From TOD to TAC: Why and How Transport and Urban Policy Needs to Shift to Regenerating Main Road Corridors with New Transit Systems
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Basis 1: Historical Analysis of Transport and Land Value
3. Theoretical Basis 2: Entrepreneurship Theory for Transit Activated Corridor Development
3.1. Principle 1: Create Partnerships from the Start
- An agreement between the three tiers of government, setting out a plan for the City Deal,
- Greater community involvement and support for any projects, and
- Involvement of the private sector, including innovative financing that integrates transit and land development, and with supporting funds from local and state government, with the federal government providing a risk guarantee.
- The Tsukuba Express project in Japan, which came about as a result of long-term government strategic planning. It was delivered on commercial terms by a specially constituted company with ownership shared between city, prefectural and metropolitan governments along the route, and the private sector. The central government provided concessional financing to support the project, but it was delivered by a private company [8].
- The Indian Government’s Metro Rail Policy, which sets as a requirement of central government support of a project that it includes private participation, and also must consider the potential for private funding contributions and transit-oriented development. The implementing agencies are also encouraged to maximize project revenue from commercial real estate development at the stations and other non-fare box revenue. Metro rail is seen as a means to achieving sustainable development and a more compact urban form and the mechanism for delivery includes the Urban Mass Transit Company which is a 50:50 government and private agency that has flexibility in raising finance as well as enabling assessments of Metros [33].
- London Crossrail—a project jointly funded by private interests, the Greater London Authority and the national Department for Transport with partnerships developed through the Infrastructure and Projects Authority which is a national government advisory group establishing PPP to enable the funding and financing of infrastructure [8].
3.2. Principle 2: Value Creation Rather Than Prediction
3.3. Principle 3: Begin with Available Means Rather Than Pre-Determined Ends
3.3.1. San Francisco
3.3.2. Pearl District Streetcar
3.3.3. South Lake Union Streetcar, Seattle
3.3.4. Brightline
4. Theoretical Basis 3: Urban Planning Tools for Fast Transit Corridors and Walkable Station Precincts
4.1. Principle 4: Define Transit Activated Corridors
4.2. Principle 5: Walkable and Sustainable Station Precinct Design
5. Applying Transit Activated Corridor Development with Mid-Tier Transit
6. Conclusions
- Create partnerships from the start, that suggests for TAC the need for partnerships between government, community and the private sector which can leverage such entrepreneurial approaches similar to the historic role of entrepreneurs in creating train and tram corridors, and the emerging models for involving the private sector in rail developments, especially involving City Deals;
- Value creation rather than prediction, which suggests for TAC taking value creation opportunities through involvement of private sector financing of land development rather than predicting transit outcomes as in current transit planning;
- Begin with available means rather than pre-determined ends, suggesting that TAC could use available resourcing from land development in organic steps to stage the financing;
- Define Transit Activated Corridors, that suggests a high-level strategic plan to develop Transit Activated Corridors (like the European Sustainable Urban Mobility Plans) with statutory mechanisms that require the delivery of transit priority as well as dense, urban regeneration, and providing a delivery agency focussed on this task; and
- Walkable and sustainable station precinct design, that would mean a series of statutory design requirements for the station precincts to be high quality designed TODs for walkability, affordability and sustainability.
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Traditional Transport Planning | > | Sustainable Urban Mobility Planning |
---|---|---|
Focus on traffic | > | Focus on people |
Primary objectives: Traffic flow capacity and speed | > | Primary objectives: Accessibility and quality of life, as well as sustainability, economic viability, social equity, health and environmental quality |
Modal-focussed | > | Balanced development of all relevant transport modes and shift towards cleaner and more sustainable transport modes |
Infrastructure focus | > | Integrated set of actions to achieve cost-effective solutions |
Sectorial planning document | > | Sectorial planning document that is consistent and complementary to related policy areas (such as land use and spatial planning; social services; health; enforcement and policing; etc.) |
Short- and medium-term delivery plan | > | Short- and medium-term delivery plan embedded in a long-term vision and strategy |
Related to an administrative area | > | Related to a functioning area based on travel-to-work patterns |
Domain of traffic engineers | > | Interdisciplinary planning teams |
Planning by experts | > | Planning with the involvement of stakeholders using a transparent and participatory approach |
Limited impact assessment | > | Regular monitoring and evaluation of impacts to inform a structured learning and improvement process |
