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  1. Columbia is a census-designated place in Howard County, Maryland, United States. It is a planned community consisting of 10 self-contained villages. The census-designated place had a population of 104,681 at the 2020 census, making it the second most populous community in Maryland after Baltimore.

  2. 20 de abr. de 2024 · Columbia, planned community in Howard county, central Maryland, U.S. It lies southwest of Baltimore and northeast of Washington, D.C. Designed by real-estate developer James Rouse—who had in the 1950s pioneered the enclosed shopping malls that later became a ubiquitous feature of the suburban.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Oakland Mills. Oakland Mills is one of the 10 villages in Columbia, Maryland, United States. It is located immediately east of Town Center, across U.S. Route 29. [2] Neighborhoods in the village of Oakland Mills include Steven's Forest, Talbott Springs, and Thunder Hill. [3]

  4. Town Center is one of the ten villages in Columbia, Maryland, United States, first occupied in 1974. The Town Center is a non-contiguous, diverse area, and the most urban-like, ranging from multi-level high density apartments, homes and office buildings to single family homes.

  5. Kings Contrivance is a village in the planned community of Columbia, Maryland, United States and is home to approximately 11,000 residents. It is Columbia's southernmost village, and was the eighth of Columbia's ten villages to be developed.

  6. Named for. Hickory Ridge Plantation. Villages of Columbia. Hickory Ridge is one of the 10 villages in Columbia, Maryland, United States, located to the west of the Town Center with a 2014 population of 13,000 in 4,659 housing units. [2] The village overlays the former postal community of Elioak.

  7. Dorsey's Search is one of ten villages comprising Columbia, Maryland, United States, named after the land tract with a 2014 population of 7,500. Early land purchases and rezoning included Howard County Board of Trade member J Frank Gwynn's farm along Font Hill in 1955 by the Development and Investment Corporation of Maryland. [3]