Development owed $125,162,689.[32][22] In 2004 the project was sold to General Growth Properties, which went bankrupt in 2008. General Growth Properties submitted a plan for increasing density throughout Columbia in 2004 which was unanimously voted down.[33] Ownership of the project fell to the previous Rouse subsidiary the Howard Hughes Corporation. Howard Hughes submitted a new plan to increase density in 2010 under the Ulman administration that passed unanimously.[citation needed]

Columbia has never incorporated; some governance, however, is provided by the non-profit Columbia Association, which manages common areas and functions as a homeowner association with regard to private property. The first boards were filled entirely with Rouse Company appointees.[27] The first manager of the Columbia Association was John Estabrook Slayton (d. 1967). For Slayton's contributions to the early planning of Columbia, the community center in the Wilde Lake village, Slayton House, was named for him. Wilde Lake was the first village area to be developed in Columbia; accordingly, the town's first high school was Wilde Lake High School, which opened in 1971 as a "model school for the nation". Constructed in the open classroom style, it was razed in 1994 but reconstructed on the same site in 1996.[citation needed]

Master plan

To achieve the goals set forth by the Work Group, Columbia's Master Plan called for a series of ten self-contained villages, around which day-to-day life would revolve. The centerpiece of Columbia would be The Mall in Columbia and man-made Lake Kittamaqundi.[citation needed]

Villages and neighborhoods

 
The lakefront in Downtown Columbia sits upon Lake Kittamaqundi

The village concept aimed to provide Columbia a small-town feel (like Easton, Maryland, where James Rouse grew up). Each village comprises several neighborhoods. The village center may contain middle and high schools. All villages have a shopping center, recreational facilities, a community center, a system of bike/walking paths, and homes. Four of the villages have interfaith centers, common worship facilities which are owned and jointly operated by a variety of religious congregations working together.[34]

Most of Columbia's neighborhoods contain single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and apartments, though some are more exclusive than others. The original plan, following the neighborhood concept of Clarence Perry, would have had all the children of a neighborhood attend the same school, melding neighborhoods into a community and ensuring that all of Columbia's children get the same high-quality education. Rouse marketed the city as being "color blind" as a proponent of Senator Clark's fair housing legislation. If a neighborhood was filled with too many purchasers of a single race, houses would be blocked until the desired ratio was met.[14]: 85 

  • Village – Neighborhoods (in order of residential opening)
    • Wilde Lake – (Est. 1967) Bryant Woods, Faulkner Ridge, Running Brook
    • Harper's Choice – (Est. 1968) Longfellow, Swansfield, Hobbit's Glen
    • Oakland Mills – (Est. 1969) Thunder Hill, Talbott Springs, Stevens Forest
    • Long Reach – (Est. 1971) Phelps Luck, Jeffers Hill, Locust Park, Kendall Ridge
    • Owen Brown – (Est. 1972) Dasher Green, Elkhorn, Hopewell
    • Town Center – (Est. 1974) Vantage Point, Banneker, Amesbury, Creighton's Run, and Warfield Triangle
    • Hickory Ridge – (Est. 1974) Clemens Crossing, Hawthorn, Clary's Forest
    • Kings Contrivance – (Est. 1977) Macgill's Common, Huntington, Dickinson
    • Dorsey's Search – (Est. 1980) Dorsey Hall, Fairway Hills
    • River Hill – (Est. 1990) Pheasant Ridge, Pointers Run

Columbia takes its street names from famous works of art and literature: for example, the neighborhood of Hobbit's Glen takes its street names from the work of J. R. R. Tolkien; Running Brook, from the poetry of Robert Frost; and Clemens Crossing, from the work of Mark Twain. The book Oh, You Must Live in Columbia! chronicles the artistic, poetic, and historical origins of the street and place names in Columbia.[35]

Further expansion

"The Downtown Columbia Plan" is a 2010 amendment to the county's General Plan of expansion. It is a framework for the revitalization of Downtown Columbia over the next thirty years. Development plans for downtown projects in the years ahead will include details for that project such as neighborhood design guidelines, environmental restoration, public amenities and infrastructure. These development plans must adhere to the framework of the Downtown Columbia Plan as required by the zoning legislation. Over the life of the Downtown Columbia development project, as much as 13 million square feet of retail, commercial, residential, hotel and cultural development is planned.[36]

To be accomplished in three phases, the plan calls for the formation of the non-profit Columbia Downtown Housing Corporation to build an additional 5,500 units of low income housing placed downtown in exchange for increased zoning density for other projects.[37] Additional development includes 4.3 million square feet of commercial office space, 1.25 million square feet of retail space, 640 hotel rooms, Merriweather Post Pavilion redevelopment and a multi-modal transportation system.[38]

The Downtown Columbia Plan also has sustainability features, including goals for saving water and energy, and for ecology and livability.

Columbia's master developer, the Howard Hughes Corporation, is heading up the expansion project. The project is projected to cost $90 million and will outline development in the community for the next 40 years.[39]

Geography

 
Map of the villages in Columbia

Because Columbia is unincorporated, there is confusion over its exact boundaries. In the strictest definition, Columbia comprises only the land governed under covenants by the Columbia Association. This is a considerably smaller area than the census-designated place (CDP) as defined by the United States Census Bureau. The CDP has a total area of 32.2 square miles (83.4 km2), of which 31.9 square miles (82.7 km2) are land and 0.3 square miles (0.7 km2), or 0.80%, are water.[5] The CDP includes a number of older communities which do not lie within the CA's purview, including the Holiday Hills, Diamondback, and Allview subdivisions and the former town of Simpsonville, as well as some land on the east side of Clarksville. These areas are not part of the "new town", and are not directly served by its amenities. Some of these areas are included in Columbia ZIP codes by the post office, and some are not.

Columbia is located in central Maryland, 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Baltimore, 25 miles (40 km) northeast of Washington, D.C., and 30 miles (48 km) northwest of Annapolis. The community lies in the Piedmont region of Maryland, with its eastern edge at the fall line. The climate tends to hot, humid summers and cool to cold and wet winters. There are occasional large amounts of snowfall that happen every year.

The primary landforms in Columbia are rolling hills and stream valleys; Columbia's road network is laid out to follow the terrain, with many winding streets and cul-de-sacs. Elevations range from about 200 to 500 feet (61 to 152 m) above sea level. Most of Columbia is drained by the Middle Patuxent and Little Patuxent rivers. There are three artificial lakes, created by damming of tributary streams during community construction. In 1965, the Rouse Company leased 7,000 acres (2,800 ha) of farmland staged for development, and earmarked 4,000 acres (1,600 ha) of oak forest for timber harvesting. The company developed a sapling planter to replant sections of cleared land that would use Columbia's W.R. Grace-developed fertilizers.[40] An outer ring of greenspace was abandoned early in the project because the combination with the already required river buffers would have reduced profitable land available for building.[14]: 76  Along with Symphony Woods, many other stands of mature trees have been temporarily maintained in Columbia, including the large Middle Patuxent Environmental Area in the western part of the community between Harper's Choice and River Hill villages, protecting much of the river valley from development.

Climate

Columbia has a humid subtropical climate, with cool winters and hot, muggy summers.

Climate data for Columbia, MD
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °F (°C) 42
(6)
46
(8)
55
(13)
66
(19)
75
(24)
84
(29)
88
(31)
87
(31)
79
(26)
68
(20)
58
(14)
46
(8)
66
(19)
Average low °F (°C) 25
(−4)
27
(−3)
35
(2)
44
(7)
55
(13)
64
(18)
69
(21)
68
(20)
60
(16)
48
(9)
38
(3)
29
(−2)
47
(8)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 3.16
(80)
3.14
(80)
4.10
(104)
3.81
(97)
4.56
(116)
4.23
(107)
4.05
(103)
3.43
(87)
4.60
(117)
3.98
(101)
4.21
(107)
3.77
(96)
47.04
(1,195)
Source: weather.com[41]

Demographics

NOTE: The CDP includes considerable areas which are not part of the planned community.

