This document discusses the need for improved public transit options in New York City neighborhoods that are currently underserved by the subway system. It notes that the city's population and job centers have increasingly shifted to the outer boroughs, but the subway system was designed based on mid-20th century land use patterns. As a result, over 750,000 city residents now commute over an hour each way, disproportionately impacting low-income families. The document proposes bus rapid transit (BRT) as a more affordable solution that could significantly increase mobility and access to jobs/opportunities in transit-starved areas, outlining eight priority corridors for further BRT planning and implementation.
Supported by The Rockefeller Foundation, this ebook highlights a dozen of CityLab's favorite stories from the 2014 series on how Americans will travel tomorrow.
U.S. Bus Rapid Transit: 10 High-Quality Features and the Value Chain of Firms...The Rockefeller Foundation
Bus rapid transit (BRT) is increasingly being considered in cities across the United States as a reliable and cost-effective public transit mode. A large part of the appeal of BRT is its flexibility, offering a choice of system features that can be adapted to each community’s needs and constraints. As more U.S. cities look to BRT, they will need to understand the value chain that provides the vehicles, technology, services and financing needed to create a high-quality BRT system.
Urban transportation is undergoing massive change and expansion, especially in the developing world. The rapid growth of cities is driving demand for better urban transportation and many cities are set to invest heavily in infrastructure. Unfortunately, the needs of low-income households are often overlooked in the selection, design, and service decisions related to these investments. According to the World Bank, urban public transportation systems disproportionately disadvantage the urban poor and vulnerable, especially in cities in the developing world.
Meanwhile, innovative business and service models are emerging that are disrupting the established transportation systems in cities by taking advantage of open data, the Internet and mobile telephony. Services such as bike share, ZipCar®, Waze®, Hopstop®, and Uber® are reducing consumption and reconfiguring the relationship between modes, users, and providers of transportation. These new approaches improve urban transportation by making it more efficient, dependable, and sustainable.
As Susan Zielinski of the University of Michigan’s SMART Initiative puts it, “Transportation is at a crossroads. In response to rapid urbanization, shifting demographics, and other pressing social, economic, and environmental factors, cities and regions are shifting investment dollars from single mode infrastructure to multi-mode, multi-service, IT-enabled door-to-door systems… innovations and opportunities (are going) beyond the bounds of the traditional transportation industry.”
Collectively referred to as the emerging New Mobility sector, this innovative industry sector provides a key opportunity to build more inclusive cities and more resilient communities.
Catalyzing the New Mobility in Cities is an exploratory effort focused on identifying innovative business and service models that are beneficial to the urban poor, both as users and providers of urban transportation.The primer briefly summarizes and showcases some of the hallmark innovations that are challenging the status quo in rapidly growing cities in the developing world.
While the mobile sector has grown significantly over the last 5-7 years, scale and sustainability have yet to be achieved. To further explore opportunities and barriers to investment and partnership to scale mobile-enabled technology, the Rockefeller Foundation has supported the work of Mobile for Development Intelligence, an open data research portal for the developing world mobile industry.
This report analyzes market and user data to provide a fuller picture of activities in the mobile sector and present recommendations on how to accelerate economic, social and environmental impact with mobile solutions.
This is the presentation Michael Skipper, Executive Director of the Metropolitan Planning Office, delivered to the Transit Citizen Leadership Academy of Septemb
Over 300 stakeholders from 12 countries representing the private sector, government, training institutions, academia, philanthropy, and youth attended the Impact Sourcing (IS) Conference held on November 13th and 14th at the Polo Club in Johannesburg, South Africa.
The event was hosted by Rockefeller Foundation Africa regional office Managing Director Mamadou Biteye and the Digital Jobs Africa Team, and was officially opened by Dr. Edmund Katiti, director of the Africa Program for the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD).
Supported by The Rockefeller Foundation, this ebook highlights a dozen of CityLab's favorite stories from the 2014 series on how Americans will travel tomorrow.
U.S. Bus Rapid Transit: 10 High-Quality Features and the Value Chain of Firms...The Rockefeller Foundation
Bus rapid transit (BRT) is increasingly being considered in cities across the United States as a reliable and cost-effective public transit mode. A large part of the appeal of BRT is its flexibility, offering a choice of system features that can be adapted to each community’s needs and constraints. As more U.S. cities look to BRT, they will need to understand the value chain that provides the vehicles, technology, services and financing needed to create a high-quality BRT system.
Urban transportation is undergoing massive change and expansion, especially in the developing world. The rapid growth of cities is driving demand for better urban transportation and many cities are set to invest heavily in infrastructure. Unfortunately, the needs of low-income households are often overlooked in the selection, design, and service decisions related to these investments. According to the World Bank, urban public transportation systems disproportionately disadvantage the urban poor and vulnerable, especially in cities in the developing world.
Meanwhile, innovative business and service models are emerging that are disrupting the established transportation systems in cities by taking advantage of open data, the Internet and mobile telephony. Services such as bike share, ZipCar®, Waze®, Hopstop®, and Uber® are reducing consumption and reconfiguring the relationship between modes, users, and providers of transportation. These new approaches improve urban transportation by making it more efficient, dependable, and sustainable.
As Susan Zielinski of the University of Michigan’s SMART Initiative puts it, “Transportation is at a crossroads. In response to rapid urbanization, shifting demographics, and other pressing social, economic, and environmental factors, cities and regions are shifting investment dollars from single mode infrastructure to multi-mode, multi-service, IT-enabled door-to-door systems… innovations and opportunities (are going) beyond the bounds of the traditional transportation industry.”
Collectively referred to as the emerging New Mobility sector, this innovative industry sector provides a key opportunity to build more inclusive cities and more resilient communities.
Catalyzing the New Mobility in Cities is an exploratory effort focused on identifying innovative business and service models that are beneficial to the urban poor, both as users and providers of urban transportation.The primer briefly summarizes and showcases some of the hallmark innovations that are challenging the status quo in rapidly growing cities in the developing world.
While the mobile sector has grown significantly over the last 5-7 years, scale and sustainability have yet to be achieved. To further explore opportunities and barriers to investment and partnership to scale mobile-enabled technology, the Rockefeller Foundation has supported the work of Mobile for Development Intelligence, an open data research portal for the developing world mobile industry.
This report analyzes market and user data to provide a fuller picture of activities in the mobile sector and present recommendations on how to accelerate economic, social and environmental impact with mobile solutions.
This is the presentation Michael Skipper, Executive Director of the Metropolitan Planning Office, delivered to the Transit Citizen Leadership Academy of Septemb
Over 300 stakeholders from 12 countries representing the private sector, government, training institutions, academia, philanthropy, and youth attended the Impact Sourcing (IS) Conference held on November 13th and 14th at the Polo Club in Johannesburg, South Africa.
