Property Values and Transportation Facilities: Finding the Transportation-Land Use Connection

This article reviews empirical studies of the relationship between transportation facilities—highways, heavy rail, and light rail transit systems—and property values. The main objective is to develop an explanation for inconsistent results presented in this literature over the past several decades. Results from these studies vary based on whether travel time or travel distance is used as a measure of accessibility. When researchers measure access to highways and rail transit in terms of travel time, study results usually indicate the expected inverse relationship between access to transportation facilities and property values. When studies use travel distance as a measure of access to transportation facilities, results tend to show mixed property value effects. The delineation of study areas also appears to influence the direction of results. This article offers a new interpretation of the transportation facility-property value literature that improves our ability to measure this relationship and to anticipate land-market responses to transportation facilities.

[1]  R. Voith,et al.  TRANSPORTATION, SORTING AND HOUSE VALUES , 1991 .

[2]  Hong-wei Huang,et al.  The Land-Use Impacts of Urban Rail Transit Systems , 1996 .

[3]  J. Strathman,et al.  LIGHT-RAIL TRANSIT STATIONS AND PROPERTY VALUES: A HEDONIC PRICE APPROACH , 1993 .

[4]  R. Cervero LIGHT RAIL TRANSIT AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT , 1984 .

[5]  C O Falcke STUDY OF BART'S EFFECTS ON PROPERTY PRICES AND RENTS , 1978 .

[6]  William G Adkins,et al.  LAND VALUE IMPACTS OF EXPRESSWAYS IN DALLAS, HOUSTON, AND SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS , 1959 .

[7]  William C Pendleton,et al.  RELATION OF HIGHWAY ACCESSIBILITY TO URBAN REAL ESTATE VALUES , 1963 .

[8]  G Giuliano,et al.  Research Policy and Review 27. New Directions for Understanding Transportation and Land Use , 1989 .

[9]  Carlos F. Daganzo,et al.  Storage space vs handling work in container terminals , 1993 .

[10]  S. Lewis-Workman,et al.  Measuring the Neighborhood Benefits of Rail Transit Accessibility , 1997 .

[11]  Martin Wohl,et al.  MASSACHUSETTS ROUTE 128 IMPACT STUDY , 1959 .

[12]  Eric Damian Kelly,et al.  The Transportation Land-Use Link , 1994 .

[13]  R. L. Knight,et al.  Evidence of land use impacts of rapid transit systems , 1977 .

[14]  Raymond B Palmquist IMPACT OF HIGHWAY IMPROVEMENTS ON PROPERTY VALUES IN WASHINGTON STATE , 1982 .

[15]  Arthur Christian Nelson,et al.  IMPROVING THE EFFECTS OF ELEVATED TRANSIT STATIONS ON NEIGHBORHOODS , 1990 .

[16]  V. Bajic,et al.  The Effects of a New Subway Line on Housing Prices in Metropolitan Toronto , 1983 .

[17]  Dean H. Gatzlaff,et al.  The Impact of the Miami Metrorail on the Value of , 1993 .

[18]  D Damm,et al.  THE EFFECT OF THE WASHINGTON METRO ON URBAN PROPERTY VALUES , 1978 .

[19]  Robert Clinton Burton,et al.  SOCIO-ECONOMIC CHANGE IN VICINITY OF CAPITAL BELTWAY IN VIRGINIA , 1964 .

[20]  Wei Huang THE EFFECTS OF TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE ON NEARBY PROPERTY VALUES: A REVIEW OF LITERATURE , 1994 .

[21]  J S Golden LAND VALUES IN CHICAGO: BEFORE AND AFTER EXPRESSWAY CONSTRUCTION , 1968 .

[22]  国際協力機構国際協力総合研修所 Urban and regional development , 2006 .

[23]  R. Kirwan Location and Land Use: Toward a General Theory of Land Rent , 1966 .

[24]  Donald N. Dewees,et al.  The effect of a subway on residential property values in Toronto , 1976 .

[25]  R. Cervero,et al.  Assessing the impacts of urban rail transit on local real estate markets using quasi-experimental comparisons , 1993 .

[26]  Armstrong,et al.  IMPACTS OF COMMUTER RAIL SERVICE AS REFLECTED IN SINGLE-FAMILY RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY VALUES , 1994 .

[27]  Robert Cervero,et al.  Journal Report: Light Rail Transit and Urban Development , 1984 .

[28]  D. Boyce,et al.  IMPACT OF RAPID TRANSIT ON SUBURBAN RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY VALUES AND LAND DEVELOPMENT. ANALYSIS OF THE PHILADELPHIA--LINDENWOLD HIGH-SPEED LINE , 1972 .

[29]  P D Cribbins,et al.  ECONOMIC IMPACT OF SELECTED SECTIONS OF INTERSTATE ROUTES ON LAND VALUE AND USE , 1965 .

[30]  H. B. Gamble,et al.  BENEFICIAL EFFECTS ASSOCIATED WITH FREEWAY CONSTRUCTION--ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL, AND ECONOMIC , 1978 .

[31]  J. Landis,et al.  Rail Transit Investments, Real Estate Values, and Land Use Change: A Comparative Analysis of Five California Rail Transit Systems , 1995 .

[32]  Hays B. Gamble,et al.  ADVERSE AND BENEFICIAL EFFECTS OF HIGHWAYS ON RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY VALUES , 1974 .

[33]  Michael Dyett BART IMPACT PROGRAM: LAND USE AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT IMPACTS OF BART. , 1979 .

[34]  J H Lemly CHANGES IN LAND USE AND VALUE ALONG ATLANTA'S EXPRESSWAYS , 1959 .

[35]  Arthur Christian Nelson,et al.  EFFECTS OF ELEVATED HEAVY-RAIL TRANSIT STATIONS ON HOUSE PRICES WITH RESPECT TO NEIGHBORHOOD INCOME , 1992 .