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Transit and Economic Development

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Title: Transit and Economic Development


1
Transit and Economic Development
  • Transit as a Place Making Strategy

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What is Place-Making?
  • A place-making approach to livability involves
    assessing the concerns and needs of a local
    community and then using this assessment to make
    improvements to the many places in that
    community.

5
What is Livability?
  • When people speak of livability they mean
  • clean air and water,
  • safe streets,
  • positive race relations,
  • affordable homes,
  • quality public schools,
  • greenery and open space,
  • uncongested roads, and
  • low taxes, among other things.

6
A Place-Making Approachto Community Livability
  • Seeks to focus community participation around
    very specific issues to enhance quality of life
    in that place.
  • Through this approach, people are encouraged to
    clearly define issues, contribute ideas and
    develop agendas that address their concerns as
    well as encourage them to participate in
    implementing strategies to address such questions
    as the following
  • What works and does not work about this
    neighborhood or space?
  • What problems exist?
  • What would make it work better?
  • What kind of design improvements are needed?
  • What types of management strategies should be
    introduced?
  • How can transit support and enhance the
    activities of the place?

7
Place Making in Practice


The Streets are Alive
A Bus Stop So Lively You Won't Mind Waiting
The Streets are a Fashion Show
The Square as a Downtown Living Room
8
Enlivening the Street and Commercial Environment
  • Using the principles of place making, it's
    entirely possible to undertake transportation
    projects--involving foot, bike, transit and even
    automobile traffic--that bring life to a place
    rather than take it away.

Portlands Pioneer Courthouse Square
9
Visible Signs of Success with Strategies for
Creating Livable Places
  • Many different types of activities are occurring.
  • Many different kinds of people and different age
    groups are using a place (children, elderly,
    families).
  • Activities are not necessarily related to a
    specific facility or a planned event.
  • There are several choices of things to do, and
    it is easy to go from one choice to another.
  • Designate a liaison from a transit agency to
    coordinate with users in the area.
  • Train on-site transit personnel (such as ticket
    agents) to provide information about uses and
    activities in the areas adjacent to a facility.

10
Visible Signs of Problems with Strategies for
Creating Livable Places
  • Spaces are empty of people for all or part of the
    day.
  • Security problems are evident (broken windows,
    graffiti, vandalism).
  • Buildings are vacant or underutilized.
  • Uses are isolated from each other or cannot be
    seen.
  • Spaces are too small and congested for the number
    of transit riders present.

11
Ways of Measuring Impacts of Strategies for
Creating Livable Places
  • Record the number and type of activities at
    different times of the day and of the week.
  • Survey the community or space users about their
    perceptions of current uses and activities and
    what they would like to see there in the future.
  • Inventory existing land-use patterns to determine
    what activities are present or missing.

12
Design Strategies for Creating Livable Places
  • Create a public space that can be programmed for
    a variety of uses.
  • Provide amenities that support desired
    activities.
  • Provide specific uses and activities in adjacent
    or nearby structures.

13
Transit Strategies for Creating Livable Places
  • Make a transit stop the central feature of a
    place.
  • Develop easy transfers between buses or modes of
    transportation.
  • Provide amenities for transit patrons.
  • Provide information about attractions in the
    area.
  • Designate a liaison from a transit agency to
    coordinate with users in the area.
  • Train on-site transit personnel (such as ticket
    agents) to provide information about uses and
    activities in the areas adjacent to a facility.

14
Transit and Place-Making
  • A focus on place-making can bring the ridership
    goals of the transit agency and the livability
    goals of the community together.
  • For transit operators, this means that each
    decision made to provide service, locate a
    station or stop and maintain that station should
    be made in the context of how transit can
    contribute positively to the experience of that
    place.
  • Mobility options must be developed and improved
    in response to expressed as well as observed
    community needs.
  • These transportation options also must be
    regarded as a set of alternatives (cars, buses,
    trains, vans, bicycles, walking) that fit into a
    communitys broader vision as well as its
    self-image.