The event was hosted by Rockefeller Foundation Africa regional office Managing Director Mamadou Biteye and the Digital Jobs Africa Team, and was officially opened by Dr. Edmund Katiti, director of the Africa Program for the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD).
Cities have long birthed advances in the sciences, arts, human rights, business and government. Millions of people have moved to cities for better lives or services unavailable elsewhere.
But as cities grow, so are problems stemming from stretched transportation, energy and water infrastructure.
Suburban poverty affects over 16.4 million people across the U.S. and is growing rapidly, significantly outpacing the growth rate of urban poverty over the last decade (64% vs. 29%). Experts suggest that the problem of suburban poverty is “the new normal.” While the basic needs of the poor in the suburbs are similar to those of the urban poor (e.g. education inequity, poor access to quality healthcare etc.), there are some critical systemic differences (e.g. limited transportation options, jurisdictional challenges etc.). These challenges are further exacerbated by the lack of awareness and understanding of the problem and
potential solutions.
For the Final of the European Student Parliament in Copenhagen in June 2014, I created a preparation kit. My working group of around 10 young students from all over Europe was asked to develop new ideas for future mobility in cities.
In my overview I touched several topics, such as understanding cities, relevance of mobility, current challenges and perspectives for the future.
More information on my blog: hoffmannmartin.eu/youth-science-finals-of-the-european-student-parliaments/
Walk this Way: The Economic Promise of Walkable Places in Metropolitan Wash...Jesse Budlong
the Brookings Institution has created a five-tiered scale of walkability for metropolitan neighborhoods, from completely non-walkable places (exurban residential communities where everyone gets around by car) to mixed-use, dense and amenity-rich neighborhoods where you may not need a car at all (think, in the Washington, D.C., region, Dupont Circle and Georgetown).
At iomob we seek to transform urban mobility from its current fragmented state towards a decentralised internet of mobility marketplace. This white paper seeks to explore emerging trends and future directions towards more seamless access to public and private mobility services.
Creating Better Places with Transportation Demand Management (TDM)Mobility Lab
A “transit premium” can increase property values by anywhere between a few percentage points up to more than 150 percent.
TDM focuses on shifting travelers away from single occupancy-vehicle modes like biking, walking, bus, and rail. In many cases, however, TDM solutions and programs may address only a single alternative mode, or ignore the increasing diversity in how people – particularly younger generations – are traveling.
There is strong evidence of this narrow focus occurring frequently. Residential buildings may tout their WalkScore as a measure of pedestrian-friendliness. Or a commercial building may earn a Bicycle Friendly Business’ designation from the League of American Bicyclists. While these tools and designations are certainly valuable, sustainable buildings should have an an equitable distribution of transportation options and opportunities.
Most property owners and managers (and the business leaders who operate within them) can find ways to better promote and encourage a range of multi-modal options.
My contribution to helping them do so is the Multi-Modal Transportation Score (or what I like to call ModeScore for short). It measures the total accessibility of a given building, taking into account all possible sustainable transportation modes. My overarching goal is that building users will create and embrace programs to encourage and increase alternative travel.
Cities have long birthed advances in the sciences, arts, human rights, business and government. Millions of people have moved to cities for better lives or services unavailable elsewhere.
But as cities grow, so are problems stemming from stretched transportation, energy and water infrastructure.
Suburban poverty affects over 16.4 million people across the U.S. and is growing rapidly, significantly outpacing the growth rate of urban poverty over the last decade (64% vs. 29%). Experts suggest that the problem of suburban poverty is “the new normal.” While the basic needs of the poor in the suburbs are similar to those of the urban poor (e.g. education inequity, poor access to quality healthcare etc.), there are some critical systemic differences (e.g. limited transportation options, jurisdictional challenges etc.). These challenges are further exacerbated by the lack of awareness and understanding of the problem and
potential solutions.
For the Final of the European Student Parliament in Copenhagen in June 2014, I created a preparation kit. My working group of around 10 young students from all over Europe was asked to develop new ideas for future mobility in cities.
In my overview I touched several topics, such as understanding cities, relevance of mobility, current challenges and perspectives for the future.
More information on my blog: hoffmannmartin.eu/youth-science-finals-of-the-european-student-parliaments/
Walk this Way: The Economic Promise of Walkable Places in Metropolitan Wash...Jesse Budlong
the Brookings Institution has created a five-tiered scale of walkability for metropolitan neighborhoods, from completely non-walkable places (exurban residential communities where everyone gets around by car) to mixed-use, dense and amenity-rich neighborhoods where you may not need a car at all (think, in the Washington, D.C., region, Dupont Circle and Georgetown).
At iomob we seek to transform urban mobility from its current fragmented state towards a decentralised internet of mobility marketplace. This white paper seeks to explore emerging trends and future directions towards more seamless access to public and private mobility services.
Creating Better Places with Transportation Demand Management (TDM)Mobility Lab
A “transit premium” can increase property values by anywhere between a few percentage points up to more than 150 percent.
TDM focuses on shifting travelers away from single occupancy-vehicle modes like biking, walking, bus, and rail. In many cases, however, TDM solutions and programs may address only a single alternative mode, or ignore the increasing diversity in how people – particularly younger generations – are traveling.
There is strong evidence of this narrow focus occurring frequently. Residential buildings may tout their WalkScore as a measure of pedestrian-friendliness. Or a commercial building may earn a Bicycle Friendly Business’ designation from the League of American Bicyclists. While these tools and designations are certainly valuable, sustainable buildings should have an an equitable distribution of transportation options and opportunities.
Most property owners and managers (and the business leaders who operate within them) can find ways to better promote and encourage a range of multi-modal options.
My contribution to helping them do so is the Multi-Modal Transportation Score (or what I like to call ModeScore for short). It measures the total accessibility of a given building, taking into account all possible sustainable transportation modes. My overarching goal is that building users will create and embrace programs to encourage and increase alternative travel.
Before Metro Bus, CDA completed Feasibility Study on Bus Rapid Transit Project, Islamabad, Pakistan. The indicative capital costs for the BRT system are estimated at US$ 79 million, and annual operating costs at US$ 3.8 million. The report will provide awareness as how much Tax payer money we are wasting in the Metro Bus Project.
Micro Urbana Communities- Creating and Implementing Livable Transportatino So...Cynthia Hoyle
How can communities successfully create multi-modal transportation systems? This presentation discusses how Champaign-Urbana, IL has been working to give people choices in mobility and lifestyle and how it has been succeeding in creating mode-shift.
