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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
03.12.2008
Greening The Suburbs

Between the coming wave of new infrastructure spending, the growing concern about climate change, and, of course, the gnawing fear that gasoline prices will cruise back upward once the global economy climbs out of its sinkhole, we'll likely hear a lot more about public transit in the coming years. But it's rarely a straightforward subject—sure, at first, it sounds harmless enough to build a new light rail or subway system, but inevitably the objections start pouring in. Earlier this morning, I sat in on a heated discussion at the Brookings Institution on the proposed Purple Line in Maryland. The line itself is of mostly local interest, but many of the debates involved are relevant for any metro region grappling with new transit, so why not do a little recap? First, a map:

      

The logic undergirding the Purple Line is that D.C.'s Metro, like most old-school subways, is a hub-and-spoke model, built for an era when people lived in the suburbs and commuted downtown for work. Nowadays, though, most traffic flows from suburb to suburb—hence the need to interlink Montgomery County and Prince George's County. Most area residents favor some sort of connecting line; the bickering is over the details. Marc Elrich, a Montgomery County councilman, explained that he was agonizing about whether Maryland should spend $1.2 billion on a fixed light-rail system projected to transport 64,000 people per day, or spend just $600 million on a bus rapid transit (BRT) system with a dedicated lane, projected to transport 58,000, and use the savings for other worthwhile initiatives.

Chris Leinberger, a Brookings expert on development who comes at things from a real-estate perspective, countered that Elrich was approaching this too narrowly. Leinberger argued that transportation tends to drive development, and that transit projects should be viewed as a means of creating new value in a metro area. In that vein, he argued that middle-class people like trains well enough, but often refuse to ride buses, which carry the stigma of poverty; as a result, developers are much more likely to invest around rail stations than bus stops. (This may not be an ironclad law, but, alas, the United States has relatively few examples of successful BRT, a la the famous system in Curitiba, Brazil).

What's more, Leinberger assured the audience, developers will flutter to new light-rail stops in droves, because there's colossal pent-up demand in this country for transit-oriented development. By his count, some 30 to 50 percent of residents in U.S. metropolitan areas want to live in a walkable urban environment—a trend fueled by the growing number of single and childless couples, who will constitute 88 percent of household growth through 2040. Trouble is, he estimates there are currently only enough walkable neighborhoods to satisfy about 5 to 10 percent of metro residents, which is why rents in transit-accessible areas are so exorbitant. (Incidentally, the boom in childless households is one reason why development in D.C. could start to expand beyond Montgomery County and toward the northeastern suburbs, which have long been hampered by relatively inferior schools.)

Of course, to fix all this, new rail lines alone won't suffice. The towns around the proposed stops will have to revamp their zoning codes to allow high-density development near train stations—a suggestion that's typically greeted by angry, pitchfork-wielding mobs. (Ryan Avent recently dredged up a perfect example.) Now, since these changes in land use can both reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and bring down the cost of housing, Leinberger argued that environmentalists and social-justice activists should be at the forefront here. "Instead," he said, "you've just been leaving it up to developers—and no one seems to trust us!" Not that developers will ever be irrelevant: One interesting point Leinberger made was that if transit really does create the sort of value he expects, then real-estate developers should be more willing to pitch in and help finance these projects.

That still leaves the question of federal funding. Maryland has been working with the Federal Transit Administration to get these transit projects approved and shake loose matching funds, but John Pocari, the state's transportation secretary, observed that the process itself can be maddening. Notably, mass-transit projects must always prove that they're "cost-effective" over a fairly narrow timeframe. Yes, a transit project might be great for reducing carbon-dioxide emissions or essential for boosting the supply of affordable housing, but if it can't prove its own short-term cost-effectiveness, it'll never get off the ground. (Moreover, many cost analyses are often misguided, as one official in the audience point out: A bus system, for example, may appear to cost less upfront than light rail, even if the fact that it requires more drivers and frequent bus replacements means higher operating costs over the long haul.) Needless to say, highways rarely endure such scrutiny—indeed, for the full list of federal-funding biases that favor roads over transit, see this old post.

What's needed, Pocari concluded, is a more holistic approach to transportation that combines a broader vision of land-use planning with individual transit projects. The upside, he added, is that the transit funding process could be changed fairly easily by the Transportation Department itself—this doesn't need to wait for complex legislative fixes. That's why it's a genuinely encouraging sign that, for instance, veep-to-be Joe Biden recently came out and bragged about his "pro-rail bias" and talked up the need for more transit spending. An attitude like that can trickle down and have real consequences in short order.

--Bradford Plumer

Posted: Wednesday, December 03, 2008 6:15 PM with 9 comment(s)

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satyendra said:

"developers are much more likely to invest around rail stations. "   But there's nothing left to develop.  Every square inch around the purple line is already developed, much of it with fugly McTownhouses situated next to fast food joints and gas stations.  Well, perhaps the prices of the existing housing and rental occupancy will go up.

In Chevy Chase it's like they want to run it right over the Capital Crescent trail.  Understood that commuting is now suburb-suburb, but how to do it without wrecking existing green spaces.

December 4, 2008 9:36 AM

Brad Plumer said:

satyendra--Partially agree. I think there are both legitimate concerns about green space and fairly harmful NIMBYism going on in Chevy Chase, side by side. I mean, here's a map of the space that some activists want to prevent being converted into a walkable retail/office village near the proposed purple line station:

http://beyonddc.com/log/?p=455

Right now, it's a surface parking lot and an aging strip mall. (As for the Capital Crescent Trail, my understanding was they're still hashing out a way to preserve it.)

Also, I agree that a lot of the Purple Line stops in Montgomery County are pretty well developed (especially in a place like Bethesda), but there are a few places that could see a lot of development--Chevy Chase Lakes and Takoma/Langley are the two big ones, but parts of Prince George's, too. And it's possible to, eventually, redevelop those wastelands with fast-food joints and gas stations...

December 4, 2008 10:29 AM

The Plank said:

A Few Good Women: Obama ushers in a feminist revolution in national security. by A.J. Rossmiller Don't

December 4, 2008 10:43 AM

patrickbassett said:

Instead of constructing a  purple line, I'd prefer to see a monorail system that circles the beltway in both directions and connects to the Metro stations that are closest to the beltway, while we are at it this monorail system should connect  ones on the Dulles Toll Road and the I95 corridor between Baltimore and DC. A lot of satellite parking lots should be set up to encourage people to use this sytem.

December 4, 2008 11:02 AM

cspencef said:

I hadn't thought about the potential impact of ol' Amtrak Joe on this subject.  Not sure how much political capital an incoming VP has (probably very little), but it would be a good thing if Biden were to expend some of it on pushing non-driving transit.  

I am also a bit surprised that this Leinsberger chap didn't mention another inherent drawback to a BRT; it is still traffic-bound, and subject to the same grind that an ordinary commuter faces.  One of the practical salable benefits of a good transit system is a level of relative certainty about just how long your commute is going to take, without having to get snarled by that fender-bender on the connector.  (Yes, rail transit can get delayed too, but it doesn't happen quite so easily or regularly).

No, I don't live in DC, but I do think this is a debate coming soon to a metropolis near you.  And it's especially germane to the daring city that may be starting up some sort of light-rail or monorail system from scratch.  The mayor over in Kansas City was pushing a light-rail plan this past year; I don't think it passed, but I suspect it will come back at some point.  As I recall, though, it was pretty much the usual hub-and-spoke system, ignoring the burb-to-burb nature of much modern commuting (of course, the mayor of KC is primarily interested in sucking everybody into KC, one would suspect).  Somebody's going to have to persuade folks to step back and take a broader view of the greater metro area if a city like this is going to do transit right.  

In this case it's complicated by a state border, which I would assume also applies in DC with MD/VA; the mayor's plan was strictly on the MO side, which is silly since some of the larger population centers in greater KC -- Overland Park, for example -- are over here on the KS side of the border.  But who can get MO and KS to work together?

December 4, 2008 12:49 PM

dhauck said:

Brad -

It's always nice to see urban planners relinquishing their central-city focus.  Maybe some of these guys could call their counterparts in greater Cleveland and explain this viewpoint to them.  Right now, we have a single West side line to downtown, and a split East side line, again to downtown.  Most of the bus lines are similarly laid out on the spoke model.  If I could go from loop-bus to rail to loop-bus for my 30 mi cross-town commute, I would definitely take advantage of it, even though Cleveland's traffic is nothing like what some of you coastals put up with.  

However, those loop buses are pretty important to such a scheme, especially in a nasty weather town like Cleveland, and they might be the undoing of inter-burb rail, at least at the start.  Most big city downtowns are served pretty well by buses; most suburbs are not, especiallly the far flung ones where middle-class homes and businesses have been moving for 25 years.  And such suburbs, as mentioned above, tend to be much less dense than downtown.  So a rail line that drops me off in the suburb's town-center does me no good if I have to hump my briefcase 4 mi. through a foot of snow (or rain, or sweltering heat) to get to the office park where I actually work.  If that is required, rail riders will be hard to come by, at least until Mr. Leinberger's developers manage to relocate all the employers around rail hubs, say in another 25 years or so.

So we need to have those buses for the rail to be viable, but three or four loop buses for each of greater Cleveland's thirty suburbs adds up to a lot of freakin' buses, and ones that, individually, won't see huge ridership, because of their distributed nature.  This would be especially true outside of peak hours.  I suppose the solution is to shrink their size - maybe to half-size or less - and to have them owned/run by the individual suburbs, rather than a central transportation department, so they are quicker to respond to local demand.  Still, it seems like a hard sell.

What do you think?  Is this situation typical of most major cities, or are some of our factors here unique?  And are there better solutions for this than the loop buses (e.g. fewer buses and more rail stops)?  In my travels in Europe and Japan, a large part of this need seems to be handled by taxis, but that gets expensive fast, and of course all those idling taxis at the train stations aren't so great for the environment, either - I'd sooner keep on building highways.

December 4, 2008 1:10 PM

satyendra said:

Brad, I know that area real well, my Mom and stepfather live nearby.  I think the aerial of the "aging strip mall" depicts the Chevy Chase mkt., which my Mom can and does walk to.  I guess I don't see the point of replacing what I understand to be perfectly viable stores with the Starbucks and Borders-studded pseudo town squares that often take their place.

December 4, 2008 4:26 PM

satyendra said:

Actually, much as I've shopped at Chevy Chase Mkt., it's hard for me to visualize from the aerial if that exact store would be impacted.  The Smith & Hawken is right on CT, the Mkt. might be to the left of the area that NIMBY would preserve.

December 4, 2008 4:32 PM

Environment and Energy said:

Among the major reorganizing principles telegraphed in the early days after president-elect Barack Obama

December 5, 2008 10:53 AM