Transit-Oriented Affordable Housing study- Activity 1 RPC Meeting November 3, 2017

Similar documents
AGRICULTURAL LAND SOIL INVESTIGATION

Mixed Income Transit-Oriented Rental Housing Study

Residential Rental Tenure Zoning

TOD and Equity. TOD Working Group. James Carras Carras Community Investment, Inc. August 7, 2015

Analysis of the Financial Viability of New Purpose- Built Rental Housing at Transit-Oriented Locations in Metro Vancouver

Denver Comprehensive Housing Plan. Housing Advisory Committee Denver, CO August 3, 2017

10/22/2012. Growing Transit Communities. Growing Transit Communities Partnership. Partnership for Sustainable Communities

PROPOSED METRO JOINT DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM: POLICIES AND PROCESS July 2015 ATTACHMENT B

DRAFT REGIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING STRATEGY and METRO VANCOUVER HOUSING CORPORATION

The New Starts Grant and Affordable Housing A Roadmap for Austin s Project Connect

Housing & Development

Terms of Reference for Town of Caledon Housing Study

El Cerrito Affordable Housing Strategy City Council Presentation August 15, 2017

Implementing Mixed Income TOD: Shared Issues and Emerging Strategies

Housing Reset :: Creative Advisory Accelerating Non-Profit / City Partnerships What We Heard

City of Winnipeg Housing Policy Implementation Plan

Subject: Affordable Housing Reserve Fund Policy Bylaw No. 3866, 2008

SECURED MARKET RENTAL HOUSING POLICY NEW WESTMINSTER

RENTAL AND AFFORDABLE HOUSING Public feedback and RAH Strategy. July 5, 2016 Council Workshop

The Planning & Development Department and the Legal Services Division recommends that Council:

Subject. Date: January 12, Chair and Members of Planning and Development Committee 2016/02/01

Part 4 The Idea Bank

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT

Date: September 17, 2018 Meeting Date: October 5, Progress Update on the 2018 Regional Parking Study Household Survey

Mixed Income Transit-Oriented Rental Housing Study Transit Ridership

1.0 INTRODUCTION PURPOSE OF THE CIP VISION LEGISLATIVE AUTHORITY Municipal Act Planning Act...

METRO JOINT DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM: POLICY Updated January 2017

Date: May 15, 2014 Meeting Date: May 23, Corporation of Delta Proposed Amendment to Metro Vancouver 2040: Shaping our Future for Southlands

Affordable Housing Incentives. Regional TOD Advisory Committee June 15, 2018

Equitable Development Principles and Strategies

Town of Yucca Valley GENERAL PLAN 1

Prioritizing Publicly-Owned Lands as a Critical Resource For Affordable Housing Recommendations From GCC Public Lands Working to CASA

Parking Challenges and Trade-Offs

Corporate Services Planning and Economic Development. Memorandum

CITY OF VANCOUVER ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT

PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTING TOD: KEY FACTORS FOR SUCCESS. Sujata Srivastava Knowledge Corridor TOD Workshop June 5, 2013

Equitable Housing Initiative. February 18,

Metro Vancouver Purpose-Built Rental Housing Inventory and Risk Analysis. Profile for the District of West Vancouver

Barbara County Housing Element. Table 5.1 Proposed Draft Housing Element Goals, Policies and Programs

Burquitlam-Lougheed Neighbourhood Plan Market Analysis Findings and Lessons Learned

MOTION NO. M Capitol Hill Site D Agreement with Seattle Central College and Capitol Hill Housing

Provide a diversity of housing types, responsive to household size, income and age needs.

Twin Cities Region Equitable Development Principles & Scorecard

MODERATE INCOME RENTAL HOUSING PILOT PROGRAM: APPLICATION PROCESS, PROJECT REQUIREMENTS AND AVAILABLE INCENTIVES

City of Westminster

METRO VANCOUVER REGIONAL DISTRICT HOUSING COMMITTEE

ASSEMBLY BILL No. 904

housing element of the general plan Approved and Adopted April 2011

MOTION NO. M Capitol Hill Transit-Oriented Development Purchase and Sale Agreement and Ground Lease

Transfers of Property Q Sound Transit did not transfer any properties subject to RCW (1)(b) during the first quarter of 2018.