The Transforming Health Systems (THS) initiative was one of The Rockefeller Foundation’s largest global health initiatives. Aligned with the Foundation’s mission to promote the well-being of humanity, THS aimed to improve the health status and financial resilience of poor and otherwise vulnerable populations through activities promoting improved health systems performance and the expansion of universal health coverage (UHC).
This report synthesizes findings from a five-year, multicomponent evaluation of the THS initiative. The objectives of the evaluation were to assess i) the effectiveness of the three core strategies – global advocacy, regional networks, and country-level investments – employed under THS to advance progress toward UHC in low- and middle-income countries in four focus countries, ii) the overall effectiveness and influence of the initiative, and iii) the Foundation’s legacy in the UHC arena. A key component of the evaluation was to document lessons learned from achievements and challenges to inform the development of future initiatives at the Foundation.
Overall, the evaluation found the THS initiative to be successful in its efforts to activate a global movement to accelerate progress toward UHC. The Foundation catalyzed and shaped the global UHC movement and, ultimately, influenced the inclusion of UHC in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the post-2015 agenda. It also created enduring cross-learning platforms and tools to support country progress toward the SDGs’ UHC targets. Although THS gained less traction in advancing UHC through its focus country investments, its success in making UHC a global development target and creating networks and coalitions to support UHC reform efforts in LMICs will likely have country-level impacts for years to come.
This guide is designed for program officers to use in their work related to networks, coalitions, and other relationship-based structures as part of their initiatives, program strategies, and outcomes. It offers a set of core components that make up the basics of strategizing, implementing, and sustaining inter-organizational relationships and structures. You can work through the guide from beginning to end or jump to specific issues with which you might be struggling. Every component suggests concrete “actions” or questions that a program officer can apply.
Putting “Impact” at the Center of Impact Investing: A Case Study of How Green...The Rockefeller Foundation
More than ever before, investors are looking to put their money where their values are. As a result, impact investing has burgeoned into an over $100 billion industry in just over ten years. But how do impact investors know whether their money is truly having a positive impact on people and
the planet? How can these investors better manage their results, and use material data – both positive and negative – about social and environmental performance to maximize their impact?
This case study documents the journey of one organization, Green Canopy Homes – and its financing arm, Green Canopy Capital – toward more systematically thinking about, measuring, and managing its impact. While developing the impact thesis for its resource-efficient homes, Green Canopy applied a theory of change tool, an approach common within the social sector, to systematically map the causal pathways between its strategies and intended impact. Its rationale for adopting this approach was simple: use it to maximize impact, and understand and minimize possible harm. The tool also effectively positioned Green Canopy to measure and communicate about its social and environmental performance, and to make client-centric adaptations to its business.
The case study provides an illuminating example of how investors can adapt theory of change to serve their impact management needs. By demonstrating the relevance and transferability of this tool for articulating, measuring, and managing impact, the hope is that this case study can contribute to strengthening other investors’ approaches, in turn contributing to building the evidence base for the “impact” of impact investments.
Electricity is one of the most important drivers of socio-economic development, yet up to 250 million Indians are not connected to the national grid, and the majority of rural consumers have grossly unreliable power supply. More than solar lanterns and home systems that power a few lights and fans, among the most efficient ways to provide reliable electricity in remote areas is through local mini-grids. India has several run by energy service companies and usually funded by philanthropic capital.
Most of these enterprises have not been able to scale-up their impact meaningfully because the risk of the national grid entering their markets can render their mini-grid unviable. Rather than seeing “grid versus mini-grid” as a policy choice, Beyond Off-Grid: Integrating Mini-Grids with India’s Evolving Electricity System explores ways we can encourage more of both: to have the grid operate in partnership with a network of distributed mini-grids to accelerate electrification.
What does the roadmap for this ‘interconnection’ of our energy system look like? How can we leverage both government and private investment? What are the different interconnection models and their commercial, technical and regulatory implications? Where do mini-grids go from here? This timely report – commissioned by the Asha Impact Trust in collaboration with Shakti Foundation and Rockefeller Foundation – provides a multi-layered perspective to address these questions based on extensive research, wide-ranging policymaker interactions, and our investment experience evaluating mini-grid operators.
We cannot achieve significant poverty reduction without stimulating electricity consumption, which fuels income-generating activities in the modern economy. In India, about 237 million people have little or no access to reliable electricity -- more than 90% of them live in rural areas. This severely constrains economic opportunities. Addressing this chronic problem requires going beyond simply expanding the government grid.
Mini-grids have emerged as a viable solution to complement and integrate with the national grid, and can support the government in achieving its ‘Power for All’ vision. The Rockefeller Foundation’s Smart Power for Rural Development (SPRD) initiative is the first to pursue the creation of a mini-grid sector that is robust enough to fuel commercial enterprises and drive economic development beyond just one village. Smart Power India (SPI), which leads the SPRD initiative in India, has proven that mini-grids can be swiftly deployed to deliver reliable power, and has likewise demonstrated that mini-grids can spur economic activity needed to help people lift themselves out of poverty.
This issue of Smart Power Connect, published after the hundredth village was connected to Smart Power, explores the efforts, success stories, and challenges faced in SPI’s mini-grid journey to date. With insights from government agencies, policy experts, energy service companies, investors and mini-grid customers themselves, this publication provides a glimpse into the potential of the mini-grids to transform the energy sector – and how rural communities are embracing and utilizing clean, reliable and adequate power to improve their lives.
Today, nearly 240 million Indians lack access to reliable electricity, and 90 percent of them live in rural areas. Despite the government’s ambitious plans to accelerate universal electrification by 2018, challenges remain in providing reliable and sufficient energy to the last mile. Distributed renewable energy (DRE) solutions, and in particular mini-grids, have emerged as a reliable complement to the government’s electrification programs by providing rural areas with access to reliable and high-quality electricity at a much faster pace. The growth of the DRE sector will be an important fillip to the last-mile challenge.
Smart Power India (SPI) is an organization that implements The Rockefeller Foundation’s Smart Power for Rural Development (SPRD) to build viable and commercially oriented mini-grid ecosystems in India. This report explains the Smart Power mini-grid model and explores the drivers of success. Analyzing early data from a cohort of the 106 Smart Power mini-grids operational as of 2017, SPI provides data on commercial performance as well as recommendations to further accelerate the rural mini-grid business.
