Rockville 2040 Comprehensive Plan

The Rockville 2040 Comprehensive Plan describes the broad vision for the city’s future. It is the core philosophy that guides development, conservation, and capital improvement projects to improve the quality of life in the Rockville community. The plan establishes new policies, and retains many existing ones, to guide the city’s growth, development, and quality of life over the next 20 years, including in the areas of land use, transportation, housing, recreation and parks, the environment, and historic preservation, among other topics. During the life of the plan’s 20-year timeframe, decisions are made on land use issues and budget priorities, guided by the extent to which they correspond with the plan. The current plan was adopted in August 2021 to replace the 2002 Comprehensive Master Plan.

The Rockville 2040 Comprehensive Plan is comprised of 10 citywide topical Elements and 17 neighborhood-scale Planning Areas. Both sections derive from feedback gathered throughout the Rockville 2040 process, which included numerous listening sessions, citywide forums, open houses, and other meetings, as well as analysis and discussion by staff and the Planning Commission.

Amendments to the Comprehensive Plan

As the Comprehensive Plan is a long-range planning document, amendments may be necessary from time-to-time to ensure continued alignment with the city’s goals and visions for its future. The policies, goals, and visions within the amendments are treated with the same weight as those in the original Comprehensive Plan document as it was adopted in 2021.

The Pedestrian Master Plan, adopted into the Comprehensive Plan on Oct. 30, 2023, amends, clarifies, and in many cases provides more details regarding the facility and policy planning within the city’s Comprehensive Plan, while helping to implement the city’s Transportation Vision, which states, “Rockville’s transportation system will provide residents, businesses, employees, and visitors with multiple options for moving about the city through a variety of modes and paths while ensuring access for persons of all abilities and mobilities…Rockville will continue to transition to a more walkable community and contribute to regional efforts to create safe, efficient, and environmentally sustainable mobility.” The plan provides an overview of the pedestrian network and identifies policy and infrastructure improvements to address unique issues faced by people walking and rolling.

The Rockville Town Center Master Plan, adopted on Jan. 27, 2025, replaces the Planning Area 1 chapter of the Comprehensive Plan, as it was initially adopted in 2021. The Town Center Master Plan establishes a vision for the Town Center neighborhood of Rockville to “continue to grow as a vibrant, multicultural, diverse, and inclusive community that celebrates a high quality of life and sense of place. A neighborhood at its core, Town Center will be a hub within the region for sustainable, walkable, transit-oriented living.” To achieve this vision, the Town Center Master Plan calls for a flexible regulatory environment, encourages the development of additional housing units, and promotes higher density development, all of which will strengthen the local economy and bring this vision to life.

The Lincoln Park Conservation District Amendments were adopted on Jan. 27, 2025 into the 2007 Lincoln Park Neighborhood Conservation District Plan, which was adopted to preserve the existing character of the streetscape and community in an approximately 94-acre section of the Lincoln Park neighborhood. The adopted amendments revise standards for new construction within the boundaries of the conservation district, including maximum building footprint, maximum height of structures, and minimum front setbacks. Since the 2007 plan was adopted into the Comprehensive Plan in 2021, the 2025 amendments were also adopted into the Comprehensive Plan.

Annual Reports

To provide transparency to the Rockville community, the Comprehensive Planning Division issues annual reports to demonstrate progress made toward implementing the Comprehensive Plan’s recommended actions. Track progress over time by viewing past annual reports found below.

Rockville 2040 Process

Rockville 2040, the community engagement effort to update the city’s Comprehensive Plan, engaged the Rockville community in a discussion about the current state of the city and desired future on critical planning issues. The public outreach component included 35 listening sessions, four citywide forums, and three open houses. In addition, planning staff met with a wide variety of stakeholders and neighborhood groups to get feedback on the plan as it was being drafted.

The public process and its resulting input were summarized and presented to the Planning Commission along with a draft of the Comprehensive Plan in two phases, the Elements section in 2019 and the Planning Areas section in 2020. For each section, the Planning Commission held a series of public hearings and work sessions to consider edits to the draft plan and recommended a complete revised version to the Mayor and Council in early 2021. After holding a series of public hearings and work sessions, and making further revisions to the draft plan, the Mayor and Council adopted the Comprehensive Plan at a meeting on Aug. 2, 2021.

Background Information

The following background information contributed to the Comprehensive Plan update:

The Comprehensive Plan is required to comply with the State of Maryland Land Use Article. To learn about the law regarding comprehensive planning, read the article on LexisNexis. (Note: When this link first opens, click “Agree” and expand the plus symbol next to “Land Use,” then “Division I,” then “Title 3,” and read any of the sections under Subtitles 1-3). Additional guidance on the preparation of master plans is available through the Maryland Department of Planning.

The city is part of the larger capital region and is a member of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (MWCOG). On May 3, 2010, the Mayor and Council voted to endorse the MWCOG plan, Region Forward, which describes common planning challenges and demographic trends, and outlines planning goals and objectives for the greater Washington, D.C. area.

The Rockville Summits were a two-part, community-oriented initiative to engage residents and business owners in a dialogue about Rockville’s future. The first Rockville Summit was held in October 2011 and brought together nearly 200 members of Rockville’s residential, business, government, and nonprofit communities to begin an ongoing dialogue about the city, the regional economy, and Rockville’s future. The second Rockville Summit was held in November 2012, when community members from throughout Rockville, including residents and representatives of the business, nonprofit, government, and education sectors, reported on a series of working group studies on various key issues in the Rockville community.

To understand conditions in the city, city departments prepared a scan of key topics through several trends reports that informed the Comprehensive Plan update. The following reports have been completed: