Development
Did building Metro bring growth? It depends where
This week, Metro celebrates the 35th anniversary of the opening of its first line, whose construction first began in late 1969. How effective has the system been in re-orienting development patterns?
In many ways, Metro has proven to be an essential element of the region's mobility system. Ridership, depending on who is counting and how they are doing it, ranges between 700,000 and 900,000 trips a day
That's slightly lower than initial estimates from the 1970s, which predicted 350 million annual trips in 1990, but it still makes it the nation's second most-used rapid transit system after New York's. And Metro's initial phase, about 100 miles in all, was completed twenty years late
Thus Washington's network is relatively new: Extensions continue to open every few years; a major new line running to and beyond Dulles Airport, in fact, is in construction.
This means that many of the changes that have been hypothesized to accompany heavy rail service, like densification, may not have yet appeared. Nonetheless, in some places, such as along the Rosslyn-Ballston Corridor in Arlington County, Virginia, significant urban redevelopment has occurred. Similarly, in cities like Charlotte, Denver, and Minneapolis, major new construction has begun after the completion of light rail lines.
Just how widespread are these effects? Have similar changes happened everywhere where new Metro stations have opened in the Washington region?
To examine this question, I have delved into recently released Census 2010 data to consider what has changed since 2000. By considering the alterations in development patterns near stations that opened about ten years ago, we can better understand what has occurred.
On first evaluation, there is no clear connection between the opening of a new station and increased construction
Between 1997 and 2001, nine Metro stations opened, two of which were in the heart of the city on the Green Line (Columbia Heights and Georgia Avenue) and the rest of which were at the termini of the Red (Glenmont), Blue (Franconia-Springfield), and Green Lines (Congress Heights, Southern Avenue, Naylor Road, Suitland, and Branch Avenue).

Compared to their host jurisdictions, only three of the nine stations saw higher growth in adjacent Census tracts: Columbia Heights, Franconia-Springfield, and Branch Avenue. In the areas around these stations, densification was significant, promoting the theory that transit can be an effective tool for urban regeneration and growth.
These changes were particularly interesting at Columbia Heights, where an already pretty dense neighborhood only became more so thanks to rapid replacement of low-lying building stock with taller buildings. Around the other two stops, largely vacant land was replaced with new construction.
Around two other stations
Finally, four of the studied stations saw a decrease in population in the surrounding Census tracts. Each station is on the southeastern branch of the Green Line, which runs through arguably the region's weakest area from an economic perspective. The presence of transit did not appear to be of any help here: Though Washington and Prince George's County saw population growth between 2000 and 2010, the specific neighborhoods around these stations did not.
Changes appear to be quite context-dependent. The population of the area around the Columbia Heights station expanded significantly, likely not only because of the presence of Metro, but also because of a growing interest nationwide in living in urban cores. On the other hand, the poor attractiveness of Prince George's County, just east of the District of Columbia, likely reduced developer interest in building around stations there.
This analysis indicates that the presence of a transit station cannot provide alone for the kind of urban redevelopment planners often hope to produce when they allocate funds to new rail lines. This does not mean that the opening of the new Metro stations was not an important element of regional growth in Washington, but rather that that infrastructure in itself is not enough to encourage developer interest. In the case of many of these stations, land was not available, zoning was not free enough, and the neighborhoods were not attractive enough to see substantial change, at least over the past ten years.
Transit systems like the Washington Metro are very expensive to construct, so public authorities must make a greater effort to coordinate planning efforts to allow for the creation of more transit-oriented districts to take advantage of such investments.
I would like to note several important caveats: The use of Census tract data in this analysis was meant to provide a neighborhood-level glimpse into development changes. Residents (or potential residents) are likely to see Metro stations as assets, even if their homes are not in immediate proximity. Yet development changes are likely to be unusually affected by that proximity: It may be useful to reconsider these questions at the block level. It is possible, for instance, that the areas directly adjacent to the southeast Green Line stations did see growth, even when surrounding neighborhoods did not.
| Opening Day | Place/Station (# Census tracts) | Pop 2000 | Pop 2010 | Density 2010 | Change in Pop | Change in Pop | Change in Hsg. Units |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2001-01-13 | Congress Heights (3) | 11,964 | 11,221 | 6,080.85 | -743.00 | -6.21% | -5.35% |
| 2001-01-13 | Southern Ave (3) | 12,826 | 11,730 | 6,624.12 | -1,096.00 | -8.55% | -2.25% |
| 2001-01-13 | Naylor Rd (6) | 22,775 | 22,262 | 5,114.41 | -513.00 | -2.25% | 0.31% |
| 2001-01-13 | Suitland (4) | 17,272 | 16,833 | 3,788.74 | -439.00 | -2.54% | -3.51% |
| 2001-01-13 | Branch Ave (1) | 3,425 | 4,696 | 2,582.80 | 1,271.00 | 37.11% | 83.13% |
| 1999-09-18 | Georgia Ave/ Petworth (5) | 20,490 | 21,351 | 25,104.06 | 861.00 | 4.20% | 6.70% |
| 1999-09-18 | Columbia Heights (4) | 16,434 | 17,646 | 44,015.96 | 1,212.00 | 7.37% | 19.99% |
| 1998-07-25 | Glenmont (6) | 26,866 | 28,678 | 4,606.17 | 1,812.00 | 6.74% | 1.52% |
| 1997-06-29 | Franconia/ Springfield (3) | 11,443 | 13,293 | 3,772.78 | 1,850.00 | 16.17% | 16.15% |
| Montgomery County | 873,374 | 971,777 | 1,978.15 | 98,403.00 | 11.27% | 12.33% | |
| Prince George's County | 801,476 | 863,420 | 1,788.76 | 61,944.00 | 7.73% | 8.54% | |
| Fairfax County | 969,840 | 1,081,726 | 2,766.78 | 111,886.00 | 11.54% | 13.51% | |
| DC | 572,059 | 601,723 | 9,856.49 | 29,664.00 | 5.19% | 7.96% |
Cross-posted at The Transport Politic.