As of July 2019, Columbia is a majority minority community, with non-Hispanic whites constituting 47.3% of the population.[5]

2020 census

Population by Race in Columbia MD (2020)[42]
Race Population % of Total
Total 104,681 100
Caucasian 45,228 43
African American 28,293 27
Asian 13,369 13
Hispanic 10,709 10
Two or More Races 6,015 6
Other 848 1
Three or more races 478 < 1%
American Indian 524 ~ 1%

2010 census

Historical population
Census Pop.
19708,815
198052,518495.8%
199075,88344.5%
200088,25416.3%
201099,61512.9%
2020104,6815.1%
U.S. Decennial Census[43]

The 2009-2013 census estimates report the median income for a household in the CDP was $99,877. The per capita income for the CDP was $46,374. About 4.1% of families and 6.6% of the population were below the poverty line, including 8.8% of those under age 18 and 6.4% of those age 65 or over.[44]

2000 census

As of the census[5] of 2000, there were 88,254 people, 34,199 households, and 23,118 families residing in the CDP. The population density was 3,202.0 inhabitants per square mile (1,236.3/km2). There were 35,281 housing units at an average density of 1,280.0 per square mile (494.2/km2). The racial makeup of the CDP was 66.52% White, 21.47% Black or African American, 0.26% Native American, 7.30% Asian, 0.05% Pacific Islander, 1.63% from other races, and 2.76% from two or more races. 4.12% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. 14% of Columbia's residents were German, 11% Irish, 10% English, 5% Italian, 4% Polish, 2% Russian, 2% Scottish, 2% Indian, 2% Chinese, 2% Korean, 2% Sub-Saharan African, 2% French, and 2% West Indian.[45]

There were 34,199 households, out of which 35.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 53.4% were married couples living together, 11.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 32.4% were non-families. 25.6% of all households were made up of individuals, and 5.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.54 and the average family size was 3.09.

In the CDP, the population was spread out, with 26.3% under the age of 18, 6.7% from 18 to 24, 34.1% from 25 to 44, 25.5% from 45 to 64, and 7.5% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 36 years. For every 100 females, there were 93.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 88.7 males.

Economy

James Rouse conceived of a city, not a suburban bedroom community, and a large area on the eastern edge was allocated for industrial purposes. The centerpiece of this aspect of the development was a General Electric appliance plant on a 1,125-acre (4.55 km2) site previously operated as a cattle farm.[46][47] After an injunction attempt was blocked in 1969, the plant began operations in 1972, peaking at 2,300 of the predicted 12,000 jobs. It was closed in 1990, with all but 21 acres (85,000 m2) of the property being sold back to Howard Research and Development.[14]: 141  One section of the property was subsequently redeveloped for big box retail; the remainder became the large Gateway Commerce office complex, still being expanded.[48] In 1968, Bendix Field Engineering moved to a new 143,000-square-foot (13,300 m2) facility on the historic Woodlawn Plantation where it was used for engineering activity. Howard County purchased the vacant facility creating the Maryland Center for Entrepreneurship in 2011, which relocated to the vacant Patuxent Publishing building in 2014.[49][50] There is still a smaller industrial area to the south of this, but by and large East Columbia is dominated by commercial real estate—office, retail, and wholesale—in contrast to the original plan, which saw the Town Center area as the commercial center of Columbia.[51]

The U.S. federal government is the source of many jobs for Columbians. Several large U.S. Department of Defense installations and R&D facilities surround Columbia, the largest being the National Security Agency at Fort George G. Meade, and the Applied Physics Laboratory south of Columbia, both pre-dating the establishment of Columbia. Companies which have had research facilities in the area include W.R. Grace and Company. Further afield, many Columbians commute to government and government contractor jobs in the Baltimore and Washington, D.C. area.[citation needed]

Companies based in Columbia include W.R. Grace and Company,[52][53] Sourcefire, PetMeds, MICROS Systems, Martek Biosciences, Integral Systems, GP Strategies Corporation, Corporate Office Properties Trust, and the consumer research company Nielsen Audio (formerly Arbitron).[citation needed] When MaggieMoo's was an independent company, its headquarters was in Columbia.[53][54]

Shopping

The Mall in Columbia, located in Town Center, is a large regional shopping mall with three anchor department stores (Nordstrom, Macy's, and JCPenney), a multiplex movie theater, and more than 200 stores and restaurants.

There are several other major competing shopping centers in East Columbia, including Dobbin Center strip mall opened in 1983, Snowden Square big box retail on the remainder of the GE industrial site, Columbia Crossing I and II big box retail started in 1997, and Gateway Overlook.[14]: 142 

Columbia's nine "village centers" provide residents with nearby shopping as well, often including supermarkets, gas stations, liquor stores, dry cleaners, restaurants, and hair salons. The village centers are laid out so that individual stores are not visible from the road, unlike traditional strip malls. The arrangement is criticized because it makes it difficult for newcomers and non-residents to know what shopping is available; it is praised for eliminating much of the garishness of roadside America.[citation needed]

The village centers have evolved over time. The Oakland Mills Village Center had a traditional Village Center layout—stores located off a central corridor—until its demolition in the late 1990s. It has since been replaced with a more traditional strip mall managed by Cedar Realty Trust. The Rouse Company abandoned the village center concept in 2002, selling off the assets to Kimco Realty for $120 million.[55] The Kings Contrivance Village Center underwent major construction in 2007 and 2008 when a new Harris Teeter supermarket was added to the center, but maintained the original character of stores around a central corridor and plaza. Owen Brown village center is now managed by GFS Realty, and the Long Reach Village center was declared blighted and purchased by Howard County for resale in 2014.[56]

Arts and culture

Entertainment and performing arts

 
Merriweather Post Pavilion
 
The National playing at Virgin Mobile Freefest at Merriweather Post Pavilion

In the absence of nightclubs, Columbia relies on local bars to bring in bands. Sonoma's (in Owen Brown) and Nottingham's Tavern and The Green Turtle (near Dobbin Center) regularly bring in groups to perform.

Merriweather Post Pavilion, a well-known outdoor concert venue, attracts many prominent performers.[57] In addition, there are several performing arts organizations that present professional theater, including Toby's Dinner Theatre, Columbia Center for Theatrical Arts and the Young Columbians which have produced the area premieres of several musicals.

Columbia also offers chamber music concerts, children's programs, community outreach programs, master classes, and pre-concert lectures and discussions through the Candlelight Concert Society, a non-profit organization formed by Columbia residents to provide chamber music concerts since 1972.[58]

Howard County Library System

Howard County Library System (HCLS) is consistently top rated among the nation's public library systems according to Hennen's American Public Library Ratings (HAPLR).[59] Two of the six branches of the Howard County Library System are in Columbia, including the Central Branch in Town Center and the East Columbia Branch in Owen Brown.

Historic sites

Two historic buildings in Columbia, Dorsey Hall and Woodlawn, were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.[60] Both were once homes of prominent Howard County citizens. Most historic buildings, mills and plantations within Columbia that qualified for the register, such as Oakland Manor,[61] were not submitted by Rouse company affiliates.

Religion

Rouse believed that individual churches were a waste of developable land.[10] Dr. Stanley Hallet advised the 1964 work group to economically abandon "The extravagance of church life" in favor of ecumenical establishments that focused resources on retreat centers and non-profit religious corporations.[62] The Rouse Company discouraged individual congregations from purchasing land from the company.[10] In 1966 the Columbia Religious Facilities Corporation was founded to lease interfaith centers to congregations.[63][64] On June 22, 1969, $2.5 million in church donations applied to the CFRC to purchase Columbia land and build an interfaith facility in the village of Wilde Lake. The organization formed the Interfaith Housing Corporation (now the Columbia Housing Corporation) to purchase 300 units of low and moderate income housing in the development with Federal Housing Authority funding.[14]: 97  [65]

Parks and recreation

Recreation has always been an important part of the Columbia concept.[citation needed] The homeowners association, the Columbia Association, known to many in Howard County as "CA", builds, operates and maintains most of these facilities. CA operates a variety of recreational facilities, including 23 outdoor swimming pools, five indoor pools, two water slides, ice and roller skating rinks, an equestrian center, a sports park with miniature golf, a skateboard park, batting cages, picnic pavilions, clubhouse and playground, three athletic clubs including the 24/7 Supreme Sports Club, numerous indoor and outdoor tennis, basketball, volleyball, squash, pickleball, and racquetball courts, and running tracks. In February 2006 LifeTime Fitness (a Minnesota company) opened a 24/7 health club at the edge of the Columbia Gateway industrial park. This facility includes one outdoor and two indoor pools (with water slides), racquetball courts, basketball courts, fitness equipment, and pilates and yoga facilities.