City of Oakland Programs, Policies and New Initiatives for Housing

Community & Infrastructure Services Committee

From Policy to Reality

Impacts of a New Transit Service on Property Values

NEW STARTS. Land Use & Economic Development. gbplacemaking.com

Transit-Oriented Development Specialized Real Estate Services

4.13 Population and Housing

Actual & Projected Population

The Corporation of the District of Central Saanich

Bending the Cost Curve Solutions to Expand the Supply of Affordable Rentals. Executive Summary

Atlanta BeltLine REGIONAL SYMPOISUM ON IMPLEMENTING TRANSIT PLANS

HSC Regeneration Forum The Last Chapter First: Lessons Learned

SUMMARY: FRAMEWORK FOR THE FUTURE

Development & Builders Association Comments on the Implementation Tools 2009 Affordable Housing Discussion Paper

Sound Transit s Office of Land Use Planning & Development Transit Oriented Development Quarterly Status Report Q2 2018

TOWN OF LEE NOBLE FARM DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP

BALTIMORE REGIONAL FAIR HOUSING IMPLEMENTATION PLAN 2/19/13

Scenario Planning with Envision Tomorrow

Bylaw No , being "Official Community Plan Bylaw, 2016" Schedule "A" DRAFT

Urban Mobility India 2012 New Delhi. Dr. Adnan Rahman. December, Transportation leadership you can trust.

AFFORDABLE ATLANTA. Presented By: Presented For: ULI Atlanta: LCC Working Group on Affordable Housing 1/16/18

CITY COUNCIL JANUARY 16, 2018 NEW BUSINESS

Housing Broward An Inclusive Housing Plan

Developing an Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance

Community Housing Federation of Victoria Inclusionary Zoning Position and Capability Statement

Policy Directions. Housing Affordability and Diversity.

HOUSING ELEMENT TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION...HO- 1 BAINBRIDGE ISLAND SNAPSHOT: PEOPLE AND HOUSING.. HO-1

State Policy Options for Promoting Affordable Housing

Pier 70 Special Use District

2016 Census Bulletin Changing Composition of the Housing Stock

Affordable Housing Advisory Committee Review of Recommendations. Planning and Development Department Community Development Division March 10, 2015

Draft for Public Review. The Market and Octavia Neighborhood Plan

CityShaping: Draft Official Community Plan East Third Street Area Consultation

Housing. Approved and Adopted by City Council November 13, City Council Resolution City Council Resolution

HOUSING: LINKING TOOLS TO NEEDS

Tools to Provide Long-Term Affordability Near Transit and Other Location-Efficient Areas. June 16, 2011

REGIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING STRATEGY UPDATE REVISED DRAFT

Land Use Impacts of BRT

CITY OF RICHMOND AFFORDABLE HOUSING STRATEGY

CITY OF VANCOUVER ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT

Implementation Tools for Local Government

Central Lonsdale Planning Study

Inclusionary Housing and the Inclusionary Housing Calculator

Housing Vancouver Strategy

ENABLING AFFORDABLE HOUSING IN LOCAL GOVERNMENT AREAS. Discussion Paper COMMONEQUITY.COM.AU

êéëé~êåü=üáöüäáöüí Livable Lanes: A Study of Laneway Infill Housing in Vancouver and Other Growing B.C. Communities

Housing renewal and the Compact City: The social implications of a planning orthodoxy

UDO Advisory Committee Meeting #3 August 18, 2011

DRAFT Affordable Housing Master Plan City of Grande Prairie

GREATER VANCOUVER REGIONAL DISTRICT HOUSING COMMITTEE

Transcription:

Transit-Oriented Affordable Housing study- Activity 1 RPC Meeting November 3, 2017

Overview 1. Housing supply and demand analysis 2. Environmental scan 3. Key findings from literature review 2

Section 1 -Supply Gap Analysis, 2017-2026 Estimate gap between rental supply and demand for low-income groups over next 10 years Data sources: CMHC completions data Metro Vancouver Rental Demand Projections 3

Supply gap analysis, 2017-2026 4

Section 2 Environmental scan Reviews recent investments, initiatives, policies for affordable rental housing and public transit Provides a regional context for potential partnerships to create deeper levels of affordability, opportunities to integrate housing and transit policy 5

