Unlike conventional mixed-use infill projects, Midtown Commons will
feature wide streets with plenty of maneuvering room for Capital Metro
buses conveying commuters to and from trains, Sallis says. "We were
also trying to have a tight, urban, densesite," he says. "It took
compromises on everyone's part to do that."
Capital Metro is
working with Trammell Crow to connect its new station directly with
Midtown Commons, according to Misty Whited, a spokesperson for the
transit authority. Capital Metro is developing two more stations along
the 32-mile rail line including one in Leander, a community at the
northern end of the route, and is working with the City of Austin to
coordinate development of the rail terminal in downtown Austin.
"We've always had an idea of placing our station in that
[Crestview] area because it's one of the heaviest corridors," Whited
says of the station that will open adjacent to Midtown Commons.
Trammell Crow has developed other transit-oriented projects around the
nation and understands the rail line's potential to drive commercial property uses,Whited says. "They're keyed in on transit-oriented development and they really know that can be successful."
Transit-oriented development isn't entirely new to Texas. The
Dallas Area Rapid Transit system, or DART, links 13 cities in the
Dallas/Fort Worth metropolitan area and has spawned several commercial
developments. One of those, Mockingbird Station, has fueled extensive
retail and apartment construction, and a stop in Plano has driven a
redevelopment of that community's downtown area, according to Brian
Jetty, executive vice president of the North Texas Commercial
Association of Realtors and Real Estate Professionals.
Even so, transit-oriented development is an immature field in
Texas, where professionals have been slow to try mass transit."I don't
have a sense that culturally we're there yet," Jetty says. "If you're
making $200,000 a year, you're probably not taking mass transit even if
it runs from right by your house to right by your office."
In Austin, however, insufficient highway infrastructure results in
commute times that are particularly long for a secondary market.That's
why transportation planners expect the planned rail service to be a hit
with commuters. "Austin is booming and it's not going to stop anytime
soon," says Whited of Capital Metro. "The downtown population is
increasing everyday, and we're doing our best to provide more choices
for people who live in this area."
If developers like Trammell Crow want to help make commuter rail
stops more successful by providing complementary projects, Capital
Metro is ready to listen to their ideas, she says. "We're willing to
work with anybody who's got transit-oriented development in mind."
http://www.masstransitmag.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=3&id=6090&pageNum=1