Transit-Oriented Development

2018

2016

2015

2014

2013

2011

2010

2009

2008

2006

Can private enterprise save BART?

Timothy Roberts
Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal

How Metro Shapes D.C.

Zachary M. Schrag
Washington Post, page B01

2005

2004

2003

2001

Linking Community Development to Transit Oriented Development

Local Initiatives Support Corporation
Growing Smart Neighborhoods: Information, Models and Trends for Community Developers

2015

Promoting Opportunity through Equitable Transit-Oriented Development (eTOD): Making the Case

John Hersey and Michael A. Spotts

Promoting Opportunity through Equitable TOD: Making the Case, the first of three reports that cover different aspects of eTOD, provides a non-exhaustive review of the evidence and literature that demonstrates the importance of eTOD. A second report will illustrate barriers to eTOD and best practices for overcoming them, while the third will address the federal role in supporting eTOD. 

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

Capturing the Value of Transit

Nadine Fogarty, Nancy Eaton, Dena Belzer and Gloria Ohland

2007

2006

Preserving and Promoting Diverse Transit-Oriented Neighborhoods

Dena Belzer, Scott Bernstein, Cali Gorewitz, Carrie Makarewicz, jennifer McGraw, Shelley Poticha, Abby Thorne-Lyman and Mariia Zimmerman

Communicating the Benefits of TOD: The City of Evanston's Transit-Oriented Redevelopment and the Hudson Bergen Light Rail Transit System

Cali Gorewitz, Gloria Ohland , Carrie Makarewicz, Albert Benedict, ChaNell Marshall, Jan S. Wells and Martin Robins
prepared for the Development, Community and Environment Division of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

2005

Transit-Oriented Development: Developing a Strategy to Measure Success

John L. Renne and Jan S. Wells
National Cooperative Highway Research Program, Research Results Digest 294

2004

2003

2002

2001

Transit-Oriented Development in Four Cities

Gloria Ohland
paper presented to the Partnership for Regional Livability conference in Chicago, Illinois in August 2001

1999

The Zoning and Real Estate Implications of Transit-Oriented Development

S. Mark White and edited by James B. McDaniel
Legal Research Digest 12, Transit Cooperative Research Program

1998

n/a

2018

2017

2016

2015

2014

Building the Case for Racial Equity in the Food System

Anthony Giancatarino and Simran Noor
The Center for Social Inclusion

This report from The Center for Social Inclusion examines the effects of housing, school, land, and wage policies on access to healthy food in communities of color. It offers recommendations to surmount these challenges, such as investing in cooperatively owned food enterprises and leveraging dollars from the Affordable Care Act’s community benefit requirements for nonprofit hospitals. The report also includes several reference guides to help community groups identify and confront the particular institutions, policies, and practices that promote structural racial inequity in their food systems. 

2013

2012

Losing Ground: The Struggle of Moderate-Income Households to Afford Rising Costs Of Housing and Transportation

Robert Hickey, Jeffrey Lubell, Peter Haas and Stephanie Morse

The Center for Housing Policy and the Center for Neighborhood Technology’s new report by Robert Hickey and Jeffrey Lubell measures how combined housing and transportation costs burden moderate-income households.  Looking at the 25 largest metro areas in the United States and using newly available data, the report finds that the problem has not only gotten worse in the last decade but also that moderate-income households are disproportionately saddled by these heavier costs. Notably, transportation costs vary greatly and influence the overall affordability of metro areas significantly. Moderate-income homeowners also carry heavier cost burden than renters. The report offers policy implications of these trends and highlight promising approaches available to local and state governments that help make the combined costs of place more manageable for moderate-income.

Are We There Yet? Creating Complete Communities for 21st Century America

Gloria Ohland and Allison Brooks

In this report, Reconnecting America focuses on creating complete communities – places where people can live, work, move, and thrive in a healthier, more equitable, and more economically competitive way — and identifies opportunity areas — the places within our cities and regions where we can get a jump-start on this vision.  Rating all 366 U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Areas based on indicators in four categories: Living, Working, Moving and Thriving, the authors offer examples of successful policies and strategies for “completing” communities — from zoning changes and suburban retrofits to community benefits agreements.

2011

2010

2009

Fostering Equitable and Sustainable Transit-Oriented Development

Center for Transit-Oriented Development
Briefing Papers for a Convening on Transit-Oriented Development

2008

2007

Public Transportation: Benefits for the 21st Century

American Public Transportation Association
Public Transportation: Benefits for the 21st Century

2006

The Role of State DOTs in Support of Transit-Oriented Development (TOD)

Mary Kay Bailey, L. Anderson, N. Bottigheimer, D. Somerset, A. Hopkins, G. Labonty, J. Parks, R. Rybeck and M. Sims
report to the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO)

2004

2003

2002

1999

1997

n/a

The Emerging U.S. Rail Industry: Opportunities to support American manufacturing and spur regional development

Erik R. Pages, Brian Lombardozzi and Lindsey Woolsey

This paper examines the current state of the U.S. rail transit industry along with its manufacturing supply chain and provides recommendations about potential changes for policy makers and NIST MEP to consider.