There are three lakes (Lake Kittamaqundi, Lake Elkhorn, and Wilde Lake) surrounded by parkland for sailing, fishing, and boating; 80 miles (130 km) of paths for jogging, strolling and biking; and 148 tot lots and play areas.

Nine village centers, 15 neighborhood centers, and four senior centers provide space for a large variety of community activities. There are a variety of fairs and celebrations throughout the year, including entertainment on the lakefront of Lake Kittamaqundi during the summer and the Columbia Festival of the Arts.

Columbia also has garden plots for rent, under the guidance of the Columbia Gardeners, which has been in existence since the 1970s. There are about 350 garden plots at three sites in Columbia, with each garden rented for a nominal fee (at one time $30 per year)[when?].[66]

Chiara D'Amore's Community Ecology Institute's Freetown Farm, founded in 2016, uses hands-on gardening to educate people and cultivates communities where people thrive together. Freetown farm was built on the site of Columbia's last working farm. The name Freetown farm refers to the area's historical name and its ties to the Underground Railroad. It features a NAACP garden and donates the much of the food that is raise to local food banks.[67]

In 2017, Columbia FC, a soccer club based in Columbia was founded. Consisting of former Howard County students and transfer players, the sports club made their debut in Maryland's Major Soccer League Division I on September 8, 2019.

Education

Columbia's public schools are operated by the Howard County Public School System. As of the 2007–2008 school year, the following high schools served some part of Columbia:[68]

Most of these schools also serve students from outside Columbia, as is also the case with some middle and elementary schools.

Colleges and universities

There are no conventional four-year colleges or universities in Columbia, but several other college-level programs have facilities there. Howard Community College is located near the town center, while the University of Phoenix, American Career Institute, Lincoln College of Technology, Loyola University Maryland, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Maryland University of Integrative Health, and Johns Hopkins University have facilities on the east side of town at Columbia Gateway Business Park.

In 1966, Howard Community College (HCC) was founded by the Board of Education in Howard County and formally authorized by the Howard County Commissioners Charles E. Miller, J. Hubert Black, and David W. Force. In addition to its original campus in Columbia, it now has satellite campuses in Mount Airy, Laurel, and East Columbia, in the Columbia Gateway Business Park.

Infrastructure

Transportation

Public transit

Columbia's initial plan called for a minibus system connecting the village centers on a distinct right-of-way that allowed denser development along the route.[76] The routes were not constructed, though minibuses were operated by the Columbia Association under the name "ColumBus". These were eventually taken over by Howard County. Six Howard Transit bus routes served Columbia and connected it with its neighboring areas (such as Ellicott City and BWI Airport) until they were replaced by Regional Transportation Agency of Central Maryland (RTA) in 2014. Several Maryland Transit Administration (MTA) routes provide access to and from both Washington and Baltimore; MTA weekday commuter bus service connects Columbia to the Washington Metro system. There are no rail stations within Columbia, although the Dorsey MARC Train station is served by RTA buses.

RTA provides local bus service as well as the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority and Maryland Transit Administration. RTA Bus Routes include: 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 501, and 503.

OurBus offers intercity bus service from Columbia to New Brunswick, New Jersey and New York City.

Roads

 
I-95 in Columbia

Columbia has a number of roadways that serve the community (see below). All of these highways allow Columbia access to nearby Baltimore, Washington, D.C. and Annapolis.

Healthcare

Medical care is available at Howard County General Hospital, affiliated with Baltimore's Johns Hopkins Hospital. The Columbia Medical Plan was founded in 1967 as a health maintenance organization (HMO) available to citizens of Columbia.[14]: 99  [77] In more recent years, however, this plan has divided into separate medical groups that simply share the Twin Knolls buildings. Today, there is a Kaiser Permanente facility located in the Columbia Gateway industrial park. There are also a number of clinics, such as the Righttime Medical Care center and Patient First.

Notable people

Sister cities

Columbia is a sister city to the planned cities of Cergy-Pontoise, France, and Tres Cantos, Spain.[needs update] The Columbia Association International and Multicultural Programs Advisory Committee organizes a summer exchange program for French and Spanish students enrolled in Howard County Public Schools. In 2013, CA announced its new sister city relationship with Tema, a port city in Ghana. The official celebration was marked with a Ghana Fest on November 17, 2013.[85] An advisory committee planned to sign the official SCI agreement by 2015.[citation needed] In 2016, Cap-Haïtien, Haiti became a sister city followed by Liyang, China in 2018.[86][87]

Related cities

The Rouse Company, now owned by the Howard Hughes Corporation, owns and operates multiple HUD Title VII-New Town planned community developments along with Columbia. These include The Woodlands, Texas, Bridgeland Community, Texas, and Summerlin, Nevada.[89]

References

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Further reading

  • Joseph Rocco Mitchell and David L. Stebenne, New City Upon A Hill: A History of Columbia, Maryland (The History Press, 2007)
  • Missy Burke, Robin Emrich and Barbara Kellner, (2008)
  • Barbara Kellner,

External links

  • Columbia Association, Inc.
  • Columbia Archives
  • Stephen Amidon talks to Kojo Nnamdi about growing up in Columbia in the 1970s ()
  • "A haven for interracial love amid relentless racism: Columbia turns 50" by DeNeen L. Brown, The Washington Post July 21, 2017