15
A Neighborhood Transit Station as a Livable Place
16
The Transit-Oriented Place Making Strategies for
San Mateo CA
  • Turning Transit Stops and Stations into Places.
  • San Mateo's commuter rail stations and bus
    stops should be attractive, mixed-use
    destinations that give people an extra incentive
    to take transit.
  • Transforming El Camino Real into a Grand
    Boulevard.
  • As the common link between the towns of San
    Mateo County, El Camino Real can be reborn as a
    walkable boulevard with housing, retail, and
    transit stops that connect a series of improved
    public spaces throughout the region.
  • Creating Balanced Access.
  • When transit facilities are designed and located
    with only automobile access in mind, they become
    isolated from town centers. A balanced approach
    takes pedestrians and bicyclists into
    consideration and improves connections between
    transit stops and other civic destinations.
  • Adding Housing and Creating a Lively Downtown
    Mix.
  • With San Mateo County facing a severe lack of
    affordable housing, the Peninsula Corridor Plan
    presents an excellent opportunity to create new
    mixed use residential neighborhoods near transit
    stations and downtowns.

17
Transforming El Camino Real into a Grand Boulevard
  • Today, most pedestrians would rather avoid El
    Camino Real yet it could become a walkable
    boulevard connecting people to transit stations
    and public spaces.

18
Turning Transit Stops and Stations into "Places
  • To make transit an attractive alternative to
    driving, bus stops have to be more than just
    waiting areas they should be attractive,
    mixed-use destinations.

19
Place Making by Using Transit, Adding Housing and
Creating a Lively Downtown Mix
  • Place making used to relieve gridlock and
    increase transit ridership by transforming
    auto-dominated downtown streets into
    pedestrian-friendly public spaces.

20
Creating Balanced Transportation Access
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A Model for Determining Economic Impact of
Transit on Land Values
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The Basic Principle
  • Transit-oriented development (TOD) (also called
    pedestrian pockets or transit villages) is
    the term commonly used to express new development
    constructed around transit facilities.
  • These facilities act as focal points for a
    community and are generally accompanied by higher
    densities of land use, with an emphasis on
    walking.
  • The car becomes an option rather than a
    necessity.

25
Principles Governing Detailed Plans for Each
Station Area
  • Highest densities should be concentrated within
    walking distance of stations, with building
    heights, densities and uses tapered down to
    existing single-family residential neighborhoods.
  • Existing single-family residences and most
    residential communities should be preserved.
  • Commercial revitalization should come about
    primarily as a function of redevelopment of the
    core area and associated increases in residential
    land-use density.
  • Each station should feature integral pedestrian
    circulation systems connecting residential areas,
    commercial facilities, and station entrances, and
    a streetscape program focused on pedestrian
    amenities and landscaping.
  • Adequate open space in the station areas in
    general, and the core areas in particular, would
    be obtained through a combination of county
    acquisitions and the site plan approval process.

26
A BART Transit Village
27
Arlington County VAs Application of the Station
Planning Principles
  • As a result of these policies, the overwhelming
    state of the countys commercial and residential
    development between 1970 and 1994 has taken place
    in these corridors within 1/2 mi of a Metrorail
    station.
  • This development includes
  • 14,700 residential units,
  • 21 million sq ft of office space,
  • more than 6,000 new hotel rooms, and
  • 2.2 million sq ft of service and destination
    retail.
  • These designated transit hubs have absorbed 94
    percent of the countys new office development
    and more than 90 percent of its hotel and retail
    development.
  • This concentration of intense mixed-use
    development has yielded a much higher use of
    transit in this corridor than in other inner
    suburb locations in the greater Washington
    region.
  • As a result of the development pattern, several
    Metrorail stations in this corridor have the
    highest daily boarding of any stations outside
    the district central office core.

28
N. Hollywood CAs Transit Art Park
  • For years the old downtown of North Hollywood had
    been reinventing itself as an arts and theatre
    district, but progress was slow.
  • The N. Hollywood Community Forum has jump started
    the process by transforming a bus stop on a
    vacant lot into a Transit Art Park.

