Transit-proximate development
Transit-proximate development is a term used by some planning officials to describe (potentially dense) development that is physically near a public transport node (e.g. a bus station, train station or metro station). This type of development includes transit-oriented development, but, according to some planning officials, can also describe development that is not transit-oriented development. Thus, transit-proximate development can include results where, despite the location of dense development near transit, the development does not take full advantage of -- or fully encourage the use of -- the public transport node. For example, transit-proximate development could include buildings with extensive parking facilities typical of suburban locations, a lack of "mixed-use development" (housing, workplaces and shopping in the same place), or a lack of extensive pedestrian facilities that would make it easier for people to reach the public transport node.
See also
- New Urbanism
- Smart growth
- Urban sprawl
- Transit-oriented development
- Principles of Intelligent Urbanism
- Transit village
- Value capture
References
- use of "transit-proximate" in a government planning document
- "transit-proximate development" distinguished from "transit-oriented development" in Congressional testimony