columbia, maryland, columbia, census, designated, place, howard, county, maryland, united, states, principal, communities, baltimore, washington, metropolitan, area, planned, community, consisting, self, contained, villages, planned, communitycensus, designate. Columbia is a census designated place in Howard County Maryland United States It is one of the principal communities of the Baltimore Washington metropolitan area It is a planned community consisting of 10 self contained villages Columbia MarylandPlanned communityCensus designated placeColumbia Town Center along Lake KittamaqundiMotto The Next America 1 Location of Columbia MarylandColumbiaShow map of MarylandColumbiaShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 39 12 13 N 76 51 25 W 39 20361 N 76 85694 W 39 20361 76 85694 Coordinates 39 12 13 N 76 51 25 W 39 20361 N 76 85694 W 39 20361 76 85694Country United StatesState MarylandCountyHowardFoundedJune 21 1967 2 Founded byJames RouseNamed forColumbia personification Area 3 Total32 19 sq mi 83 37 km2 Land31 93 sq mi 82 71 km2 Water0 26 sq mi 0 66 km2 Elevation407 ft 124 m Population 2020 Total104 681 Density3 278 04 sq mi 1 265 68 km2 The CDP includes areas not part of Columbia proper as defined by the Columbia Association Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP codes21044 21046Area codes410 443 667FIPS code24 19125GNIS feature ID0590002HighwaysI 95 US 29 MD 32 MD 100 MD 108 MD 175Websitecolumbiaassociation comColumbia began with the idea that a city could enhance its residents quality of life Creator and developer James W Rouse saw the new community in terms of human values rather than merely economics and engineering Opened in 1967 Columbia was intended to not only eliminate the inconveniences of then current subdivision design but also eliminate racial religious and class segregation 4 Columbia proper consists only of that territory governed by the Columbia Association but larger areas are included under its name by the U S Postal Service and the Census Bureau These include several other communities which predate Columbia including Simpsonville Atholton and in the case of the census part of Clarksville The census designated place had a population of 104 681 at the 2020 United States Census 5 It is the second most populous community in Maryland after Baltimore 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Howard County land acquisition 1 3 Unveiling and growth 1 4 Master plan 1 4 1 Villages and neighborhoods 1 5 Further expansion 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 2020 census 3 2 2010 census 3 3 2000 census 4 Economy 4 1 Shopping 5 Arts and culture 5 1 Entertainment and performing arts 5 2 Howard County Library System 5 3 Historic sites 5 4 Religion 6 Parks and recreation 7 Education 7 1 Colleges and universities 8 Infrastructure 8 1 Transportation 8 1 1 Public transit 8 1 2 Roads 8 2 Healthcare 9 Notable people 10 Sister cities 10 1 Related cities 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditOrigins Edit Columbia was founded by James W Rouse 1914 1996 a native of Easton Maryland In 1935 Rouse obtained a job in Baltimore with the Federal Housing Administration a New Deal agency whose purpose was to promote home ownership and home construction This position exposed Rouse to all phases of the housing industry 7 Later in the 1930s he co founded a Baltimore mortgage banking business the Moss Rouse Company In the 1950s his company by then known as James W Rouse and Company branched out into developing shopping centers and malls In 1957 Rouse formed Community Research and Development Inc CRD for the purpose of building owning and operating shopping centers throughout the country Community Research and Development Inc which was managed by James W Rouse and Company became a publicly traded company in 1961 In 1966 Community Research and Development Inc changed its name to The Rouse Company after it had acquired James W Rouse and Company in exchange for company stock 8 9 By the early 1950s Rouse was also active in organizations whose goals were to combat blight and promote urban renewal Along the way he came to recognize the importance of comprehensive planning and action to address housing issues A talented public speaker Rouse s speeches on housing matters attracted media attention By the mid 1950s he was espousing his belief that in order to be successful cities had to be places where people succeeded In a 1959 speech he declared that the purpose of cities is for people and that the objective of city planning should be to make a city into neighborhoods where men women and their families can live and work and most importantly grow in character personality religious fulfillment brotherhood and the capacity for joyous living citation needed In the early 1960s Rouse decided to develop a new model city Rouse s ideas about what a new model city should be like were informed by a number of factors including his personal Christian faith as well as the goal for his company to earn a profit influences that he did not consider to be incompatible with one another 10 After exploring possible new city locations near Atlanta Georgia and Raleigh Durham North Carolina Rouse focused his attention between Baltimore and Washington D C in Howard County Maryland Howard County land acquisition Edit In April 1962 Mel Berman a longtime Howard County resident who was also a member of the CRD s Board of Directors saw a sign on Cedar Lane in Howard County advertising 1 309 acres 530 ha for sale Berman reported the option to the CRD and a decision was made to purchase the land This was the first of 165 land purchases made by Rouse over the next year and a half In order to keep land costs low Jack Jones an attorney from Rouse s firm of Piper Marbury set up a grid system to secretly buy land through dummy corporations like the Alaska Iron Mines Company 11 12 Some of these straw purchasers included Columbia Industrial Development Corporation 95 32 Corporation 95 216 Corporation Premble Inc Columbia Mall Inc Oakland Ridge Industrial Development Corporation and Columbia Development Corporation Robert Moxley s firm Security Realty Company now Security Development Group Inc 13 negotiated many of the land deals for Jones becoming his best client 13 14 57 15 CRD accumulated 14 178 acres 57 38 km2 10 percent of Howard County from 140 separate owners Rouse was turned down in financing from David Rockefeller who had recently cancelled a planned Rouse Village concept called Pocantico Hills 14 58 The 19 122 622 acquisition was then funded by Rouse s former employer Connecticut General Life Insurance in October 1962 at an average price of 1 500 per acre 0 37 m2 The town center land of Oakland Manor was purchased from Isadore Guldesky who was turned down from building high rises on the site by Rob Moxley s brother County Commissioner and land developer Norman E Moxley Sensing that he had a key property he requested 5 million for his 1 000 acres 400 ha signing an agreement by hand on a land plat 16 The competition between Rouse and Guldesky carried over to the competing Tysons Corner Center and Tysons Galleria projects with each hiring their competitor s employees 17 By late 1962 citizens had elected an all Republican three member council J Hubert Black Charles E Miller and David W Force who campaigned on a low density growth ballot but later approved the Columbia project 18 The Howard County Planning Commission Chairman Wilmer Sanner declared if this adds to the orderly development of the county that s what we are looking for 14 56 That July Sanner sold the majority of his 73 acre 30 ha Simpsonville farm to Howard Research prior to the public announcement 19 In October 1963 the acquisition was revealed to the residents of Howard County putting to rest rumors about the mysterious purchases These had included theories that the site was to become a medical research laboratory or a giant compost heap Despite the moniker of being a planned city the planning for the city occupied Rouse officials for most of 1964 after the announcement while marketing director Scott Ditch was brought from Baltimore s Cross Keys development to promote the project to community groups 14 56 20 In December 1964 the zoning was rejected by planning director Tom Harris Jr for handing nearly all planning control to the developer A media push was instituted to approve the zoning by Dorris Thompson of The Howard County Times Seymour Barondes of the Howard County Civic Association and Anita Iribe of the League of Women Voters 14 64 In June 1965 zoning was approved for the project and Howard Research and Development entered into a 37 5 million construction deed backed by the property 21 22 Development was temporarily stalled in October 1965 when James and Anna Hepding of Simpsonville sued the planning board stating New Town zoning was a form of spot zoning benefiting a sole property owner The case was dropped when developer Homer Gudelsky purchased the estate 23 Ten years later former Councilman Charles E Miller stated that if he could do it over again he wouldn t have voted to approve Columbia He felt exploited and felt the subsidized housing would become a problem for the rest of the county 24 Miller had been defeated in the November 1974 Howard County Council elections in part as a result of the changed political landscape that Columbia s development brought In early 1976 a Columbia Flier editorial charged that Miller was a fear mongering reactionary who had a personal vendetta against Columbia Rouse and Columbia residents 25 Unveiling and growth Edit Blandair a historic plantation located in the center of Columbia At the unveiling on June 21 1967 James Rouse described Columbia as a planned new city which would avoid the leap frog and spot zoning development threatening the county The new city would be complete with jobs schools shopping and medical services and a range of housing choices Property taxes from commercial development would cover the additional services with which housing would burden the county The urban planning process for Columbia included not only planners but also a convened panel of