29
N. Hollywoods Innovative Economic Development
Strategy
  • Sublet the park from the Community Redevelopment
    Agency to a new restaurant that moved into a
    building facing the Transit Art Park.
  • Received 60,000 in additional park landscaping
    and design improvements for the park from the
    restaurant, which maintains the park
  • Transformed a city-owed vacant lot that only had
    a stick in the ground with a sign identifying
    it as a bus stop, by adding grass, trees, an
    art-poster-adorned information kiosk, and a new
    bus shelter.

30
New Jersey Transit and Merchants Link Commuters
and Commerce
  • When NJT attracted vendors and businesses to
    locate inside its stations, it looked first to
    businesses in the immediate area or to small
    vendors.
  • At the Maplewood Station, the Maplewood Concierge
    Company offers the services and products of
    nearly 70 local businesses everything from car
    repair to take home dinners to the 2,000
    commuters who use the station every day.
  • NJT worked with the local Chamber of Commerce to
    convince area merchants to buy shares in the
    for-profit concierge company.
  • Customers place orders in the morning, in person
    or by fax, and pick up their orders in the
    evening at the train station, for retail cost
    plus a 10 surcharge.
  • Service providers such as accountants, insurance
    agents and housing contractors advertise through
    the concierge service.

31
Boulders HOP, SKIP JUMP Program
  • The HOP is a bus that follows a route connecting
    the towns three major activity centers the
    downtown business district, the University of
    Colorados (CU) main campus, and a major retail
    area.
  • The shuttle is dramatically different than
    anything Boulder residents had seen before.
  • Instead of traditional 40-foot diesel buses, the
    HOP is a small, brightly colored shuttle, which
    comes every six minutes, not every fifteen, and
    burns clean, low-sulfur, diesel fuel.

32
Boulders HOP, SKIP JUMP Program
  • SKIP is a high-frequency bus route that serves
    the Broadway corridor, a busy artery connecting
    Boulders northern- and southern-most
    neighborhoods and the commercial centers in
    between.
  • A partnership between the university and the city
    keeps the buses running until 3 a.m. when school
    is in session.
  • The university covers the cost of the night
    service.

33
Boulders HOP, SKIP JUMP Program
  • JUMP, a high-frequency, high-volume bus service
    that commenced operation in 2000, connects the
    cities of Boulder and Lafayette with
    high-frequency transit for the first time.

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Five Steps to Getting Startedon a Place Making
Transportation Project
  • Go out into the field.
  • Seek out partners.
  • Develop a shared vision for the project
  • Get started.
  • Keep the big picture in mind.

36
Go Out Into the Field
  • Take a walk around the community.
  • Visit transit and transportation facilities and
    observe what kinds of activities occur there.
  • Talk to people, and ask them what works and what
    doesnt work about the place.
  • Listen to their suggestions.
  • Through this process, you will develop a better
    understanding about how a place operates and how
    it can be improved.

37
Seek Out Partners
  • If you are with a transportation agency, reach
    out to community organizations, businesses, and
    local officials to elicit their ideas and
    opinions - and support.
  • If you are with a community organization, get in
    touch with the staff of your transportation or
    transit agency.
  • Invite them for a tour or site visit of an
    existing or proposed project.
  • Discuss ways of working together to plan, design,
    and implement a project.

38
Develop a Shared Vision for the Project
  • Address the future needs of the community and of
    the transportation agency and specify short- and
    longer-term goals, immediate actions steps, and
    additional partners.
  • Seek ways to solve problems, overcome obstacles,
    and innovate and identify a range of funding
    sources that may be available to the community or
    to the transportation agency.

39
Get Started
  • Implement some short-term projects by
    experimenting with low-cost improvements.
  • Collaboratively plan special events, cleanups,
    and beautification projects, and make simple
    physical improvement to transportation
    facilities, streets, and the areas adjacent to
    them.
  • Invite the public to help.

40
Keep the Big Picture in Mind
  • Make more major changes using short-term projects
    as stepping stones.
  • Use the partnership as a mechanism for addressing
    the broader livability and environmental concerns
    of the community.

41
Placemaking in NYC
  • http//www.pps.org/info/placemaking_in_new_york/pp
    s_streetfilms/reclaiming_grand_army_plaza
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