Encouragingly, the report reveals that the 23 top-cohort plants have an average unit-level profit margin of approximately 30% after the first year of operations. It also highlights that villages receiving electricity from SPRD mini-grids show early signs of social and economic impact (also see Understanding the Impact of Rural Electrification.) SPI has observed that site selection, a strong focus on operations, support for demand generation and marketing optimized for rural customers, are critical to the continued improvement of mini-grid operations. Finally, the report provides recommendations to address external challenges such as the need for increased financing, stronger policy support and further technological innovation.
A successful philanthropic initiative depends not just on the strategy pursued – but also on how that strategy is implemented. Implementation considerations can vary significantly based on the shape of an initiative – starting a new organization can look very different than investing in a portfolio of existing organizations. This report looks at four “models” for implementing initiatives. These don’t represent an exhaustive set of potential models to pursue, or even the most high potential models. Rather, these are four examples of models, each of which has significant potential for impact when chosen wisely and executed well. The report outlines the considerations involved in choosing to pursue each of these models and findings on how to implement them, drawn from real-world experience.
Globally, over 1 billion people still live without electricity. Roughly 237 million of these people are in India. Smart Power for Rural Development (SPRD) is a $75 million initiative aimed at accelerating development in India’s least electrified states. Through the deployment of decentralized renewable energy mini-grids, SPRD works to accelerate the growth of rural economies, while at the same time improving the lives and livelihoods of poor and marginalized families and communities. With access to energy, individuals, households, and communities can generate economic opportunities and enhance their quality of life. Understanding the Impact of Rural Electrification has generated significant insights on how SPRD is having an impact on the lives of villagers, and what more is needed to sustain, grow, and scale these gains. We’ve learned that households and businesses are slowly but surely moving up the energy ladder; enterprises are expanding and new ones are being created as a result of energy access, and women are feeling safer and more mobile after dark. In this report, we also introduce the innovative GDP+ approach which, which quantifies and measures the social, economic and environmental gains of access to electricity in GDP terms. The initial findings here show that SPRD villages experienced an $18.50 per capita increase in GDP+.
The information in this brief is drawn from a case study of the JLN conducted by Mathematica Policy Research in consultation with the THS team and the Evaluation Office of The Rockefeller Foundation. The study, completed in 2016, was undertaken to assess the extent to which the JLN had achieved its goal of becoming a country-driven, sustainable network helping to advance progress toward universal health coverage in low- and middle-income countries.
The Joint Learning Network (JLN) is a key innovation and central part of The Rockefeller Foundation’s efforts to promote universal health coverage (UHC) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) under its Transforming Health Systems (THS) initiative (2009-2017). Launched in 2010, the JLN is a country-led, global learning network that connects practitioners around the globe, in order to advance knowledge and learning about approaches to accelerate country progress toward UHC. The JLN currently includes 27 member countries across Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America that engage in multilateral workshops, country learning exchanges, and virtual dialogues to share experiences and develop tools to support the design and implementation of UHC-oriented reforms. The core vehicles for shared learning and resource development under the JLN are technical initiatives, which are managed by several technical partners and organized around key levers for reaching UHC objectives.
With 62.5 million tons of food wasted in the United States each year, there is much work to be done to
bring about substantial changes in the food industry that will create a more efficient food system and
help preserve the environment. This guide describes promising opportunities to reduce food waste
in three areas—packaging, food retail, and home kitchens—and discusses a number of solutions that
could be piloted, validated, and scaled to significantly reduce food waste in America.
National Disaster Resilience Competition's Resilience Academies - Emerging In...The Rockefeller Foundation
In 2015 The Rockefeller Foundation partnered with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to launch the National Disaster Resilience Competition (NDRC)
Resilience Academies. Recognizing the salient need to infuse resilience thinking into HUD’s NDRC, these Academies were established to expose state and local governments to new approaches for protecting and promoting the long-term well-being and safety of their communities. A recent independent evaluation of the Academies has provided instructive insights about what works in efforts to build innovative resilience capacity.
Following its successful partnership with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) post–Hurricane Sandy Rebuild by Design competition, The Rockefeller Foundation launched the Resilience Academies and Capacity-Building Initiative. Designed to support HUD’s National Disaster Resilience Competition (NDRC), the Academies and the Initiative provide eligible state, county, and municipal governments with subject-matter expertise and lessons from the Foundation’s years of on-the-ground disaster recovery programming and mitigation planning. Further, the Foundation hoped to assist these key players in moving global knowledge and resources to meet homegrown needs.
In December 2016, The Rockefeller Foundation’s African Regional Office hosted the Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Convening in Nairobi, Kenya. Over 150 delegates and 40 speakers participated, sharing insights, examples, and engaging in debate and discussion on why and how ‘resilience’ can enhance Africa’s ongoing development.
Launched in 2008, the Asian Cities Climate Change Resilience Network (ACCCRN) Initiative aimed to catalyze attention, funding, and action for building the climate change resilience of vulnerable cities and people in Asia. Given that current estimates forecast that about 55 percent of Asia’s population will be living in urban centers by 2030, the ACCCRN Initiative is built on the premise that cities can take actions to build climate resilience – including drainage and flood management, ecosystem strengthening,
increasing awareness, and disease control – which can greatly improve the lives of poor and vulnerable people, not just in times of shock or stress, but every day.
At the time the initiative was launched, the concept of urban resilience and models for implementing it were nascent and emergent. ACCCRN proved to be an important experiment and “learning lab” for the Foundation and its grantees and partners to build capacity in cities to better understand and implement resilience solutions to the often devastating shocks and stresses of climate change. The initiative was effective in the initial 10 ACCCRN cities and, later, in an additional 40 cities.
As part of our Foundation-wide commitment to learning and accountability to our grantees, partners and stakeholders, we undertook an independent evaluation of the work of the initiative in 2014 to assess what worked well and not so well in ACCCRN. Conducted by Verulam Associates and ITAD, who also conducted a mid-term evaluation of the ACCCRN Initiative in 2011, this summative evaluation highlights successes, but also provides an important moment to reflect on the challenges we faced and on what we can do better or differently going forward.
As part of its overall mission of promoting the well-being of humanity throughout the world, The Rockefeller Foundation developed the goal of advancing inclusive economies. The framing of this goal is deliberate: the word inclusive stresses the need to overcome disadvantage while the choice of economies versus growth suggests the need to consider all dimensions of economic life. This executive summary outlines efforts to develop a framework to better understand and measure the characteristics of an inclusive economy. It includes:
• The evolution of the concept of an inclusive economy
• Key lessons learned from an analysis of indicator initiatives
related to measuring an inclusive economy
• A recommended indicator framework composed of 5 broad
characteristics, 15 sub-categories, and 57 indicators
• Implications for future work
For more details, a full report is available at:
inclusiveeconomies.org
Situating the Next Generation of Impact Measurement and Evaluation for Impact...The Rockefeller Foundation
Situating the Next Generation of Impact Measurement and Evaluation for Impact Investing contends that measurement practices need to evolve by borrowing from the strengths of both private business and social sector evaluation. Suggesting that an impact thesis is a crucial anchor for impact measurement strategies, the paper offers several measurement approaches in use today. The ‘next generation’ of impact measurement and evaluation must stem from a commitment of impact investors to strengthen evidence for their social returns alongside the evidence for financial returns.