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by jimble on Mar 28, 2011 3:28 pm
by MPC on Mar 28, 2011 3:32 pm
by Plangal on Mar 28, 2011 3:39 pm
by Le Mon on Mar 28, 2011 3:47 pm
In the absence of contradictory evidence, and when an outcome is expected, it is a more than reasonable to deduce that a correlation is due to causation. Or as http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/PSEUDOSC/GlobWarm.HTM">someone else put it
"If correlation doesn't prove causation, what does? Taken to its logical conclusion, you could observe the same result in a hundred experiments and dismiss it as merely a strong correlation. Correlation doesn't prove causation when there is no plausible link between two phenomena, or when there is some more plausible cause. But if there is a plausible link, then correlation is very strong evidence for causation. The correlation-causation caveat is routinely used in the social sciences to deny any causal connection that is inconvenient or embarrassing to the denier's ideology."
by David C on Mar 28, 2011 4:12 pm
I'd like to see a fully functional Metro station. That, to me, would be a station where no less than 40% of its peak population is present 24 hours a day, for whatever reason (residential, commercial, retail, business, work, after-work, etc.)
by C. R. on Mar 28, 2011 4:12 pm
by Dave Murphy on Mar 28, 2011 4:15 pm
by Ben Ross on Mar 28, 2011 4:18 pm
(Also, how about the Largo extension and the New York Ave infill station? There's already been very significant development around both of them -- far more so than the Southern Green Line segments and Glenmont extension)
by andrew on Mar 28, 2011 4:22 pm
by Tina on Mar 28, 2011 4:27 pm
by Tina on Mar 28, 2011 4:31 pm
Using their same methodology might be helpful to show some sort of continuation of development.
by thesixteenwords on Mar 28, 2011 4:47 pm
by DavidDuck on Mar 28, 2011 10:41 pm
For now, Ridership discussion begins on Page 16 of document, listed as page 53 in PDF.
by Yonah Freemark on Mar 28, 2011 11:16 pm
I doubt that what minor development there is at a few others had much to do with Metro.
by Tom Coumaris on Mar 29, 2011 2:58 am
by Thayer-D on Mar 29, 2011 7:14 am
- Pre-metro growth rates in these areas
- Whether/how Metro spurs commerical/retail/industrial? development
- NY Ave and Largo information
- How much building park-and-rides inhibits growth. (Not that we should not have park and rides, we absolutely need them at the ends of the lines, but we should temper our expectations about development at these locations)
by EJ on Mar 29, 2011 9:30 am
by andrew on Mar 29, 2011 11:11 am
Still, good work as usual Yonah.
by H Street Landlord on Mar 29, 2011 6:51 pm
Sorry dude, but I'd have to give you a failing grade on this paper. (And McKinsey or Bain would tell you "I'm sorry but we are pursuing other candidates -- you did not pass the case interview")
If you re-framed your article around the narrower question: "Did Metro Bring Increased Residential Density to Areas Around Stations?", you would get an A, and you would be hired.
A few items to consider:
(1) The recent GGW article (and comments) about the census showing a smaller than expected population gain near the Columbia Heights Station might be a good read.
(2) Is population growth a good measure of (or proxy for)"development"? Clearly not, given what happened at Columbia Heights over the past decade. In Columbia Heights, a multitude of new development projects and condo conversions displaced residents living in more "crowded", or more densely populated housing.
(3) Also, consider the incredible amount of retail development in Columbia Heights. How many residents did the DC USA project add? Zero. In fact, it may have displaced residents. But it is still "development" -- and development on a major scale.
by nwdc4life on Mar 30, 2011 12:11 am
There is no significant housing being developed either.
This station has produced, neither population or commercial growth.
It's very much a victim of the Jack Johnson-style corruption that has plagued this county for years.
by phil104 on Mar 30, 2011 8:22 am
http://www.gazette.net/stories/071206/aspenew213947_31993.shtml
But the NIMBYs effectively killed it by claiming it would create too much traffic, even though it would have sat directly on top of the Red Line terminus:
http://www.gazette.net/stories/053008/busimlo200007_32363.shtml
So, as you say, context is important when looking at all of these stations individually. But that context is not limited to land availability or developer interest. Short sighted local government plays a big role too.
by Dave in Wheaton on Mar 30, 2011 10:23 am
Other than a small piece of frontage on Silver Hill Road, it's completely surrounded by the Suitland Parkway and the Suitland Federal Center. And that stretch of Silver Hill Road is a very busy six-lane road with poor pedestrian crossings. Where would you put a shop or restaurant in order to get foot traffic from the Suitland station? Nowhere, really.
A pedestrian bridge or tunnel over/under Silver Hill Road would reduce the disconnection between the Suitland Metro and the surrounding community. It would still be more disconnected than one would like, but it would make access easier than it is now. The locations across Silver Hill Road from the Suitland station and the Suitland Federal Center would effectively be much closer to the Metro than they are now, and would be more valuable as a result.
by low-tech cyclist on Mar 30, 2011 3:24 pm
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