When transit gets better the land around it becomes more valuable:
many people would like to live next to a subway station. This means
that there are a lot of public transit expansions that would make us
better off, building space for people to live and work. And yet, at
least in the US, we don’t do very much of this. Part of it is that
the benefits mostly go to whoever happens to own the land around the
stations.
A different model, which you see with historical subway construction
or Hong Kong’s MTR, uses the
increase in land value to fund transit construction. The idea is, the
public transit company buys property, makes it much more valuable by
building service to it, and then sells it.
While I would be pretty positive on US public transit systems adopting
this model, I have trouble imagining them taking it on. Instead,
consider something simpler and more distributed: private developers
paying to expand public transit.
This is a proposed $3.3B 1.9M-sqft development, adjacent to the Fitchburg
Line. A train station right next to it would make a ton of sense,
and could be done within the existing right of way without any
tunneling. Somernova briefly mentions this idea on p283, where they
say:
Introducing a new train station on campus could dramatically reduce
commute times, making all of Somernova within a five minute walk from
the station. We look forward to ongoing dialog about these transit
possibilities with the community and advocates, ensuring we continue
to explore all options for enhanced connectivity longterm.
This is pretty vague compared to the rest of the plan, which has a ton
of estimates, but we can make our own. The MBTA recently completed a
long and expensive project to extend the
Green Line along this right of way, which stops at Union Square.
Extending it to Dane Street would require another 0.9km of track and
another station. The overall Green Line extension cost $2.2B for
7.6km, or $290M/km, though this included a bunch of over-designed work
that needed to be thrown away and it should
have been far less. This portion is relatively simple compared to
the other work, with no maintenance facility or elevated sections,
though it does include three bridges and moving a
substation. Accepting the $290M/km figure, though, we could estimate
$260M.
A $260M extension would raise Somernova’s construction costs by under
8%, less if you include the costs of the land, and I expect would
raise the value of the completed project by well more than
that—rents right next to subway stations are generally a lot
higher than farther away. So even though Somernova would not capture
all of the benefits of the new station they would capture enough to
come out ahead.
This isn’t a new idea: in
2011 the Assembly Row
developers made a deal with the MBTA to fund an infill
station for their development. Because this was just a station it
was cheaper:
$15M from the developer and $16M from the federal government.
Another place where something like this could make sense is building
housing at Route 16. The other branch of the Green Line Extension,
along the Lowell
Line, could be extended 1.4km to Route
16. Figuring the same $290M/km this would be $400M, though as a
straight-forward project in an existing right of way it should be possble to do
it for about half that. Next to the site is a liquor store and
supermarket, about 150k sqft:
Let’s say you build ground-floor retail (with more than enough room
for the current tenants) and many stories of housing above it. It’s
not currently zoned for this, but zoning is often dependent on transit
access and this is something the city could fix (ex: Assembly
Square got special zoning). A hard limit on height is Logan
Airport airspace but that’s high enough you wouldn’t come close:
The airspace rules would allow a ~65 story building, but lets
say you pattern this off Assembly and go for 23 stories: 22
housing, one retail. With 75% average lot coverage (courtyards) this
would be ~2.6M sqft. Building this might cost $600/sqft (but I’d love better
numbers), giving ~$1.6B.
There’s also a UHaul lot next door, at around 110k sqft which could be included:
Building it out the same way would give you another ~1.9M sqft at a
cost of ~$1.1M, for a total of 4.5M sqft for $2.7B. Add in the subway
extension and it’s $3.1B.
Even with the cost of the extension this would be quite profitable:
new construction right next to a subway station. Factoring in 20% for
affordable housing, you break even at around $850/sqft, and
extrapolating from the listings I see for Assembly you should be able
to get about $1,000/sqft.
I’m not sure why we don’t see more of this. Are transit agencies not
very open to it? Are the costs too unpredictable? Are private
developers too car-focused? Am I wrong about how much more valuable
transit access makes places? Are cities unwilling to agree to high
density for newly transit-served locations?
Fund Transit With Development
Link post
When transit gets better the land around it becomes more valuable: many people would like to live next to a subway station. This means that there are a lot of public transit expansions that would make us better off, building space for people to live and work. And yet, at least in the US, we don’t do very much of this. Part of it is that the benefits mostly go to whoever happens to own the land around the stations.
A different model, which you see with historical subway construction or Hong Kong’s MTR, uses the increase in land value to fund transit construction. The idea is, the public transit company buys property, makes it much more valuable by building service to it, and then sells it.
While I would be pretty positive on US public transit systems adopting this model, I have trouble imagining them taking it on. Instead, consider something simpler and more distributed: private developers paying to expand public transit.
Consider the proposed Somernova Redevelopment, in Somerville MA:
This is a proposed $3.3B 1.9M-sqft development, adjacent to the Fitchburg Line. A train station right next to it would make a ton of sense, and could be done within the existing right of way without any tunneling. Somernova briefly mentions this idea on p283, where they say:
This is pretty vague compared to the rest of the plan, which has a ton of estimates, but we can make our own. The MBTA recently completed a long and expensive project to extend the Green Line along this right of way, which stops at Union Square. Extending it to Dane Street would require another 0.9km of track and another station. The overall Green Line extension cost $2.2B for 7.6km, or $290M/km, though this included a bunch of over-designed work that needed to be thrown away and it should have been far less. This portion is relatively simple compared to the other work, with no maintenance facility or elevated sections, though it does include three bridges and moving a substation. Accepting the $290M/km figure, though, we could estimate $260M.
A $260M extension would raise Somernova’s construction costs by under 8%, less if you include the costs of the land, and I expect would raise the value of the completed project by well more than that—rents right next to subway stations are generally a lot higher than farther away. So even though Somernova would not capture all of the benefits of the new station they would capture enough to come out ahead.
This isn’t a new idea: in 2011 the Assembly Row developers made a deal with the MBTA to fund an infill station for their development. Because this was just a station it was cheaper: $15M from the developer and $16M from the federal government.
Another place where something like this could make sense is building housing at Route 16. The other branch of the Green Line Extension, along the Lowell Line, could be extended 1.4km to Route 16. Figuring the same $290M/km this would be $400M, though as a straight-forward project in an existing right of way it should be possble to do it for about half that. Next to the site is a liquor store and supermarket, about 150k sqft:
Let’s say you build ground-floor retail (with more than enough room for the current tenants) and many stories of housing above it. It’s not currently zoned for this, but zoning is often dependent on transit access and this is something the city could fix (ex: Assembly Square got special zoning). A hard limit on height is Logan Airport airspace but that’s high enough you wouldn’t come close:
The airspace rules would allow a ~65 story building, but lets say you pattern this off Assembly and go for 23 stories: 22 housing, one retail. With 75% average lot coverage (courtyards) this would be ~2.6M sqft. Building this might cost $600/sqft (but I’d love better numbers), giving ~$1.6B.
There’s also a UHaul lot next door, at around 110k sqft which could be included:
Building it out the same way would give you another ~1.9M sqft at a cost of ~$1.1M, for a total of 4.5M sqft for $2.7B. Add in the subway extension and it’s $3.1B.
Even with the cost of the extension this would be quite profitable: new construction right next to a subway station. Factoring in 20% for affordable housing, you break even at around $850/sqft, and extrapolating from the listings I see for Assembly you should be able to get about $1,000/sqft.
I’m not sure why we don’t see more of this. Are transit agencies not very open to it? Are the costs too unpredictable? Are private developers too car-focused? Am I wrong about how much more valuable transit access makes places? Are cities unwilling to agree to high density for newly transit-served locations?
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