Section 2 Environmental scan Key findings: ~ $1 billion for affordable housing allocated to Metro over the next 10 years Over $2.5 billion for public transit All levels of government are at the table Questions remain about how to integrate the two funding streams 6

Section 3: Literature Review What have other jurisdictions have done to promote affordable housing near transit? What are the policy tools, emerging/best practices, policy learning? 7

Literature review: Equitable Transit-Oriented Development Key concept: Equitable Transit-Oriented Development Equitable TOD refers to development and investment decisions that help households of all incomes have the opportunity to share in the benefits of walkable, livable, transit-rich communities Hickey, 2013 8

Collaboration and Cooperation needed Regional approach Need a quarterback agency Relationships, leadership, shared visions, buy-in Does not happen overnight 9

Example: Growing Transit Communities Partnership - Puget Sound Regional Council Partnership of over 100 non-profits, financial institutions, philanthropy organizations, businesses, governments across Puget Sound region Region-wide equitable transitoriented development strategy 10

Specific policy tools Range of policy tools can be employed to promote mixedincome rental housing near transit Various policy interventions from various partners required to create affordability. 11

Example of policy tools/interventions for senior levels of government Adapt housing programs Adapt transit programs Supply-side housing programs Grants to facilitate coordination 12

Measure Examples Examples of local and regional policy tools Public land Opportunity sites inventories Transit-Oriented Structured Funds/TOD Affordable Housing Funds -Various jurisdictions (e.g. King County Surplus Program for Affordable Housing) -The Association of Bay Area Governments Opportunity Sites Inventory (San Francisco) -Portland Housing Bureau -Denver TOD acquisition fund -Bay Area Transit-Oriented Affordable Housing Fund -Puget Sound Regional Equitable Development Fund Tax-Increment Financing Transit-Oriented Inclusionary zoning Joint Development Bond Financing Reductions in Parking requirements Density Bonusing Community Land Trusts -City of Portland Pearl District -The City of Atlanta Beltline Allocation District -Massachusetts Smart Growth Zoning Overlay District Act of 2004 -Metro (LA) 35% of all housing units in Metro joint developments projects must be affordable -Metropolitan Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA) requires 20% affordable housing on transit owned land. -Proposition 1C (California) -City of Austin bond issue -Various jurisdictions (e.g. Denver, Atlanta, Bay Area) -Various jurisdictions (e.g. Denver, Atlanta, Bay Area) - Atlanta Land Trust Collaborative (ALTC) -Urban Land Conservancy (Denver) 13

Important tool: Transit-Oriented Affordable Housing Funds 14

Thank You! Questions? Comments? 15

Transit-Oriented Affordable Housing Study Raymond Kan SENIOR REGIONAL PLANNER Regional Planning Committee November 3, 2017

1. About the Study 2. Key Findings 3. Next Steps

Working Definition of Housing Affordability Housing costs that do not exceed 30% of pre-tax household income The study focuses on households earning less than $50,000. Affordable rent is about $1,300 per month in rent. 3

Housing + Transportation Connection 4

About the Study Research + knowledge transfer New rental housing supply Strategic Partners: BC Housing BC Non-Profit Housing Association TransLink Vancity 5 Activities 5

Activity Deliverable Status Activity 1: Regional rental housing supply gap projections Innovative practices Activity 2: Quantify the relationship between income, tenure, and transit use Activity 3: Mapping inventory of lands under public or nonprofit ownership in transit-oriented locations Activity 4: Financial viability gap analysis of purpose-built rental housing Activity 5: Knowledge transfer BCNPHA report (ATTACHMENT 1) Regional Planning Committee and MVRD Board received findings and communicated to federal, provincial, and regional stakeholders in fall 2016. Maps and analysis Coriolis report (ATTACHMENT 2) Communications strategy and key messages for study partners Completed Completed Deferred to 2018 Completed Completed 6

Key Finding #1: Demand for rental housing, particularly housing affordable to households earning less $50,000 per year, is not being met across the region. Metro Vancouver 7

Key Finding #1: Demand for rental housing, particularly housing affordable to households earning less $50,000 per year, is not being met across the region. BC Non-Profit Housing Association 8

Key Finding #2: Renter households, especially those earning less than $50,000, are more likely to use transit, and that means improved access and mobility, and a higher return on investment in transportation. 2011 National Household Survey 9

