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TOD Toolkit: TOD potential at the Hi-Lake Station along Hiawatha Corridor

Developed by. WORKING DRAFT. TOD Toolkit: TOD potential at the Hi-Lake Station along Hiawatha Corridor. Support from. Twin Cities Regional Transit Vision. Hiawatha Light Rail Corridor. Demand for Housing Near Transit.

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TOD Toolkit: TOD potential at the Hi-Lake Station along Hiawatha Corridor

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  1. Developed by WORKING DRAFT TOD Toolkit: TOD potential at the Hi-Lake Station along Hiawatha Corridor Support from

  2. Twin Cities Regional Transit Vision Hiawatha Light Rail Corridor

  3. Demand for Housing Near Transit • By 2030, between 110,000 – 124,000 Twin Cities’ households will have a potential demand for living near transit (roughly 6% of region’s households) • Nationally, demand for housing near transit could double to over 15 million households. • Household size is shrinking, with singles and couples without children being the new majority. • 49% of the households with a potential demand for living near transit qualify as Low Income • 4,000-9,000 new housing units could potentially be located on underutilized sites in the Hiawatha corridor to accommodate projected future demand

  4. Tremendous Development Response in Last 3 Yrs. • As of December 2006, 11,931 housing units and 1,054,436 square feet of commercial space have been built, are under construction, planned or proposed within a half mile of the 17 stations. • 7,000 units of housing have already been either proposed or built within a half mile of the Hiawatha Line since 2000. • The majority of these projects, (65 out of 108 total projects and 45 out of 72 residential and mixed use/residential projects), are within the half-mile areas surrounding the four Downtown stations • Transit investment has leveraged higher-density TOD in historic industrial areas • “Hot Market” for Downtown station areas Recent Planned and Proposed Development, since 2003

  5. Courtesy Metropolitan Council

  6. Need to Ensure Long-Term Affordability • Corridor has a median household income of $31,000, versus $54,000 for region • Only 37% of units are owner-occupied (versus 70% for the region) creating potential for displacement • Out of 72 new residential projects since 2003, only 25% (18) are affordable or mixed income Residential Development along Hiawatha since 2003

  7. Land Constraints in the Corridor • Variety of distinct land uses and development types • Civic uses (i.e. airport, VA Hospital, Fort Snelling) dominate the corridor at 54% of total land uses and limit redevelopment potential • Multiple funding sources and jurisdictions, including Federal, impede coordination

  8. Lessons & Opportunities • Little coordination of housing and transit policies have resulted in missed opportunities • 504 underutilized acres identified as potential redevelopment sites along the corridor • Many new development projects outside downtown are smaller infill projects and not the larger “catalytic” projects necessary to promote a rider-transit link

  9. Station Example: Hiawatha and Lake Street • Located roughly mid-point on the Hiawatha line, divided by transportation infrastructure, with a number of large underutilized sites. The majority of households are low-income (median income in 1999 of only $23,342) and transit-dependent. • Available sites are being bought up by speculators or developers building small projects that are not making highest and best use of property near the station. • Plans for improvements and connections are now in place or moving forward but better coordination during initial planning and design would have ensured critical development. 2001 preferred concept ¼-mile and ½-mile radius around Hi-Lake station Station area plan developed in 2001

  10. Corcoran Midtown Revival Plan

  11. Yield Analysis Site Selected Area for Yield Analysis Development Scenarios

  12. Yield Analysis: Two Strategies Tested • Critical Mass/ Master Developer Approach • Single developer creates plan, obtains entitlements, prepares site, then sells for development of may develop some or all of site 2) Transit-Oriented Development Parking Ratios Assumes fewer parking spaces to help reduce costs and improve affordabilty

  13. Yield Analysis: Results of 3 Scenarios

  14. Scenario 1: Keep Existing Office

  15. Scenario 2: Higher Density Mixed Use & Residential

  16. Option 3 – 4 story mixed use & rowhouses

  17. Key Hard Cost Assumptions

  18. Condominiums: Average $250 per SF or $236,000 per Unit (946 Net SF)Note: Lower Value for Apartments Row Houses: Average $225 per SF or $360,000 per Unit (1,600 Net SF) Retail & Office: $1.25 per SF/Mo. triple net • Revenue Assumptions

  19. In the current market, development on the site would not generate enough value to pay to relocate the school district activities Lower-density development is more financially feasible in the short-term Over the longer term, higher densities may be possible, but timing will depend on the housing market and construction costs • Preliminary Findings

  20. A master developer approach is not a good idea at this site currently current market conditions are not conducive to desired type of development inability to assemble the land and wait to develop it later A “pioneering” project on the MnDOt site could help to increase development potential • Implications for Implementation

  21. Generate a Master Plan for the site Include flexibility to maintain existing office building Continue dialogue with the School District about future development options Monitor market conditions vis-à-vis timing of RFP for development of MinnDot site • Next Steps

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