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The Robert Llewellyn Wright House is a historic home located at 7927 Deepwell Drive in Bethesda, Maryland.It is an 1800-square foot two-story concrete-block structure designed by architect Frank Lloyd Wright in 1953, and constructed in 1957 for his sixth child, Robert Llewellyn Wright (1903–86), who worked at the Justice Department.
Congregation Beth El (Bethesda, Maryland) Bethesda Meeting House; ... Maryland Residence; Medical Center station (Washington Metro) Milton (Bethesda, Maryland)
Medical Center is the last underground station heading towards Shady Grove, as north of this station, it emerges from the tunnel onto a brief elevated section, crossing the Capital Beltway. The station is one of 11 stations in the system constructed with rock tunneling and is accordingly deeper underground than most stations in the system. [ 10 ]
HO-436, Dr. Isaac J. Martin House (Kroh House) 3802 Church Road, Ellicott City; HO-437, Bright House, Lawyer's Row (Reuben Johnson House) 8343 Court Avenue, Ellicott City; HO-438, Brother's Partnership (Peter Harmon House) 5740 Waterloo Road (MD 108), Columbia; HO-439, Curtis-Shipley House 5771 Waterloo Road (MD 108), Ellicott City
Bethesda (/ b ə ˈ θ ɛ z d ə /) is an unincorporated, census-designated place in southern Montgomery County, Maryland, United States.Located just northwest of Washington, D.C., it is a major business and government center of the Washington metropolitan region and a national center for medical research.
The campus is located between Old Georgetown Road to the west, Wisconsin Avenue to the east, West Cedar Lane to the North, and downtown Bethesda to the south. The Walter Reed National Military Medical Center is located directly across Wisconsin Ave. from the campus, and the Washington, D.C. border is less than three miles to the south.
On December 13, 1943, Suburban Hospital opened its doors as a 130-bed hospital constructed to accommodate the expanding World War II military population in rural Montgomery County, Maryland. In its first full year, the small facility, consisting of several one story cottages, admitted 3,000 patients and had an operating budget of $13,000.
In 1938, the United States Congress appropriated funds for the acquisition of land for the construction of a new naval medical center, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt selected the present site in Bethesda, Maryland, and exterior design for it, on July 5, 1938.