Key Finding #3: New affordable rental housing is undersupplied because the rents generated do not cover the costs of development. The challenges are amplified in transit-oriented locations. Case Study Sites 13 older, low density sites Local policy and zoning set out expectations for redevelopment to higher density Near Frequent Transit Network 10

1,200 1,100 Wood Frame $ Per sq.ft. (net) 1,000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 Wood Frame Construction Cost (No Land or Profit) 0 1 2 3 4 SURREY COQUITLAM BURNABY VANCOUVER 11

$ Per sq.ft. (net) 1,200 1,100 1,000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 Wood Frame Modelling assumptions: 60% studios and 1 bedrooms affordable to households income of $30,000 40% 2+ bedrooms affordable to household income of $50,000 Wood Frame Construction Cost (No Land or Profit) Value Supported by Affordable Rent 0 1 2 3 4 SURREY COQUITLAM BURNABY VANCOUVER 12

1,200 1,100 Wood Frame $ Per sq.ft. (net) 1,000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 Wood Frame Market Rental Unit Value Wood Frame Construction Cost (No Land or Profit) Value Supported by Affordable Rent 0 1 2 3 4 SURREY COQUITLAM BURNABY VANCOUVER 13

1,200 1,100 1,000 900 800 Wood Frame Wood Frame Condo Unit Price $ Per sq.ft. (net) 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 Wood Frame Market Rental Unit Value Wood Frame Construction Cost (No Land or Profit) Value Supported by Affordable Rent 0 1 2 3 4 SURREY COQUITLAM BURNABY VANCOUVER 14

1,200 1,100 1,000 900 800 Concrete Concrete Condo Unit Price Concrete Market Rental Unit Value $ Per sq.ft. (net) 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 Concrete Construction Cost (No Land or Profit) Value Supported by Affordable Rent 0 1 2 3 4 SURREY COQUITLAM BURNABY VANCOUVER 15

Key Finding #4: There are creative ways to tackle land and construction costs, but it remains very challenging to make new affordable rental housing financially viable. Construction Costs On-site parking requirements Development charges Construction financing costs Wood frame (in neighbourhoods designated for medium density) Land Costs Land at discounted or zero costs Bonus density 16

Key Finding #5: Initiatives in other jurisdictions may be worth exploring to generate new affordable rental housing near frequent transit. Existing actions could potentially be scaled up. Partnerships are key. Transit-oriented affordable housing loan funds Transit-oriented inclusionary housing policies Integration of transportation and housing funding Federal tax incentives and grants Land trusts Property tax incentives 17

Next Steps: Knowledge Transfer Study partners: communications strategy and key messages Study webpage MVRD Board communication to federal, provincial, and regional actors 18

TRANSIT-ORIENTED AFFORDABLE HOUSING STUDY http://www.metrovancouver.org/services/regional-planning/housingaffordability/transit-oriented/pages/default.aspx

Final Report on the North Shore Corridor Study Pilot MARINE-MAIN FREQUENT TRANSIT CORRIDOR Erin Rennie SENIOR REGIONAL PLANNER, METRO VANCOUVER Regional Planning Committee, November 3, 2017

Outline Pilot Project Transportation on the North Shore Corridor Study Process Findings & Outcomes What we learned about corridor studies Opportunities for TDM 2

Corridor Study Pilot Project Metro Vancouver pilot project for the Urban Centres and FTDA Review Advance integration of corridors into regional planning policies and monitoring Intended to be replicated across the region 3

Transportation on the North Shore Leveraging North Shore Area Transportation Plan Advancing the land use and transportation conversation Continuing local government integration efforts 4

Introduction Early 2016- Fall 2017 Co-Led by Metro Vancouver & TransLink Participants: CNV, DNV, DWV, Squamish First Nation, & MoTI A collaborative corridor study to coordinate the planning and design for land use, growth, and transit along the Marine Drive-Main Street corridor on the North Shore. 2030 time horizon 5

6

1. How do we integrate corridors more effectively into regional planning and monitoring? 2. What level of transit service can be achieved given planned growth and, 3. What can be done to support the performance of the corridor s land use and transportation performance indicators? 7