The goal of the CEO & Gender Media Audit was to understand the media coverage of CEOs in various situations and determine if there are differences in the way male and female CEOs are covered.
This session provides a comprehensive overview of the latest updates to the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards (commonly known as the Uniform Guidance) outlined in the 2 CFR 200.
With a focus on the 2024 revisions issued by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), participants will gain insight into the key changes affecting federal grant recipients. The session will delve into critical regulatory updates, providing attendees with the knowledge and tools necessary to navigate and comply with the evolving landscape of federal grant management.
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the rationale behind the 2024 updates to the Uniform Guidance outlined in 2 CFR 200, and their implications for federal grant recipients.
- Identify the key changes and revisions introduced by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in the 2024 edition of 2 CFR 200.
- Gain proficiency in applying the updated regulations to ensure compliance with federal grant requirements and avoid potential audit findings.
- Develop strategies for effectively implementing the new guidelines within the grant management processes of their respective organizations, fostering efficiency and accountability in federal grant administration.
Up the Ratios Bylaws - a Comprehensive Process of Our Organizationuptheratios
Up the Ratios is a non-profit organization dedicated to bridging the gap in STEM education for underprivileged students by providing free, high-quality learning opportunities in robotics and other STEM fields. Our mission is to empower the next generation of innovators, thinkers, and problem-solvers by offering a range of educational programs that foster curiosity, creativity, and critical thinking.
At Up the Ratios, we believe that every student, regardless of their socio-economic background, should have access to the tools and knowledge needed to succeed in today's technology-driven world. To achieve this, we host a variety of free classes, workshops, summer camps, and live lectures tailored to students from underserved communities. Our programs are designed to be engaging and hands-on, allowing students to explore the exciting world of robotics and STEM through practical, real-world applications.
Our free classes cover fundamental concepts in robotics, coding, and engineering, providing students with a strong foundation in these critical areas. Through our interactive workshops, students can dive deeper into specific topics, working on projects that challenge them to apply what they've learned and think creatively. Our summer camps offer an immersive experience where students can collaborate on larger projects, develop their teamwork skills, and gain confidence in their abilities.
In addition to our local programs, Up the Ratios is committed to making a global impact. We take donations of new and gently used robotics parts, which we then distribute to students and educational institutions in other countries. These donations help ensure that young learners worldwide have the resources they need to explore and excel in STEM fields. By supporting education in this way, we aim to nurture a global community of future leaders and innovators.
Our live lectures feature guest speakers from various STEM disciplines, including engineers, scientists, and industry professionals who share their knowledge and experiences with our students. These lectures provide valuable insights into potential career paths and inspire students to pursue their passions in STEM.
Up the Ratios relies on the generosity of donors and volunteers to continue our work. Contributions of time, expertise, and financial support are crucial to sustaining our programs and expanding our reach. Whether you're an individual passionate about education, a professional in the STEM field, or a company looking to give back to the community, there are many ways to get involved and make a difference.
We are proud of the positive impact we've had on the lives of countless students, many of whom have gone on to pursue higher education and careers in STEM. By providing these young minds with the tools and opportunities they need to succeed, we are not only changing their futures but also contributing to the advancement of technology and innovation on a broader scale.
Understanding the Challenges of Street ChildrenSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Mobility and Equity for New York's Transit-Starved Neighborhoods
1. A Report Funded by the Rockefeller Foundation and
Written by the Pratt Center for Community Development
December 2013
Mobility and Equity
for New York’s
Transit-Starved
Neighborhoods:
The Case for Full-Featured
Bus Rapid Transit
2. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit
In a year that marks the Rockefeller Foundation’s centennial and
the Pratt Center for Community Development’s 50th anniversary,
we turn our focus toward the future of New York City.
New York City’s public transportation system moves millions of people every day. But an increasing
number who live in outer borough neighborhoods are stuck with unreliable transit options and long travel
times tracked in hours, not minutes.
It does not have to be this way.
Developed by the Pratt Center for Community Development and funded by the Rockefeller Foundation,
this report highlights the limitations of New York City’s current public transit system, the adverse effects
those limitations have on our economy and quality of life, and the role Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) can play in
remedying these transit inequities.
BRT has transformed cities across the world from Mexico City to Barcelona to Cleveland. At a fraction of
the cost to build just a mile of subway rail, BRT gives riders a reliable way to get where they need to go.
BRT is effective. It is innovative. And it could be the solution for New York’s transit-starved neighborhoods.
Sincerely,
Michael Myers
Senior Policy Officer and
Director of Centennial Programming
Rockefeller Foundation
Adam Friedman
Executive Director
Pratt Center for Community Development
3. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit
This paper was written by
Joan Byron,
Director of Policy,
Pratt Center for Community Development,
with assistance from
Elena Conte,
Senior Organizer for Planning and Policy,
and with research by
Dylan Carey and Korin Tangtrakul.
Pratt Center works for a more sustainable
and equitable New York City by integrating
research, advocacy, and technical assistance
to community-based organizations. For more
information, visit www.prattcenter.net
Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods:
The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit
Additional Support
The Rockefeller Foundation is working with
public affairs firm Global Strategy Group to
support and promote bus rapid transit in
New York City.
4. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit
Contents
Executive Summary
Mobility and Equity
Impact of Transit Deficits for New York’s Underserved Neighborhoods
Funding Transit Expansion
Growing Needs, Limited Resources
Bus Rapid Transit
A Cost-Effective, High-Performance Solution for New York City
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network
Advancing BRT in New York City
Challenges, Strategies, and Next Steps
Appendix 1: FAQs and Concerns About BRT
Appendix 2: BRT Networks
Evolving Visions
Appendix 3: Maps
Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods:
The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit
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1
5. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 1
Executive Summary
New York City’s transit system is the largest and most heavily used in the
United States, serving more riders each day than the twenty next largest
systems combined. New York’s density and economic vitality would be
impossible without its bus and subway system.