nationally recognized experts in the social sciences known as the Work Group The fourteen member group of men and one woman Antonia Handler Chayes met for two days twice a month for half a year starting in 1963 14 68 The Work Group suggested innovations for planners in education recreation religion and health care as well as ways of improving social interactions Columbia s open classrooms interfaith centers and the then novel idea of a health maintenance organization HMO with a group practice of medical doctors the Columbia Medical Plan sprung from these meetings The community s physical plan with neighborhood and village centers was also decided Columbia s New Town District zoning ordinance gave developers great flexibility about what to put where without requiring county approval for each specific project citation needed In 1968 vice presidential candidate Spiro Agnew referenced Columbia to reporters saying Government should act as a catalyst to encourage the local governments to encourage industry and business to move next to a planned community and I want to lessen the density in the ghettos and concurrently rebuild the ghetto areas 26 In 1969 County Executive Omar J Jones felt that the increase in tax base was lagging behind the need for infrastructure as the operating budget doubled to 15 million in three years 27 Crime rates shot up around the county by 30 50 a year with hot spots around the development 28 29 By 1970 the project required additional financing to continue borrowing 30 million from Connecticut General Manufacturers Hanover Trust and Morgan Guaranty In 1972 amendments to New Town zoning proposing to place a maximum height for buildings and maintain the original density limit of 2 2 units per acre were opposed by Rouse allies including the Columbia Association the Ellicott City Businessman s Association and the Columbia Democratic Club 30 By 1974 the amount owed reached 100 000 million dubious discuss prompting partner Connecticut General to consider bankruptcy An effort to create a special taxing district in 1978 and an effort to incorporate with a mayor in 1979 failed 31 In 1985 Cigna Connecticut General divested itself of the project for 120 million By 1990 Howard Research and Development owed 125 162 689 32 22 In 2004 the project was sold to General Growth Properties which went bankrupt in 2008 General Growth Properties submitted a plan for increasing density throughout Columbia in 2004 which was unanimously voted down 33 Ownership of the project fell to the previous Rouse subsidiary the Howard Hughes Corporation Howard Hughes submitted a new plan to increase density in 2010 under the Ulman administration that passed unanimously citation needed Columbia has never incorporated some governance however is provided by the non profit Columbia Association which manages common areas and functions as a homeowner association with regard to private property The first boards were filled entirely with Rouse Company appointees 27 The first manager of the Columbia Association was John Estabrook Slayton d 1967 For Slayton s contributions to the early planning of Columbia the community center in the Wilde Lake village Slayton House was named for him Wilde Lake was the first village area to be developed in Columbia accordingly the town s first high school was Wilde Lake High School which opened in 1971 as a model school for the nation Constructed in the open classroom style it was razed in 1994 but reconstructed on the same site in 1996 citation needed Master plan Edit To achieve the goals set forth by the Work Group Columbia s Master Plan called for a series of ten self contained villages around which day to day life would revolve The centerpiece of Columbia would be The Mall in Columbia and man made Lake Kittamaqundi citation needed Villages and neighborhoods Edit The lakefront in Downtown Columbia sits upon Lake Kittamaqundi The village concept aimed to provide Columbia a small town feel like Easton Maryland where James Rouse grew up Each village comprises several neighborhoods The village center may contain middle and high schools All villages have a shopping center recreational facilities a community center a system of bike walking paths and homes Four of the villages have interfaith centers common worship facilities which are owned and jointly operated by a variety of religious congregations working together 34 Most of Columbia s neighborhoods contain single family homes townhomes condominiums and apartments though some are more exclusive than others The original plan following the neighborhood concept of Clarence Perry would have had all the children of a neighborhood attend the same school melding neighborhoods into a community and ensuring that all of Columbia s children get the same high quality education Rouse marketed the city as being color blind as a proponent of Senator Clark s fair housing legislation If a neighborhood was filled with too many purchasers of a single race houses would be blocked until the desired ratio was met 14 85 Village Neighborhoods in order of residential opening Wilde Lake Est 1967 Bryant Woods Faulkner Ridge Running Brook Harper s Choice Est 1968 Longfellow Swansfield Hobbit s Glen Oakland Mills Est 1969 Thunder Hill Talbott Springs Stevens Forest Long Reach Est 1971 Phelps Luck Jeffers Hill Locust Park Kendall Ridge Owen Brown Est 1972 Dasher Green Elkhorn Hopewell Town Center Est 1974 Vantage Point Banneker Amesbury Creighton s Run and Warfield Triangle Hickory Ridge Est 1974 Clemens Crossing Hawthorn Clary s Forest Kings Contrivance Est 1977 Macgill s Common Huntington Dickinson Dorsey s Search Est 1980 Dorsey Hall Fairway Hills River Hill Est 1990 Pheasant Ridge Pointers RunColumbia takes its street names from famous works of art and literature for example the neighborhood of Hobbit s Glen takes its street names from the work of J R R Tolkien Running Brook from the poetry of Robert Frost and Clemens Crossing from the work of Mark Twain The book Oh You Must Live in Columbia chronicles the artistic poetic and historical origins of the street and place names in Columbia 35 Further expansion Edit The Downtown Columbia Plan is a 2010 amendment to the county s General Plan of expansion It is a framework for the revitalization of Downtown Columbia over the next thirty years Development plans for downtown projects in the years ahead will include details for that project such as neighborhood design guidelines environmental restoration public amenities and infrastructure These development plans must adhere to the framework of the Downtown Columbia Plan as required by the zoning legislation Over the life of the Downtown Columbia development project as much as 13 million square feet of retail commercial residential hotel and cultural development is planned 36 To be accomplished in three phases the plan calls for the formation of the non profit Columbia Downtown Housing Corporation to build an additional 5 500 units of low income housing placed downtown in exchange for increased zoning density for other projects 37 Additional development includes 4 3 million square feet of commercial office space 1 25 million square feet of retail space 640 hotel rooms Merriweather Post Pavilion redevelopment and a multi modal transportation system 38 The Downtown Columbia Plan also has sustainability features including goals for saving water and energy and for ecology and livability Columbia s master developer the Howard Hughes Corporation is heading up the expansion project The project is projected to cost 90 million and will outline development in the community for the next 40 years 39 Geography Edit Map of the villages in Columbia Because Columbia is unincorporated there is confusion over its exact boundaries In the strictest definition Columbia comprises only the land governed under covenants by the Columbia Association This is a considerably smaller area than the census designated place CDP as defined by the United States Census Bureau The CDP has a total area of 32 2 square miles 83 4 km2 of which 31 9 square miles 82 7 km2 are land and 0 3 square miles 0 7 km2 or 0 80 are water 5 The CDP includes a number of older communities which do not lie within the CA s purview including the Holiday Hills Diamondback and Allview subdivisions and the former town of Simpsonville as well as some land on the east side of Clarksville These areas are not part of the new town and are not directly served by its amenities Some of these areas are included in Columbia ZIP codes by the post office and some are not Columbia is located in central Maryland 20 miles 32 km southwest of Baltimore 25 miles 40 km northeast of Washington D C and 30 miles 48 km northwest of Annapolis The community lies in the Piedmont region of Maryland with its eastern edge at the fall line The climate tends to hot humid summers and cool to cold and wet winters There are occasional large amounts of snowfall that happen every year The primary landforms in Columbia are rolling hills and stream valleys Columbia s road network is laid out to follow the terrain with many winding streets and cul de sacs Elevations range from about 200 to 500 feet 61 to 152 m above sea level Most of Columbia is drained by the Middle Patuxent and Little Patuxent rivers There are three artificial lakes created by damming of tributary streams during community construction In 1965 the Rouse Company leased 7 000 acres 2 800 ha of farmland staged for development and earmarked 4 000 acres 1 600 ha of oak forest for timber harvesting The company developed a sapling planter to replant sections of cleared land that would use Columbia s W R Grace developed fertilizers 40 An outer ring of greenspace was abandoned early in the project because the combination with the already required river buffers would have reduced profitable land available for building 14 76 Along with Symphony Woods many other stands of mature trees have been temporarily maintained in Columbia including the large Middle Patuxent Environmental Area in the western part of the community between Harper s Choice and River Hill villages protecting much of the river valley from