Process: Marine-Main Frequent Transit Corridor Study 3 Phases: Study Area Definition & Policy Context Transit Service Design and Corridor Concept Corridor Monitoring Program Phase 1 Funding Announcement gave a 2019 deadline for B-Line 8

Findings By 2030 the corridor could support a high-frequency bus-based service with: Limited stops Lane segregation Signal Priority Stop amenities Branding Frequent service Recommended: Phase up to Bus Rapid Transit Light 9

Findings To implement the recommended service level by 2030 the communities would have to take action: Phased approach Increase bus lane segregation Implement transit signal priority measures Consider right-of-way width Implement TDM and other transitsupportive land use strategies (6 Ds). 10

Outcomes of the Pilot Study Advanced corridor integration into regional planning and monitoring Monitoring Program and Corridor Definition Furthered the NS ATP and head-start on 2019 B-Line Implementation 11

Marine-Main Metro 2040 Monitoring Program Logic Model Inputs Resources Needed Metro 2040 RTP North Shore ATP 10 Year Vision Phase 1 funding Measures (Key Performance Indicators) Activities Outputs Outcomes Impact How resources will be Units of service resulting Changed conditions for Changes in used from activities project partners communities/ Transit frequency Transit trip time Transit span Land use designation change Transit-Supportive Housing Policies Transit Daily ridership Transit Peak ridership Dwelling unit growth* Dwelling Unit Density Population Growth Employment growth Retail Development Office Development Housing Tenure Mix Housing Type Mix Kilometres of bike facility Employment Type Mix Transit Capacity utilized Housing + Transportation cost burden Annual VKT per capita Population Distribution by Age Group Household Makeup Walkability Index Customer Satisfaction systems Mode share Percent of regional dwelling unit growth located in corridor Percent of sub-regional employment growth located in corridor Income Mix 12

13

What we learned about corridor studies Value in thinking across municipal boundaries Identification of important interdependencies Strengthens lines of communication & connections across disciplines Moves conversation forward and readies communities for implementation. Future corridor studies: incorporate land use and TDM analysis into scope 14

Considering how to integrate corridors more effectively into regional planning Visually and conceptually makes sense Recognize that growth won t be ubiquitous across corridor Monitoring Program will help us learn more 15

6 Ds of Transit Oriented Communities Integrating transit and land use means considering other influencers of ridership besides density. The 6 D's of Transit Oriented Communities Demand Management Distance Density Destinations These factors also support complete community and Metro 2040 goals. Diversity Design 16

Opportunities for Transportation Demand Management Continue to improve walk and bike network 2017 Apartment Parking Study Transit Oriented Affordable Housing Study (TOAH) Move away from Level of Service (LOS) and focus on people moving capacity Require a multimodal focus from developers 17

Opportunities for Transportation Demand Management Employer Engagement Market Segmentation Corridor Analysis Individualized Marketing Campaigns Embrace congestion as incentive for changing behaviour 18

Thank You

Land Cover Classification NEW REGIONAL HIGH-RESOLUTION LAND COVER CLASSIFICATION Josephine Clark REGIONAL PLANNER, PARKS, PLANNING & ENVIRONMENT Regional Planning Committee November 3, 2017

Land Cover Extents

Multi- Spectral Satellite Imagery and LiDAR

LiDAR 2m Hybrid 5m Outputs

Classes and Accuracy 3-level hierarchy 14 final classes Overall accuracy = 87% (hybrid) Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Built-Up Buildings Paved Other Built Bare Barren Soil Vegetation Tree Canopy Coniferous Deciduous Shrub Grass-Herb Natural Modified Non-photosynthetic vegetation Water Shadow Clouds/Ice

5m hybrid Orthophoto Comparison 5m hybrid and orthophoto

Urban area (1:3,000)

Rural area (1:3,000)

5m no LiDAR 2m with LiDAR Effect of LiDAR

Limitations Snapshot in time Class confusion Small features missed Canopy model

Canopy model

Applications Planning land use, stormwater management, drinking water resource management Air emission inventorying Ecosystem mapping Indicators and monitoring Ecosystem services assessment

Ecosystem connectivity: Pacific wren (DRAFT)

Example of 30m riparian zone Example of selected watershed Landscape indicators of aquatic ecosystem health

Next Steps Change methodology Measures Canopy cover Impermeability Assessment of further ecosystem services

Questions?

Small features missed