But the system doesn’t serve all New Yorkers equally. Over 758,000 New York City residents commute more than an
hour each way. Two-thirds of those workers are traveling to jobs that earn their families less than $35,000 per year. And
commutes are lengthening for more and more people. Skyrocketing housing costs push low- and moderate-income
families farther from Manhattan and the well-connected communities that surround it, to the “two-fare zones” where
the nearest subway station is a long, slow bus ride away. While free transfers now keep the cost of those trips to a single
swipe, commuters on Staten Island and in outlying neighborhoods of the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens, pay an ongoing
penalty in time spent away from their families.
Employers outside the Manhattan Central Business District pay a price for poor transit as well. The number of jobs in
Manhattan below 60th Street declined by over 100,000 from 2000 to 2009 – during the same period, every other borough
gained jobs. And while the recovery of the financial sector has brought some jobs back to Manhattan, growth in other
industries – retail, education, health care, manufacturing, transportation, logistics, and more – has continued to add jobs
in outer borough clusters that are poorly served by transit. Most New Yorkers work in the same borough where they live –
but the subway system’s radial design makes cross-borough commutes difficult. A trip that would take twenty minutes by
car can take forty-five minutes by bus. Bus trips are not only slow but also unpredictable, forcing some employers to send
vans or livery cars to pick up workers from subway stops that may be several miles away. Employers have trouble finding
and keeping workers, and workers find their access to jobs severely limited – especially to the mid-skilled work that offers
a ladder out of poverty.
Difficult trips to destinations other than work also undermine the health and quality of life for those living in underserved
neighborhoods. Hospitals and the clusters of health services that surround them are often difficult to reach, especially
for seniors and people with disabilities. Students face long trips to the high schools and colleges that offer access to the
skills needed to succeed. Local retail strips struggling to compete with big box chains suffer from lack of transit access,
and from car-oriented street designs that discourage foot traffic.
There is no realistic prospect of expanding the subway system to serve outlying neighborhoods. The Metropolitan
Transportation Authority’s capital budget is severely challenged to finish the expansion projects already underway,
to maintain the system in good condition, and to repair the damage done by Hurricane Sandy. Cost aside, subway
construction below New York City’s streets and buried infrastructure is difficult and disruptive, subject to unpredictable
delays and cost escalation.
Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods:
The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit
6. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 2
Bus Rapid Transit for New York City
Bus Rapid Transit offers a cost-effective and achievable
solution to the mobility needs of New York’s transit-starved
neighborhoods. The MTA and New York City’s Department of
Transportation have taken important steps toward improving
the speed and reliability of bus travel with Select Bus Service,
now implemented or planned for a total of seven routes since
its 2008 launch on the Bx12 in the Bronx. Even without some of
the key features that characterize true BRT, SBS has delivered
significant reductions in trip time, and won high ratings for
customer satisfaction.
New York’s underserved communities need something
more. They need Bus Rapid Transit – a full-featured system
that performs as well or better than light rail, but can be
implemented at a fraction of the time and cost.
The Institute for Transportation and Development Policy’s
(ITDP) BRT Standard 2013 identifies five features as essential
for a system to qualify as Bus Rapid Transit. These features
are referred to by ITDP as the ‘BRT Basics’ and are the
elements that define the concept of ‘full-featured’ BRT. To
achieve the speed, flexibility, reliability, and comfort that the
world’s most successful BRT systems have demonstrated, we
need:
• Bus lanes located along center medians rather than next to
the curb, where they can be physically protected and where
conflict with traffic, parking, and loading is minimized;
• Traffic signal priority and turn restrictions to maximize both
speed and safety;
• Visible and comfortable stations where
- Riders pay fares before the bus arrives, eliminating delays
in boarding;
- Platforms allow level boarding through multiple bus doors,
providing universal access and further minimizing delay;
- Maps and real-time bus information are available and
clear.
Fortunately, in many neighborhoods where the need for better
transit is greatest, rapid implementation of full-featured BRT is
physically feasible. Major streets in these areas are wide, often
with six or more traffic lanes, and with center medians that
could accommodate BRT stations. Long blockfronts minimize
the number of intersections, and the long distances along these
routes make the gains in speed from BRT truly significant in
reducing travel time.
Full-featured BRT can offer riders in what are now
transit-starved areas the speed, reliability, and comfort
we normally associate with rail. It also provides a fully
accessible ride for seniors, people with disabilities,
and people traveling with children. And when BRT is
implemented as a network, with well-planned connections
between BRT corridors and existing subway and bus routes,
it has the potential to greatly increase the mobility of a very
large number of people who today are isolated from transit.
BRT improves travel time and safety for non-riders as
well. On the M15 SBS corridor in Manhattan, taxi GPS
data shows that overall congestion has decreased with the
creation of separated bus and bike lanes. The changes have
also led to fewer crashes and injuries. Local retail corridors
benefit from increased foot traffic when BRT infrastructure
is coordinated with pedestrian and bicycling improvements.
Improved transit access may decrease demand for parking,
and make it possible to redesign street fronts that are now
made uninviting and chaotic by wide curb cuts and setbacks
for parking.
Executive Summary
7. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 3
Priority Corridors for BRT
This report includes a recommendation
for eight new, full-featured BRT corridors
to be prioritized for further evaluation,
planning, and implementation. The
corridors were selected based on their
potential benefits, and on their physical
feasibility for BRT. Using data from the
US Census, the Department of Labor,
and the New York City Department of City
Planning, we identified:
• Areas where many people live more
than ½ mile from any subway station
• Corridors connecting major job
centers, especially those lacking good
subway access
• Corridors connecting major health
care and educational hubs
We then prioritized corridors where BRT
is physically feasible, selecting those
where for most of their length, streets
include:
• Six or more traffic lanes
• Center medians
• Long distances between intersections
A full-featured BRT network that would
speed commutes and open up opportunity
for millions of New Yorkers is achievable
and affordable. It would build upon the
framework of collaboration our agencies
have established by implementing Select
Bus Service; it would require the agencies
to engage all stakeholders in identifying
and overcoming obstacles to the more
substantial interventions that BRT
would entail. It would demand a modest
commitment of capital dollars – backed
by a real commitment of political capital
by leaders at the City and State level.