development Climate Edit Columbia has a humid subtropical climate with cool winters and hot muggy summers Climate data for Columbia MDMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high F C 42 6 46 8 55 13 66 19 75 24 84 29 88 31 87 31 79 26 68 20 58 14 46 8 66 19 Average low F C 25 4 27 3 35 2 44 7 55 13 64 18 69 21 68 20 60 16 48 9 38 3 29 2 47 8 Average precipitation inches mm 3 16 80 3 14 80 4 10 104 3 81 97 4 56 116 4 23 107 4 05 103 3 43 87 4 60 117 3 98 101 4 21 107 3 77 96 47 04 1 195 Source weather com 41 Demographics EditNOTE The CDP includes considerable areas which are not part of the planned community As of July 2019 Columbia is a majority minority community with non Hispanic whites constituting 47 3 of the population 5 2020 census Edit Population by Race in Columbia MD 2020 42 Race Population of TotalTotal 104 681 100Caucasian 45 228 43African American 28 293 27Asian 13 369 13Hispanic 10 709 10Two or More Races 6 015 6Other 848 1Three or more races 478 lt 1 American Indian 524 1 2010 census Edit Historical populationCensus Pop 19708 815 198052 518495 8 199075 88344 5 200088 25416 3 201099 61512 9 2020104 6815 1 U S Decennial Census 43 The 2009 2013 census estimates report the median income for a household in the CDP was 99 877 The per capita income for the CDP was 46 374 About 4 1 of families and 6 6 of the population were below the poverty line including 8 8 of those under age 18 and 6 4 of those age 65 or over 44 2000 census Edit As of the census 5 of 2000 there were 88 254 people 34 199 households and 23 118 families residing in the CDP The population density was 3 202 0 inhabitants per square mile 1 236 3 km2 There were 35 281 housing units at an average density of 1 280 0 per square mile 494 2 km2 The racial makeup of the CDP was 66 52 White 21 47 Black or African American 0 26 Native American 7 30 Asian 0 05 Pacific Islander 1 63 from other races and 2 76 from two or more races 4 12 of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race 14 of Columbia s residents were German 11 Irish 10 English 5 Italian 4 Polish 2 Russian 2 Scottish 2 Indian 2 Chinese 2 Korean 2 Sub Saharan African 2 French and 2 West Indian 45 There were 34 199 households out of which 35 9 had children under the age of 18 living with them 53 4 were married couples living together 11 2 had a female householder with no husband present and 32 4 were non families 25 6 of all households were made up of individuals and 5 1 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 54 and the average family size was 3 09 In the CDP the population was spread out with 26 3 under the age of 18 6 7 from 18 to 24 34 1 from 25 to 44 25 5 from 45 to 64 and 7 5 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 36 years For every 100 females there were 93 1 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 88 7 males Economy EditJames Rouse conceived of a city not a suburban bedroom community and a large area on the eastern edge was allocated for industrial purposes The centerpiece of this aspect of the development was a General Electric appliance plant on a 1 125 acre 4 55 km2 site previously operated as a cattle farm 46 47 After an injunction attempt was blocked in 1969 the plant began operations in 1972 peaking at 2 300 of the predicted 12 000 jobs It was closed in 1990 with all but 21 acres 85 000 m2 of the property being sold back to Howard Research and Development 14 141 One section of the property was subsequently redeveloped for big box retail the remainder became the large Gateway Commerce office complex still being expanded 48 In 1968 Bendix Field Engineering moved to a new 143 000 square foot 13 300 m2 facility on the historic Woodlawn Plantation where it was used for engineering activity Howard County purchased the vacant facility creating the Maryland Center for Entrepreneurship in 2011 which relocated to the vacant Patuxent Publishing building in 2014 49 50 There is still a smaller industrial area to the south of this but by and large East Columbia is dominated by commercial real estate office retail and wholesale in contrast to the original plan which saw the Town Center area as the commercial center of Columbia 51 The U S federal government is the source of many jobs for Columbians Several large U S Department of Defense installations and R amp D facilities surround Columbia the largest being the National Security Agency at Fort George G Meade and the Applied Physics Laboratory south of Columbia both pre dating the establishment of Columbia Companies which have had research facilities in the area include W R Grace and Company Further afield many Columbians commute to government and government contractor jobs in the Baltimore and Washington D C area citation needed Companies based in Columbia include W R Grace and Company 52 53 Sourcefire PetMeds MICROS Systems Martek Biosciences Integral Systems GP Strategies Corporation Corporate Office Properties Trust and the consumer research company Nielsen Audio formerly Arbitron citation needed When MaggieMoo s was an independent company its headquarters was in Columbia 53 54 Shopping Edit The Mall in Columbia located in Town Center is a large regional shopping mall with three anchor department stores Nordstrom Macy s and JCPenney a multiplex movie theater and more than 200 stores and restaurants There are several other major competing shopping centers in East Columbia including Dobbin Center strip mall opened in 1983 Snowden Square big box retail on the remainder of the GE industrial site Columbia Crossing I and II big box retail started in 1997 and Gateway Overlook 14 142 Columbia s nine village centers provide residents with nearby shopping as well often including supermarkets gas stations liquor stores dry cleaners restaurants and hair salons The village centers are laid out so that individual stores are not visible from the road unlike traditional strip malls The arrangement is criticized because it makes it difficult for newcomers and non residents to know what shopping is available it is praised for eliminating much of the garishness of roadside America citation needed The village centers have evolved over time The Oakland Mills Village Center had a traditional Village Center layout stores located off a central corridor until its demolition in the late 1990s It has since been replaced with a more traditional strip mall managed by Cedar Realty Trust The Rouse Company abandoned the village center concept in 2002 selling off the assets to Kimco Realty for 120 million 55 The Kings Contrivance Village Center underwent major construction in 2007 and 2008 when a new Harris Teeter supermarket was added to the center but maintained the original character of stores around a central corridor and plaza Owen Brown village center is now managed by GFS Realty and the Long Reach Village center was declared blighted and purchased by Howard County for resale in 2014 56 Arts and culture EditEntertainment and performing arts Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Columbia Maryland news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Merriweather Post Pavilion The National playing at Virgin Mobile Freefest at Merriweather Post Pavilion In the absence of nightclubs Columbia relies on local bars to bring in bands Sonoma s in Owen Brown and Nottingham s Tavern and The Green Turtle near Dobbin Center regularly bring in groups to perform Merriweather Post Pavilion a well known outdoor concert venue attracts many prominent performers 57 In addition there are several performing arts organizations that present professional theater including Toby s Dinner Theatre Columbia Center for Theatrical Arts and the Young Columbians which have produced the area premieres of several musicals Columbia also offers chamber music concerts children s programs community outreach programs master classes and pre concert lectures and discussions through the Candlelight Concert Society a non profit organization formed by Columbia residents to provide chamber music concerts since 1972 58 Howard County Library System Edit Howard County Library System HCLS is consistently top rated among the nation s public library systems according to Hennen s American Public Library Ratings HAPLR 59 Two of the six branches of the Howard County Library System are in Columbia including the Central Branch in Town Center and the East Columbia Branch in Owen Brown Historic sites Edit Two historic buildings in Columbia Dorsey Hall and Woodlawn were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973 60 Both were once homes of prominent Howard County citizens Most historic buildings mills and plantations within Columbia that qualified for the register such as Oakland Manor 61 were not submitted by Rouse company affiliates Religion Edit Rouse believed that individual churches were a waste of developable land 10 Dr Stanley Hallet advised the 1964 work group to economically abandon The extravagance of church life in favor of ecumenical establishments that focused resources on retreat centers and non profit religious corporations 62 The Rouse Company discouraged individual congregations from purchasing land from the company 10 In 1966 the Columbia Religious Facilities Corporation was founded to lease interfaith centers to congregations 63 64 On June 22 1969 2 5 million in church donations applied to the CFRC to purchase Columbia land and build an interfaith facility in the village of Wilde Lake The organization formed the Interfaith Housing Corporation now the Columbia Housing Corporation to purchase 300 units of low and moderate income housing in the development with Federal Housing Authority funding 14 97 65 Parks and recreation EditRecreation has always been an important part of the Columbia concept citation needed The homeowners association the Columbia Association known to many in Howard County as CA builds operates and maintains most of these facilities CA operates a variety of recreational facilities including 23 outdoor swimming pools five indoor pools two water slides ice and roller skating rinks an equestrian center a sports park with miniature golf a skateboard park batting cages picnic