North Bethesda’s Strathmore Square wins Montgomery Planning’s top award at 2025 ceremony
From a transit-oriented North Bethesda development to a pocket plaza in Bethesda, several local sites in Montgomery County are in the spotlight following recognition by local planning officials and other experts as exemplary examples of architecture and design.
On Thursday, Montgomery Planning hosted its Design Excellence Awards event at the Marriott International Headquarters in downtown Bethesda, featuring projects honored by the department and the American Institute of Architects (AIA) Potomac Valley chapter’s 2025 Celebrate Design awards.
The awards ceremony aims to highlight and celebrate the finest examples of architecture and design in the county, Montgomery Planning officials said at the event.
At the start of the ceremony, Montgomery County Planning Board Chair Artie Harris told the dozens of architects, developers, planners and elected officials in attendance that the event was about “recognizing visionaries” whose work transforms neighborhoods, enhances public spaces and makes the county a “vibrant” place.
“It’s remarkable how simple materials, like brick, wood and concrete, can be transformed and transformative. We are privileged to be surrounded by so many projects that demonstrate the interplay between building, street and public space,” Harris said. “These projects foster connection, inclusion and a true sense of place.”
Three county development projects were recognized with planning department awards for “excellence” in design, housing and placemaking: Strathmore Square, an 8-acre transit-oriented development in North Bethesda; The Sophia, a new residential building in Bethesda’s Woodmont Triangle neighborhood; and a pocket plaza at the corner of Wisconsin and Bethesda avenues in downtown Bethesda.
Montgomery Planning Director Jason Sartori said the winners exemplified more than just beautiful aesthetics, but the ability to connect people.
“Your work inspires us every day in the work that we do in the planning department,” Sartori said to the developers and architects at the ceremony. “It challenges us and it moves us closer to our goal of complete communities. You’ve shown us what’s possible when creativity meets purpose.”
Other winners
The AIA Potomac Valley chapter also honored five projects in Montgomery County, among others in Maryland, Virginia and the District.
Here are the county winners:
- A zig-zag-shaped pavilion at Hillandale Local Park in Silver Spring received a Merit Award in the small projects category. The project was designed by Winstanley Architects & Planners, of Alexandria, Virginia, and is owned by Montgomery Parks; and
- Bullis Park Residence in Silver Spring, designed by Carib Daniel Martin of A+D Architects, of Kensington, received a Commendation Award in the residential architecture category;
- The Leggett and the Silver Spring Recreation & Aquatic Center in downtown Silver Spring, designed by the Washington, D.C.-based KDG Architecture firm, received a Commendation Award in the multi-family architecture category;
- A home library in Potomac, called “A 15 Year Library for 10,000 Books” and designed by Takoma Park’s Added Dimensions Inc., received a Merit Award in the interior architecture category;
- The Isaiah Leggett Math and Science Building at Montgomery College’s Takoma Park/Silver Spring campus, designed by the Detroit-based SmithGroup, received an Honor Award in the institutional architecture category.