Executive Summary
7
East Bronx
hospital cluster -
East Harlem
2HuntsPoint-Flushing-Jamaica
8Mid-Staten
Island-JerseyCity-
Holland
Tunnel3 Staten Island North Shore
6 Sunset Park - JFK
via SE
Brooklyn
5FarRockaway-
Jamaica
1LGA-Woodhaven-Rockaway
4 Sunset Park - JFK
via hospital cluster
0 52.5 Miles
Select Bus Service routes
Subway routes
Major roads
Tier 1
Tier 2
Proposed BRT Corridors
1 La Guardia / Woodhaven / Rockaway
2 Hunts Point / Flushing / Jamaica
3 Staten Island North Shore
4 Sunset Park / JFK via hospital cluster
5 Far Rockaway / Jamaica
6 Sunset Park / JFK via south east Brooklyn
7 East Bronx hospital cluster / East Harlem
8 Mid-Staten Island / Jersey City / Holland Tunnel
Proposed BRT routes
8. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 4
Mobility and Equity
Impact of Transit Deficits for New York’s
Underserved Neighborhoods
Lack of access to rapid and reliable transit exacts economic and non-economic costs on the families least able to bear them
– households that are struggling to maintain their footing in New York City. As housing costs rise in neighborhoods close
to Manhattan and areas well-served by subways, low- and moderate-income households are increasingly concentrated in
farther-flung neighborhoods of the Bronx, Staten Island, Southern Queens, and Southeast Brooklyn.
Population change,1990-2010:
Neighborhoods without subway
access have experienced
significant growth.
more than -100
-99 to 100
101 to 300
301 to 500
more than 501
Population growth
Select Bus Service routes
(proposed and in progress)
Subway routes
0 52.5 Miles
Data at census tract level, Census 2010
Source: US Census 1990, 2010
Population Change 1990 to 2010
by census tract
9. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 5
Mobility and Equity - Impact of Transit Deficits for New York’s Underserved Neighborhoods
Demographics, Land Use Patterns Drive Demand for More and Better Transit
In contrast to other US cities, New York City’s population has rebounded strikingly from the declines of the 1970s and 80s.
Our housing stock and infrastructure are already straining to accommodate the million-plus people we have added since
1990, and recent census data shows our growth trend continuing with another million residents projected to live in New York
City by 2040.
Large-scale, high-profile development initiatives have brought high-rise luxury construction to areas close to Manhattan’s
core, often transforming neighborhoods that were once affordable to low- and moderate-income families. But the
populations of outlying neighborhoods have grown and changed as well. Immigrants from the Caribbean, as well as long-
time New Yorkers pushed out of Central Brooklyn, for example, have changed the complexion of communities like Canarsie
and Flatlands. Homeowner communities in the north and east Bronx, southeast Brooklyn, southern Queens, and on
Staten Island’s North Shore have added density – sometimes through the replacement of one- and two-family houses with
apartment buildings (bringing traffic and parking problems that often lead to demands for downzoning.) Housing units have
also been added illegally, through the conversion of basements and garages and the subdivision of existing units.
Many transit-poor neighborhoods that have experienced population growth during the past decade have also experienced
declines in local median incomes, along with increases in average household size and percentage of multi-earner
households. This reflects the growth of low-wage employment in the city and the region, as well as displacement caused by
rising housing costs in close-in, transit-rich neighborhoods. Areas that were once quasi-suburban and car-dependent are
increasingly dense and transit-reliant. As it becomes less possible for families to afford housing on the income of a single
earner, households increasingly include extended families in which several adults work part-time or full-time. This means
that even households with access to a car are likely to rely on public transportation for many work- and non-work trips.
Mapping the subway system over densities of workers and their commute modes graphically illustrates the need for
more efficient transit options in these communities.
Percent of commuters taking public transportation
40% or less
41% - 50%
51% - 60%
61% - 70%
more than 70%
Subway Routes
Select Bus Service routes
(completed and in progress)
Commuters Taking Public Transportation
0 52.5 Miles
Data at census tract level, Census 2010
Source: American Community Survey 2007-2011
Average number of wage earners
per household
1 or less
1.1 - 1.5
1.6 - 2
2.1 or more
0 52.5 Miles
Subway routes
Select Bus Service routes
(completed and in progress)
Data at census tract level, Census 2010
Source: American Community Survey 2007-2011
Number of Wage Earners in a Household
10. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 6
Mobility and Equity - Impact of Transit Deficits for New York’s Underserved Neighborhoods
Changing Commuting Patterns – Job Growth Outside Manhattan
The subway system’s design reflects the land use and employment realities of the 1950s, when over 67 percent of all New
York City jobs were located in Manhattan. The other boroughs have steadily gained both share and absolute job numbers
between 2001 and 2010. Most of the expansion in the boroughs has been in the health care and education sectors, though
retail, transportation and distribution, and manufacturing have also experienced gains outside Manhattan.1
Centers of well-paid blue-collar employment, like the Brooklyn Navy Yard, Maspeth and College Point in Queens, and Hunts
Point in the Bronx are particularly isolated from the subway and from reliable local bus service, often forcing employers
to send vans or livery cabs to pick up workers stranded at subway stops that may be two miles away. JFK and LaGuardia
airports, respectively the destinations of 55,000 and 11,000 workers, also lack efficient – and affordable – transit options.
For all of New York City, intra-borough commutes make up a substantial plurality of trips to work. Workers traveling within
their home borough rely more on buses than their counterparts working elsewhere.2
In part because of New York City’s
infamously low conventional bus
speeds, averaging eight miles per hour
citywide, with many routes moving at
less than four miles per hour, workers
employed outside of the Manhattan
Central Business District (CBD) pay a
substantial time penalty for commuting
by transit rather than by car. Low-wage
workers in particular are likely to have
commutes of 60 minutes or more.3
Congestion means that conventional
bus service is not only slow, but also
wildly unreliable, making it difficult for
workers to consistently arrive on time.
Employers pay a price as well, since
long and unpredictable commutes
make it difficult to attract and retain
qualified workers.
A lack of efficient, affordable
transportation options outside of
the Manhattan core burdens both
workers and businesses, and inhibits
economic growth – including growth
in sectors that have the potential to
diversify New York City’s economy.
JFK Airport:
55,255 workers
Sunset Park
Waterfront:
32,957 workers
Central Brooklyn
Medical Centers:
20,623 workers
Downtown Jamaica:
18,674 workers
Flushing:
13,512 workers
Lower Concourse:
22,482 workers
Bathgate:
16,655 workers
Long Island City /
Sunnyside:
71,062 workers
East Williamsburg /
Maspeth IBZs:
16,103 workers
Hunts Point:
24,481 workers
Job Centers
Job Centers
0 52.5 Miles
Source: 2004 Census Transportation Planning Package
Select Bus Service routes
(proposed and in progress)
Subway routes
Staten Island
Retail Hub:
7,210 workers
Staten Island
North Shore:
10,849 workers
11. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 7
Mobility and Equity - Impact of Transit Deficits for New York’s Underserved Neighborhoods
The Importance of Non-Work Trips: Access to Education and Healthcare
Access to destinations other than work also matters to communities’ vitality and quality of life – and the absence of good
transit options lays a heavy burden on the young and the old, those least likely to have the option of driving.