pavilions clubhouse and playground three athletic clubs including the 24 7 Supreme Sports Club numerous indoor and outdoor tennis basketball volleyball squash pickleball and racquetball courts and running tracks In February 2006 LifeTime Fitness a Minnesota company opened a 24 7 health club at the edge of the Columbia Gateway industrial park This facility includes one outdoor and two indoor pools with water slides racquetball courts basketball courts fitness equipment and pilates and yoga facilities There are three lakes Lake Kittamaqundi Lake Elkhorn and Wilde Lake surrounded by parkland for sailing fishing and boating 80 miles 130 km of paths for jogging strolling and biking and 148 tot lots and play areas Nine village centers 15 neighborhood centers and four senior centers provide space for a large variety of community activities There are a variety of fairs and celebrations throughout the year including entertainment on the lakefront of Lake Kittamaqundi during the summer and the Columbia Festival of the Arts Columbia also has garden plots for rent under the guidance of the Columbia Gardeners which has been in existence since the 1970s There are about 350 garden plots at three sites in Columbia with each garden rented for a nominal fee at one time 30 per year when 66 Chiara D Amore s Community Ecology Institute s Freetown Farm founded in 2016 uses hands on gardening to educate people and cultivates communities where people thrive together Freetown farm was built on the site of Columbia s last working farm The name Freetown farm refers to the area s historical name and its ties to the Underground Railroad It features a NAACP garden and donates the much of the food that is raise to local food banks 67 In 2017 Columbia FC a soccer club based in Columbia was founded Consisting of former Howard County students and transfer players the sports club made their debut in Maryland s Major Soccer League Division I on September 8 2019 Education EditColumbia s public schools are operated by the Howard County Public School System As of the 2007 2008 school year the following high schools served some part of Columbia 68 Atholton 69 Centennial Hammond 70 Howard 71 Long Reach 72 Oakland Mills 73 River Hill 74 Wilde Lake 75 Most of these schools also serve students from outside Columbia as is also the case with some middle and elementary schools Colleges and universities Edit There are no conventional four year colleges or universities in Columbia but several other college level programs have facilities there Howard Community College is located near the town center while the University of Phoenix American Career Institute Lincoln College of Technology Loyola University Maryland University of Maryland Baltimore County Maryland University of Integrative Health and Johns Hopkins University have facilities on the east side of town at Columbia Gateway Business Park In 1966 Howard Community College HCC was founded by the Board of Education in Howard County and formally authorized by the Howard County Commissioners Charles E Miller J Hubert Black and David W Force In addition to its original campus in Columbia it now has satellite campuses in Mount Airy Laurel and East Columbia in the Columbia Gateway Business Park Infrastructure EditTransportation Edit Public transit Edit Columbia s initial plan called for a minibus system connecting the village centers on a distinct right of way that allowed denser development along the route 76 The routes were not constructed though minibuses were operated by the Columbia Association under the name ColumBus These were eventually taken over by Howard County Six Howard Transit bus routes served Columbia and connected it with its neighboring areas such as Ellicott City and BWI Airport until they were replaced by Regional Transportation Agency of Central Maryland RTA in 2014 Several Maryland Transit Administration MTA routes provide access to and from both Washington and Baltimore MTA weekday commuter bus service connects Columbia to the Washington Metro system There are no rail stations within Columbia although the Dorsey MARC Train station is served by RTA buses RTA provides local bus service as well as the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority and Maryland Transit Administration RTA Bus Routes include 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 501 and 503 OurBus offers intercity bus service from Columbia to New Brunswick New Jersey and New York City Roads Edit I 95 in Columbia Columbia has a number of roadways that serve the community see below All of these highways allow Columbia access to nearby Baltimore Washington D C and Annapolis U S Route 29 Columbia Pike runs north south connecting Columbia to Ellicott City and Washington D C Interstate 95 runs north south connecting Columbia to Baltimore and Washington D C MD 32 Patuxent Freeway runs east west connecting Columbia to Sykesville and Annapolis MD 100 Paul T Pitcher Memorial Highway runs east from U S Route 29 connecting Columbia to Glen Burnie MD 175 Rouse Parkway a central artery that runs east west from the Town Center to Jessup MD 108 Clarksville Pike Waterloo Road forms the northern boundary of the community by running east west from Clarksville to Ellicott City Healthcare Edit Medical care is available at Howard County General Hospital affiliated with Baltimore s Johns Hopkins Hospital The Columbia Medical Plan was founded in 1967 as a health maintenance organization HMO available to citizens of Columbia 14 99 77 In more recent years however this plan has divided into separate medical groups that simply share the Twin Knolls buildings Today there is a Kaiser Permanente facility located in the Columbia Gateway industrial park There are also a number of clinics such as the Righttime Medical Care center and Patient First Notable people EditStephen Amidon author whose 2000 novel The New City is set in a fictionalized Columbia in the 1970s Bob Beaumont 1932 2011 founder of Citicar an electric automobile manufacturer from 1974 to 1977 78 Jayson Blair disgraced former New York Times reporter Zach Brown linebacker for the NFL s Washington Redskins Michael Chabon Pulitzer Prize winning author Dan Charnas journalist and author of The Big Payback The History of the Business of Hip Hop 79 Frank Cho creator of Liberty Meadows comic strip George Colligan New York based jazz pianist Cristeta Comerford White House executive chef Jack Douglass internet personality on YouTube 80 Mary Downing Hahn award winning author of young adult literature Brent Faiyaz singer and record producer Kevin Frazier journalist and TV broadcaster Gallant Grammy nominated singer songwriter Alicia Graf Mack dancer director of dance division at Juilliard School Justin Gorham born 1998 basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League Tom Green ultra runner 81 Greg Hawkes keyboardist for new wave band The Cars David Hobby professional photographer and author of the Strobist com lighting blog Stephen Hunter Pulitzer Prize winning film critic and author Julia Ioffe journalist Kerry G Johnson award winning caricaturist cartoonist and children s book illustrator Robert Kolker author and editor Mark Levine New York City Council member Laura Lippman award winning mystery author Steve Lombardozzi former professional baseball player Steve Lombardozzi Jr professional baseball player Suzanne Malveaux CNN reporter Aaron Maybin defensive end for NFL s New York Jets Aaron McGruder animator and cartoonist The Boondocks Edward Norton Academy Award nominated actor and grandson of James Rouse made his professional debut at age 8 at Toby s Dinner Theatre in the Town Center Alexis Ohanian co founder of Reddit Toby Orenstein theater director and founder of Toby s Dinner Theatre Columbia Center for Theatrical Arts and the Young Columbians Randy Pausch professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University author of The Last Lecture Ian Jones Quartey writer storyboard artist animator and voice actor OK K O Let s Be Heroes Elise Ray Olympic gymnast James W Rouse urban planner real estate developer and philanthropist grandfather of actor Edward Norton Peter Salett singer songwriter Christian Siriano fashion designer winner of fourth season of Project Runway born in Columbia Dave Sitek guitarist and music producer member of the band TV on the Radio Linda Tripp central figure in the Monica Lewinsky scandal Terry Virts astronaut Void punk band Greg Whittington basketball player Air Commodore Sir Frank Whittle OM KBE inventor of the jet engine Oprah Winfrey talk show host television producer actress author and philanthropist Winfrey lived in Columbia during the time she worked at WJZ in Baltimore between 1976 and 1983 82 83 84 Sister cities EditColumbia is a sister city to the planned cities of Cergy Pontoise France and Tres Cantos Spain needs update The Columbia Association International and Multicultural Programs Advisory Committee organizes a summer exchange program for French and Spanish students enrolled in Howard County Public Schools In 2013 CA announced its new sister city relationship with Tema a port city in Ghana The official celebration was marked with a Ghana Fest on November 17 2013 85 An advisory committee planned to sign the official SCI agreement by 2015 citation needed In 2016 Cap Haitien Haiti became a sister city followed by Liyang China in 2018 86 87 Cergy Pontoise France 1977 88 Tres Cantos Spain 1990 88 Tema Ghana 2013 Cap Haitien Haiti 2016 Liyang China 2018 Related cities Edit The Rouse Company now owned by the Howard Hughes Corporation owns and operates multiple HUD Title VII New Town planned community developments along with Columbia These include The Woodlands Texas Bridgeland Community Texas and Summerlin Nevada 89 References Edit Levinson David M 2003 The Next America Revisited Journal of Planning Education and Research 22 329 329 344 doi 10 1177 0739456X03022004001 S2CID 13196176 Columbia Archives Columbia Association Archived from the original on February 2 2014 Retrieved January 23 2014 2020 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved April 26 2022 Galambos Louis 2011 The