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Reston Town Center is located 6 miles (9.7 km) east of Washington Dulles International Airport and 21 miles (34 km) west of Washington, D.C., just north of Exit 12 (Reston Parkway) of the Dulles Toll Road (VA-267).
Lake Anne Center was the first village center created in the planned community, and features a mix of commercial and residential buildings around a plaza and inlet of Lake Anne, a man-made reservoir. The village center was designed by Reston's master planner and architect James Rossant of New York City for Robert E. Simon and built 1963–67.
The station is located in the central section of Reston, within the median of SR 267 (Dulles Toll Road) west of its interchange with SR 602 (Reston Parkway). Reston Town Center is approximately 2,000 ft (610 m) to the north of the station.
Between 1991 and 2021 the show was known as the Northern Virginia Fine Arts Festival, [5] [6] and the name was changed to the Tephra Fine Arts Festival following a similar name change of the festival's organizer, [6] [5] which changed from being the Greater Reston Arts Center to the Tephra Institute of Contemporary Art in 2021. [7]
Reston is a census-designated place in Fairfax County, Virginia, United States, and a principal city of both Northern Virginia and the Washington metropolitan area. [5] As of the 2020 U.S. census, Reston's population was 63,226.
First responders in a Texas town are struggling to cope with the trauma of recovering bodies from the Rio Grande Morgan Chesky and Alicia Victoria Lozano February 25, 2024 at 9:00 AM
It was built in 1962 and named after Anne W. Simon, the spouse of Robert E. Simon, Reston's founder. [1] The contents of the lake come mainly from rainfall and surface runoff, as well as underground springs. [2] Lake Anne is also the name of the historic village center that surrounds the lake. Lake Anne and its adjacent neighborhood form the ...
U.S. Geological Survey National Center visitor entrance in 2011. The approximately 1,000,000 sq. ft., 1,200 foot long U.S. Geological Survey National Center building sits on a 105-acre site and is divided into three main sections—the agency administration offices, the laboratories, and the map reproduction area. [3]