Characteristic | Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) | Light Rail Transit (LRT) | Trackless Tram System (TTS) |
---|---|---|---|
Speed and Capacity | ✓ | ✓✓ | ✓✓ |
Ride Quality | ✗ | ✓✓ | ✓✓ |
Land Development Potential | ✗ | ✓✓ | ✓✓ |
Cost | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ |
Disruption during construction period | ✓ | ✗ | ✓✓ |
Implementation Time | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ |
Overall | ✓ | ✓✓ | ✓✓✓ |
Characteristic 1: Ability to facilitate partnership-driven planning | ||
BRT | BRT is able to achieve partnership driven planning, however partnerships are generally transport-centric given the lesser urban regeneration ability achieved by traditional bus-based schemes. | ✓ |
LRT | LRT is able to bring transit, land development and community interests to the table and this has been demonstrated around the world, including in the case studies above. | ✓✓ |
TTS | TTS are able to bring the same interests together as LRT to plan a transit project financed by urban regeneration, however TTS can enable the inclusion of far more parties than under the recent welfare finance model of most light rail. Projects do not need to be “Tokyo” in scale to get started, and have less risk. An inclusive, bottom-up, community-engaged planning approach can be achieved with the less expensive trackless trams, rather than only being considered by the top-down stakeholders. | ✓✓✓ |
Characteristic 2: Ability for value creation through urban regeneration | ||
BRT | Bus-based systems have had less urban regeneration success in most cases. | ✗ |
LRT | Light rail has been successful in attracting investment and urban regeneration around its lines, especially given its fixed nature, however urban regeneration is best achieved if land development is used as the cornerstone of transit finance such as proposed here. | ✓✓ |
TTS | Ability to be used like light rail, particularly through an entrepreneurial financing process to ensure urban regeneration is undertaken, but at lower cost to the entrepreneurs and thus is more likely. | ✓✓ |
Characteristic 3: Ability for organic resourcing through staged financing | ||
BRT | The lack of strong urban regeneration attraction created by BRT systems creates a lack of investor incentive for the finance of new lines. | ✗ |
LRT | Has been achieved in a number of cities, highlighted in case studies above. | ✓✓ |
TTS | Organic resourcing through staged financing would be similar to the LRT as in the case studies outlined above. At each stage of financing the two parts of the TAC, the trackless tram and the chain of TODs could be financed with steps assessed for land value uplift, patronage and other benefits and costs, before proceeding to the next stages. | ✓✓ |
Characteristic 4: Ability to service strategic plans (TAC route) | ||
BRT | If strategic plans are developed mode agnostically, BRT is competitive on infrastructure cost and speed if given priority. However, it will not achieve urban regeneration outcomes. | ✓ |
LRT | If strategic plans are developed mode agnostically, LRT is competitive on capacity per vehicle, speed and ability to attract regenerative investment. | ✓ |
TTS | If strategic plans are developed mode agnostically, TTS can enable the capacity and speed of LRT but cost much less. This is likely to open up the potential for many more strategic routes and help create an overall network with far greater overall benefits. | ✓✓ |
Characteristic 5: Ability for integrated application of TOD design tools | ||
BRT | The same TOD principles can be applied but without private investment they rarely happen. | ✗ |
LRT | Able to utilize best-practice integrated TOD design from light rail projects to achieve walkable, people-centric transit precincts. | ✓ |
TTS | Design tools for TODs would be just as effective in station precincts around trackless trams as around LRT except the cost of the infrastructure is much less (no overhead catenary and no steel tracks). | ✓✓ |
Characteristics in Terms of Ability to Use | Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) | Light Rail Transit (LRT) | Trackless Tram System (TTS) |
---|---|---|---|
Partnerships | ✓ | ✓✓ | ✓✓✓ |
Value Creation in Urban Regeneration Potential | ✗ | ✓✓ | ✓✓ |
Organic Resourcing through Staged Financing | ✗ | ✓✓ | ✓✓ |
Strategic TAC Route | ✓ | ✓ | ✓✓ |
Design Tools for TODs | ✗ | ✓ | ✓✓ |
Overall | ✓ | ✓✓ | ✓✓✓ |
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Newman, P.; Davies-Slate, S.; Conley, D.; Hargroves, K.; Mouritz, M. From TOD to TAC: Why and How Transport and Urban Policy Needs to Shift to Regenerating Main Road Corridors with New Transit Systems. Urban Sci. 2021, 5, 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci5030052
Newman P, Davies-Slate S, Conley D, Hargroves K, Mouritz M. From TOD to TAC: Why and How Transport and Urban Policy Needs to Shift to Regenerating Main Road Corridors with New Transit Systems. Urban Science. 2021; 5(3):52. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci5030052
Chicago/Turabian StyleNewman, Peter, Sebastian Davies-Slate, Daniel Conley, Karlson Hargroves, and Mike Mouritz. 2021. "From TOD to TAC: Why and How Transport and Urban Policy Needs to Shift to Regenerating Main Road Corridors with New Transit Systems" Urban Science 5, no. 3: 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci5030052
APA StyleNewman, P., Davies-Slate, S., Conley, D., Hargroves, K., & Mouritz, M. (2021). From TOD to TAC: Why and How Transport and Urban Policy Needs to Shift to Regenerating Main Road Corridors with New Transit Systems. Urban Science, 5(3), 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci5030052