Creative Society and the Price Americans Paid for It Cambridge University Press p 160 ISBN 978 1107600997 a b c d QuickFacts Columbia CDP Maryland United States Census Bureau n d Retrieved November 11 2022 Age and Sex 2015 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates S0101 All places within Maryland American Factfinder U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved August 1 2017 Unless otherwise noted this section is derived from Joseph R Mitchell David Stebenne New City Upon a Hill A History of Columbia Maryland pp 28 56 ISBN 9781614230991 C R D Board Backs Swap of Stock With Rouse Firm The Baltimore Sun February 9 1966 p C11 Suit Filed to Void Rouse s Recent Acquisition of Firm The Baltimore Sun August 21 1966 p FE29 a b c Numrich Paul D 2019 How important is religion in interreligious relationships Interreligious space sharing as a case study Journal of Interreligious Studies 26 42 57 Retrieved November 11 2022 Haar Charles Monroe Liebman Lance Property and Law Little Brown p 685 Forsythe Reforming Suburbia The Planned Communities of Irvine Columbia and The Woodlands p 114 a b Adam Sachs November 16 1993 Developer envisions 22 homes on 10 acres of Dasher Homestead Moxley has ties to Columbia s birth The Baltimore Sun a b c d e f g h i j k l Joseph R Mitchell David Stebenne New City Upon a Hill A History of Columbia Maryland Barbara Kellner Columbia p 10 Gurney Breckenfeld Columbia and the New Cities p 233 H Max Ammerman Dies Development Suburban Malls The Washington Post November 1 1988 Stebenne David Mitchell Joseph Rocco 2007 New City Upon a Hill A History of Columbia Maryland Arcadia Publishing p 48 ISBN 9781614230991 Maryland State Archives Book 440 pp 80 82 Jacques Kelly June 20 2009 Rouse Official Oversaw Naming Of Columbia s Streets Helped Gain Harborplace Approval The Baltimore Sun Columbia Archives June 14 1992 Columbia s first 25 years a chronology The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on February 1 2014 Retrieved June 8 2013 a b HOWARD COUNTY MARYLAND et al v HOWARD RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION et al PDF Archived PDF from the original on September 23 2006 Retrieved February 14 2014 Flashbacks The Baltimore Sun October 17 1990 Michael J Clark June 19 1977 At youthful age of 10 Columbia is feeling like a grown up new town The Baltimore Sun p B1 Middle Patuxent a solid proposal The Columbia Flier January 15 1976 Richard Reeves August 25 1968 Agnew Says Vice President Should Quit in a Major Rift The Washington Post a b Ellen Hoffman September 26 1969 New Towners The Voiceless Marylanders Columbia Citizens Seeking More Say The Washington Post Tom Huth September 19 1972 Howard County Boom Malignant or Benign The Washington Post Rural Howard County Goes on a Crime Alert The Washington Post December 11 1971 Michael J Clark June 22 1972 Rouse campaigning against Columbia zoning amendments The Baltimore Sun Micheal J Clark February 21 1979 Plan to Incorporate Columbia Faces Defeat The Baltimore Sun Joshua Olsen A Biography of James Rouse p 234 Howard Week The Baltimore Sun September 19 2004 Hurley Amanda July 13 2017 Here s a suburban experiment cities can learn from The Washington Post Retrieved January 24 2019 Publications Books Columbia Archives Columbia Association Archived from the original on July 25 2011 DOWNTOWN COLUMBIA PLAN A General Plan Amendment PDF Howard County Maryland February 1 2010 Archived from the original PDF on December 9 2013 Retrieved October 2 2012 Lindsey McPherson September 24 2012 Group hopes to provide affordable housing in downtown Columbia Patuxent FAQ Downtown Columbia MD Howard County Maryland 2012 lt http www columbiamd com plan faq gt Retrieved October 2 2012 Waseem Fatimah November 9 2016 Howard County Times The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on February 20 2017 Retrieved February 19 2017 HRD Howards Biggest Farmer The Howard County Times March 31 1965 Monthly Averages for Columbia MD 21044 Weather com Retrieved March 19 2012 Census 2020 P L 94 171 Data Maryland gov Retrieved September 22 2021 Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved June 4 2016 Selected Economic Characteristics Retrieved December 24 2014 Columbia MD Ancestry amp Family History Epodunk com Archived from the original on April 27 2015 Retrieved April 19 2015 Laura Barnhardt May 19 1996 Farmers Town s forgotten pioneers In 1960s they sold land to Rouse making Columbia possible The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on July 2 2013 Retrieved July 30 2015 Columbia GE Plant Grows The Washington Post May 17 1973 STATEMENT OF BASIS GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY COLUMBIA MARYLAND EPA ID NO MDD046279311 JUNE 2012 PDF Archived PDF from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved July 4 2014 Peter Muncie September 20 1968 Bendix Field Unit to Move The Baltimore Sun Amanda Yeager May 8 2014 Howard Co to buy Columbia Flier building as headquarters for business incubator The Baltimore Sun Nicholas Dagen Bloom Merchant of Illusion James Rouse America s Salesman of the Businessman s Utopia p 114 Grace in Maryland Archived 2011 07 03 at the Wayback Machine W R Grace and Company Retrieved on June 29 2011 Corporate Headquarters amp Grace Davison Headquarters W R Grace amp Co 7500 Grace Drive Columbia MD 2104 a b Columbia CDP Maryland Archived 2011 06 06 at the Wayback Machine U S Census Bureau Retrieved on February 26 2010 Bishop Tricia February 16 2007 Firm with Md roots buys MaggieMoo s The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Retrieved November 11 2022 Richard J Sharoff bought the company He moved the operation to Columbia Vozzella Laura February 8 2002 Rouse selling Columbia centers The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Retrieved November 11 2022 Lavoie Luke May 30 2014 Columbia market study presents recommendations The Baltimore Sun Mitchell Joseph Rocco Stebenne David L 2007 New City Upon a Hilll A History of Columbia Maryland History Press p 89 ISBN 978 1 5962 9067 9 Candlelight Concert Society Candlelight Concert Society better source needed Hennen s American Public Library Ratings Hennen s American Public Library Ratings Archived September 11 2013 at the Wayback Machine Hennen s American Public Library Ratings HAPLR 2010 retrieved October 18 2010 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service April 15 2008 National Register Historic Listings Howard County Retrieved June 20 2014 Columbia Ecumenical Adventure The Communicator News of the Episcopal Church in Maryland November 1966 Martin M Chemers Culture and Environment p 285 Columbia Religious Facilities Corporation Retrieved November 11 2014 Nicholas Dagen Bloom Suburban Alchemy 1960s New Towns and the Transformation of the American Dream p 172 Doug Miller Turning over a new leaf could be growing concern Columbia Flyer May 31 2007 page 17 Freetown Farm is cultivating veggies and nurturing communities Today Columbia Maryland October 7 2022 Retrieved November 11 2022 Howard County High School Attendance Area Map PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 7 2009 Atholton High School ahs hcpss org Hammond High School Archived from the original on September 24 2010 Retrieved July 10 2005 Howard High School Archived from the original on August 26 2005 Retrieved July 10 2005 LRHS Home Archived from the original on April 15 2005 Retrieved July 10 2005 Oakland Mills High School Archived from the original on September 12 2005 Retrieved July 10 2005 River Hill High School Archived from the original on May 29 2005 Retrieved July 10 2005 Home www wildelake com Edward P Eichler Marshall Kaplan The Community Builders p 69 Harold S Luft Health Maintenance Organizations Dimensions of Performance p 345 Bunkley Nick Bob Beaumont Who Popularized Electric Cars Dies at 79 The New York Times October 29 2011 Accessed October 30 2011 Paid In Full An Interview With Dan Charnas Author of The Big Payback The History of the Business of Hip Hop Part 1 Scottscope Archived from the original on April 3 2011 Retrieved September 17 2012 Brookes May October 25 2009 Student strikes YouTube gold The Eagle Archived from the original on November 8 2012 Retrieved May 24 2012 Nitkin Karen November 21 2007 Tom Green Ultrarunner A laid back Columbia man is a pioneer in running races of 50 miles or longer The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on July 19 2018 Retrieved May 5 2016 Oprah Winfrey Columbia TV personality s flying high Columbia Flier September 14 1978 p 38 Oprah Had a Presence in Maryland Columbia MD Patch May 31 2011 OPRAH DIDN T FEEL LIKE WINNER UNTIL SHE WAS A LOSER Deseret News January 1 1997 International amp Multicultural Advisory Committee IMAC Meeting Agenda PDF Archived PDF from the original on February 14 2018 Columbia Maryland s newest sister city is Liyang China Columbia Association September 11 2018 Retrieved October 3 2020 Holzberg Janene Columbia poised to add China s Liyang as sister city baltimoresun com Retrieved October 3 2020 a b Columbia Association Archived from the original on February 3 2014 Retrieved January 22 2014 Howard Hughes Corporation Properties Archived from the original on December 5 2013 Retrieved December 2 2013 Further reading EditJoseph Rocco Mitchell and David L Stebenne New City Upon A Hill A History of Columbia Maryland The History Press 2007 Missy Burke Robin Emrich and Barbara Kellner Oh you must live in Columbia The origins of place names in Columbia Maryland 2008 Barbara Kellner Columbia Images of AmericaExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Columbia Maryland Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Columbia Maryland Columbia Association Inc Columbia Archives Columbia Maryland Stephen Amidon talks to Kojo Nnamdi about growing up in Columbia in the 1970s interview A haven for interracial love amid relentless racism Columbia turns 50 by DeNeen L Brown The Washington Post July 21 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Columbia Maryland amp oldid 1132492783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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