Updating and Expanding LRT/BRT/SCT/CRT Data and Analysis
Arthur C. Nelson, University of Arizona
Summary:
This project will update and expand our station area databases (developed under previous NITC contracts 547, 650, and 763) to include new systems added since the late 2000s and more metropolitan areas. Under prior NITC contracts, we built station area databases for 12 light rail transit (LRT) systems, nine bus rapid transit (BRT) systems, four streetcar transit (SCT), and five commuter rail transit (CRT) systems. We included employment data extending annually from 2002 through 2011, and census data for 2000 and 2010. Our analysis compared development, demographic and housing outcomes associated with these transit systems during the period before the Great Recession (2000 through 2007) and during recession into recovery (2008 through 2011). Two final reports, several press interviews including one press conference in DC plus several webinars, and nearly 20 papers have been published, accepted for publication, or are in review. Though we found important differences in outcomes between the study periods of 2000-2007 and 2008-2011, our research could not measure or compare outcomes during the period of economic stability that commenced about 2012. We thus propose to update and analyze those databases to 2015. This will allow us to compare outcomes associated with these transit systems before (2000-2007), during (2008-2011) and after (2012-2015) the Great Recession. Moreover, since some LRT and streetcar systems as well as most BRT systems did not start until well into the 2000s (some during the Great Recession), the updated database will allow for more comprehensive assessment of outcomes between the Great Recession and early recovery into the period of relative economic stability. Using newly released HUD housing affordability data, we will include a new area of research associating transit station proximity to variations in median household transportation costs. Though we will apply these updated and expanded data to the methods we developed for earlier studies, and new ones, a key benefit of our databases and shape files is that we will make them available freely through NITC to enable other researchers to conduct micro-level analysis as well as in-depth longitudinal and comparative analyses that we have not. We anticipate this will be a valuable contribution to future research by academics, students, policy analysts, and transit organizations.
Project Details
- Project Type:
- Research
- Project Status:
- Completed
- End Date:
- June 30,2019
- UTC Grant Cycle:
- NITC 16 Round 1
- UTC Funding:
- $49,761
- Sponsors:
- City of Tucson, Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada, Mid-America Regional Council, Wasatch Front Regional Council, Metro, University of Arizona, Tucson
Downloadable Products
- The Link between Transit Station Proximity and Real Estate Rents, Jobs, People and Housing with Transit and Land Use Planning Implications (FINAL_REPORT)
- Streetcars and Equity (PRESENTATION)
- Using the Real Estate Market to Establish Streetcar Catchment Areas: Case Study of Multifamily Residential Rental Property in Tucson, Arizona (PRESENTATION)
- Streetcars and Economic Development: A Comparative Study of Four Streetcar Systems (PRESENTATION)
- Bus Rapid Transit and Economic Development (PRESENTATION)
- Transit and Wages (PRESENTATION)
- Bus Rapid Transit and Office Rents (PRESENTATION)
- Analysis of the Variation in Apartment and Office Market Rents with Respect to Commuter Rail Transit Station Distance in Metropolitan San Diego and Salt Lake City (PRESENTATION)
- Transit-Oriented Developments Make a Difference in Job Location (JOURNAL)
- Economic and Development Benefits of Fixed Route Transit through Denser Housing: A National Assessment (PROJECT_BRIEF)
- Using the Real Estate Market to Establish Streetcar Catchment Areas: Case Study of Multifamily Residential Rental Property in Tucson, Arizona (REPORT)
- Light Rail Transit and Economic Recovery: A Case of Resilience or Transformation? (REPORT)
- Longitudinal Cluster Analysis of Jobs-Housing Balance in Transit Neighborhoods (REPORT)
- Streetcars and Economic Development: Do Streetcars Stimulate Employment Growth? (REPORT)
- Streetcars and Equity: Case Studies of Four Streetcar Systems Assessing Change in Jobs, People and Gentrification (REPORT)
- Express Busways and Economic Development: Case Study of the Miami-Dade South Express Busway (REPORT)
- Commuter Rail Transit and Economic Development (REPORT)
- Analysis of the Variation in Apartment and Office Market Rents with Respect to Commuter Rail Transit Station Distance in Metropolitan San Diego and Salt Lake City (REPORT)
- Bus Rapid Transit and Economic Development: A Quasi-Experimental Treatment and Control Analysis (REPORT)
- Transit and Real Estate Rents (REPORT)
- TRB 2020 - UA 1103 - The (Overlooked) Link between Express Bus Stations and Commercial Rents with Implications for Transit and Land Use Planning (POSTER)
- TRB 2020 - UA 1103 - The Influence of Rail Transit on Development Patterns in the Mountain Mega-Region with Implications for Transit and Land Use Planning (POSTER)
- TRB 2020 - UA 1103 - The Link between Transit Station Proximity and Mode Choice to Work, Working at Home, Vehicle Ownership, and Transportation Costs with Implications for Transit and Land Use Planning (POSTER)
- Nationwide Worker Database to Analyze Transit Outcomes Using an Economic and Demographic Lens (FINAL_REPORT)