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PUBLICATION
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MTI Report 04-03
The Pasadena Gold Line: Development Strategies, Location Decisions, and
Travel Characteristics along a New Rail Line in the Los Angeles Region
Principal Investigator: Dr. Hollie Lund, Dr. Richard W. Willson
The first purpose of this study is to examine the early travel
behavior outcomes of Gold Line TODs and identify TOD design and policy features that
contribute to success. The project methodology is consistent with that used in Travel
Characteristics of Transit-Oriented Development in California to allow comparisons to results
elsewhere in the state and to complete the creation of a baseline for future Gold Line or
statewide studies. The study methodology is also similar to studies done on this subject in
the early 1990s. The second purpose of this study is to understand the factors
behind the TOD boom in the Gold Line corridor. Unlike the previous studies, this research
includes interviews with key developers and property managers operating in Gold Line
station areas. In these surveys, they discuss their understandings of the influence of rail
transit accessibility on development, to identify
both encouragements and impediments to TOD.
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ABSTRACT
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The
Pasadena Gold Line, a recent extension of the L.A. Metro System, has had a
boom in transit-oriented development
(TOD) along its corridor, but total ridership has been lower than
anticipated. This study, conducted
less than one year after rail service began, provides an initial assessment
of the travel behavior and
residential location choice among TOD residents, baseline data for future
assessments, and an exploratory
analysis of development issues along a new rail corridor. For a more
comprehensive understanding
of development and behaviors along the corridor, the study uses both
quantitative and qualitative
approaches. Quantitative travel and location choice data are collected
through household surveys of
residents in multifamily buildings within walking distance of a Gold Line
station. Interviews with developers
and property managers probe the logic and influencing factors behind rail
station development and
the extent to which rail access is incorporated into building management
strategies along new rail lines. By
maintaining consistency with a similar statewide TOD study conducted by Lund, Cervero, and Willson
in
2003, the research makes comparisons to other rail systems across California.
The
research indicates that providing housing within rail station areas can
encourage ridership. Station-area residents
surveyed were 2.5 times more likely to use transit than residents living in
the same area in 2000, before
rail service began. This gain was realized although most residents were
attracted to the station area because
of neighborhood quality and housing factors, not transit access. Residents
also walk and bicycle at moderately
high levels. The results support the need to further examine and implement
transit-supportive policies
and development practices: affordable housing, identifying appropriate
land-use mixes and parking requirements,
creating transit-oriented (not just transit-adjacent) projects, and
promoting more transit supportive workplace
policies (at TOD and non-TOD locations). Ridership could increase if TODs
can attract
more transit-dependent persons (those with fewer vehicles or lower incomes,
and seniors). Future studies
should monitor ridership and development trends as the Gold Line and its
station areas mature.
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ABOUT
THE AUTHORS
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HOLLIE LUND, PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Hollie Lund, Ph.D., is an assistant professor of urban and
regional planning at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. Her areas of specialty are local transportation
planning, transportation-land use interactions, and community
revitalization. Dr. Lund was primary investigator on the statewide TOD study funded by
Caltrans in 2003.
RICHARD W. WILLSON
Richard W. Willson, Ph.D., AICP, is department chair and
professor of urban and regional planning at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. Dr. Willson’s research in
transportation planning addresses land use-transportation
relationships, travel demand management, and parking policy. He also consults with regional
and local transportation agencies and was a
co-researcher on the 2003 Caltrans TOD study.
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TECHNICAL
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MTI
Report 04-03
The Pasadena Gold Line: Development Strategies, Location Decisions, and
Travel Characteristics along a New Rail Line in the Los Angeles Region
Principal Investigator: Dr. Hollie Lund, Dr. Richard W. Willson
Published: April 2005
Keywords: Behavior; Car utilization; Case studies; Rail transportation;
Transit-oriented development.
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MTI
Report 04-03
The
Pasadena
Gold Line: Development Strategies, Location Decisions, and
Travel Characteristics along a New Rail Line in the
Los Angeles
Region
Principal Investigator: Dr.
Hollie Lund, Dr. Richard W. Willson
Published: April 2005
Keywords: Behavior; Car utilization; Case studies; Rail
transportation; Transit-oriented development.
PDF
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