Can private enterprise save BART?

Timothy Roberts
Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal

How Metro Shapes D.C.

Zachary M. Schrag
Washington Post, page B01

Linking Community Development to Transit Oriented Development

Local Initiatives Support Corporation
Growing Smart Neighborhoods: Information, Models and Trends for Community Developers

Promoting Opportunity through Equitable Transit-Oriented Development (eTOD): Making the Case

John Hersey and Michael A. Spotts

Promoting Opportunity through Equitable TOD: Making the Case, the first of three reports that cover different aspects of eTOD, provides a non-exhaustive review of the evidence and literature that demonstrates the importance of eTOD. A second report will illustrate barriers to eTOD and best practices for overcoming them, while the third will address the federal role in supporting eTOD. 

Capturing the Value of Transit

Nadine Fogarty, Nancy Eaton, Dena Belzer and Gloria Ohland

Preserving and Promoting Diverse Transit-Oriented Neighborhoods

Dena Belzer, Scott Bernstein, Cali Gorewitz, Carrie Makarewicz, jennifer McGraw, Shelley Poticha, Abby Thorne-Lyman and Mariia Zimmerman

Communicating the Benefits of TOD: The City of Evanston's Transit-Oriented Redevelopment and the Hudson Bergen Light Rail Transit System

Cali Gorewitz, Gloria Ohland , Carrie Makarewicz, Albert Benedict, ChaNell Marshall, Jan S. Wells and Martin Robins
prepared for the Development, Community and Environment Division of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Transit-Oriented Development: Developing a Strategy to Measure Success

John L. Renne and Jan S. Wells
National Cooperative Highway Research Program, Research Results Digest 294

Transit-Oriented Development in Four Cities

Gloria Ohland
paper presented to the Partnership for Regional Livability conference in Chicago, Illinois in August 2001

The Zoning and Real Estate Implications of Transit-Oriented Development

S. Mark White and edited by James B. McDaniel
Legal Research Digest 12, Transit Cooperative Research Program

Building the Case for Racial Equity in the Food System

Anthony Giancatarino and Simran Noor
The Center for Social Inclusion

This report from The Center for Social Inclusion examines the effects of housing, school, land, and wage policies on access to healthy food in communities of color. It offers recommendations to surmount these challenges, such as investing in cooperatively owned food enterprises and leveraging dollars from the Affordable Care Act’s community benefit requirements for nonprofit hospitals. The report also includes several reference guides to help community groups identify and confront the particular institutions, policies, and practices that promote structural racial inequity in their food systems. 

Losing Ground: The Struggle of Moderate-Income Households to Afford Rising Costs Of Housing and Transportation

Robert Hickey, Jeffrey Lubell, Peter Haas and Stephanie Morse

The Center for Housing Policy and the Center for Neighborhood Technology’s new report by Robert Hickey and Jeffrey Lubell measures how combined housing and transportation costs burden moderate-income households.  Looking at the 25 largest metro areas in the United States and using newly available data, the report finds that the problem has not only gotten worse in the last decade but also that moderate-income households are disproportionately saddled by these heavier costs. Notably, transportation costs vary greatly and influence the overall affordability of metro areas significantly. Moderate-income homeowners also carry heavier cost burden than renters. The report offers policy implications of these trends and highlight promising approaches available to local and state governments that help make the combined costs of place more manageable for moderate-income.

Are We There Yet? Creating Complete Communities for 21st Century America

Gloria Ohland and Allison Brooks

In this report, Reconnecting America focuses on creating complete communities – places where people can live, work, move, and thrive in a healthier, more equitable, and more economically competitive way — and identifies opportunity areas — the places within our cities and regions where we can get a jump-start on this vision.  Rating all 366 U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Areas based on indicators in four categories: Living, Working, Moving and Thriving, the authors offer examples of successful policies and strategies for “completing” communities — from zoning changes and suburban retrofits to community benefits agreements.

Fostering Equitable and Sustainable Transit-Oriented Development

Center for Transit-Oriented Development
Briefing Papers for a Convening on Transit-Oriented Development

Public Transportation: Benefits for the 21st Century

American Public Transportation Association
Public Transportation: Benefits for the 21st Century

The Role of State DOTs in Support of Transit-Oriented Development (TOD)

Mary Kay Bailey, L. Anderson, N. Bottigheimer, D. Somerset, A. Hopkins, G. Labonty, J. Parks, R. Rybeck and M. Sims
report to the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO)

The Emerging U.S. Rail Industry: Opportunities to support American manufacturing and spur regional development

Erik R. Pages, Brian Lombardozzi and Lindsey Woolsey

This paper examines the current state of the U.S. rail transit industry along with its manufacturing supply chain and provides recommendations about potential changes for policy makers and NIST MEP to consider.