Dena Belzer – Economics of
Building Around Light Rail
By: Chris Harpstrite
Today,
February 06, I attended a luncheon in St. Louis at the Hilton Hotel hosted by
Citizens for Modern Transit. The luncheon brought in Transit Oriented
Development expert Dena Belzer, from Berkely, California. Her hour presentation
discussed the economical side of building around light rail and some of the
benefits of doing and also some of the hardships of trying to get it done.
She discussed St. Louis’s
economy and some of the challenges we in particular face. Some of these are:
St. Louis is in a slow growth region and how local governments around the state
are currently in a fiscal crisis themselves. But she also discussed how trends
in America are looking up and how these trends potentially positively affect
transit oriented development around the nation. Currently, almost half of the
households in the nation are single, and most of those are single women. There
is also almost 76 million baby boomers in the nation and 75-80 million
mellenials. All these groups are the primary users of mass transit and transit
oriented development properties.
Dena also spoke about the
benefits of transit oriented development in communities. There is a consumer
saving from being able to ditch one or more of their vehicles, and of course
there is an environmental benefit. Bust most importantly from a city point of
view, it is very efficient land use.
Overall I thought it was a
great lecture and I really learned a lot. CMT tries to do a lecture like this
every couple months, so hopefully I will be able to make it to another one
soon.
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