Mobility is a very significant challenge to young people, severely limiting their access to education and opportunity. New York
City boasts an unparalleled array of educational assets, but many colleges and universities are geographically out of reach to
young people in low- and moderate-income communities. Many major public institutions (e.g. Queens College, the College of
Staten Island, and Kingsborough) are inaccessible by subway. So are many of our best high schools, forcing students across
the city to leave their homes before dawn and return late in the evening.
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Select Bus Service routes
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0 52.5 Miles
Source: NYC Department of City Planning
Public and Private Colleges
“New York’s
underserved
communities
need something
more... Isolation
is a key factor in
the persistence of
poverty...”
“
12. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 8
Mobility and Equity - Impact of Transit Deficits for New York’s Underserved Neighborhoods
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! Hospitals
! Outpatient Health Services
Subway routes
Select Bus Service routes
(completed and in progress)
0 52.5 Miles
Source: NYC Department of City Planning
Hospitals and Outpatient Services
Seniors and people with disabilities are also disproportionately dependent on transit, and face additional obstacles to accessing
the health services they need – particularly the primary care that is essential in managing chronic conditions. Many hospitals and
outpatient facilities are remote from subway service, making trips difficult for many of the people they serve. Hospitals are also
economic anchors, as 24/7 employers of people with a vast range of education and skills, including many low- and mid-wage
workers.
Retail corridors that took form under the auto-centric planning regime of the last century lack the density and continuity that
are now recognized as generators of local identity and value. Parking requirements, codified in 1960s zoning, have created
streetscapes on which parking lots and curb cuts make walking dangerous and uninviting, and where local merchants struggle
to compete with big box chains.
Consumers will shop and spend their money in convenient and accessible places. In areas poorly served by public transit,
residents with cars are likely to bypass local stores and instead drive to the mall. Those who rely on public transit may shop less
frequently, or opt to shop near where they work instead of near their homes, rather than relying on infrequent and unreliable bus
service. Bad bus service means less foot traffic, and less foot traffic is bad for local businesses.
13. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 9
Mobility and Equity - Impact of Transit Deficits for New York’s Underserved Neighborhoods
Car Ownership is Unaffordable to an Increasing Share of Outer Borough Residents
Driving a car is not an option for many of the families now living in what were once auto-dependent outlying neighborhoods. At
approximately $8,000 per year (the median cost of owning and operating a mid-priced car), the average cost of car ownership
represents 20 to 25 percent of a moderate-income household’s income, compared to the $2,688 cost for unlimited transit use
by two adults. Congestion throughout the city already consumes hundreds of hours of residents’ time each year; increased car
traffic undermines community safety and quality of life, as well as adding to greenhouse gas emissions.
Percent of households with no vehicles
15% and Under
16% - 25%
26% - 50%
51% - 75%
76% - 100%
Subway routes
Select Bus Service routes
(completed and in progress)
0 52.5 Miles
Data at census tract level, Census 2010
Source: American Community Survey 2007-2011
Vehicle Availability in Households
14. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 10
Funding Transit Expansion
Growing Needs, Limited Resources
If New York City is to continue to offer opportunity to residents of all our
neighborhoods, expanding our transit system is imperative. But our ability
to meet the need through new subway lines and stations is limited by cost.
The city’s $2 billion capital contribution to the extension of the #7 line will
buy approximately one mile of track and a single new station. Phase 1 of the
Second Avenue subway, now scheduled for completion in late 2016, will cost
$4.5 billion for the 1.5-mile, 3-station segment.
Subway ridership has grown steadily since 2000, rebounding after brief declines in 2001 and 2009 to the highest levels since
1950. The MTA projects that 2013 ridership will exceed 1.7 billion trips, and that growth will continue with the ongoing economic
recovery. Population growth and new development, especially in the outer boroughs, has increased the number of subway lines
operating at capacity.
Even as pressure to expand the system grows, the MTA estimates that it will need to spend $26.6 billion between 2014 and 2019
just to maintain the system in a state of good repair. Damage from Hurricane Sandy has widened the growing gap between
capital need and resources. And while federal programs have funded approximately one-third of the MTA capital program in
recent years, it is likely that the national politics of deficit reduction will lead to lower levels of federal funding for transportation
beginning in 2014.
*MTA forecast
Sources: Metropolitan Transportation Authority; Office of the State Comptroller analysis
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
2003
2004
2005
2006
2013*
2007
2014*
2008
2015*
2009
2016*
2010
2017*
2011
2018*
2012
2019*
BillionsofDollars
MTA Debt Service
15. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 11
Funding Transit Expansion – Growing Needs, Limited Resources
The MTA anticipates that it will continue to borrow to fund the system’s capital needs, and that debt service will make up a
growing share of annual operating costs for the foreseeable future. Riders will continue to bear this burden, as they have during
the past decade, through fare increases, service cuts, or both.
No less significant than the monetary cost of subway expansion are the physical disruption, delay, and uncertainty that are
inevitable in tunneling through and below New York’s dense, aging, and often fragile street infrastructure. Subway construction
imposes heavy burdens on local residents and small businesses.
Small businesses during sewer main relocation for
construction of Second Avenue Subway
Photo courtesy of Ben Heckscher, The Launch Box Blog
http://thelaunchbox.blogspot.com/2007/12/december-29-2007.html
16. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 12
Bus Rapid Transit
A Cost-Effective, High-Performance Solution
for New York City
There is no imaginable scenario in which the subway system could be
expanded to meet the needs of fast-growing outer borough neighborhoods.
Residents of New York’s transit-starved neighborhoods need higher
performance than SBS can achieve – they need Bus Rapid Transit.
Since its introduction in Curitiba, Brazil in 1974, BRT
systems and variants have been deployed in over 160 cities
worldwide including Barcelona, Cleveland, Delhi, Istanbul,
Jerusalem, and Mexico City. The highest-standard systems
approach the performance of subway or surface rail in
their speed, reliability, capacity, rider experience, and their
transformative impact on the corridors they serve. BRT
is already well-established as a cost-effective means of
delivering the mobility benefits of rapid transit; there is
also increasing evidence that BRT’s ability to catalyze local
development is comparable to that of streetcars or light rail –
with substantially lower cost for implementation.
ITDP released an updated version of its BRT standards
in 2013, with the goal of identifying international best
practices in BRT, as well as enabling political leaders and
transportation planners to better understand the benefits
delivered by full-featured systems.4
New research shows that systems incorporating dedicated
lanes, well-designed stations, and networked routes not
only provide the greatest improvements in travel time and
user satisfaction. Their permanence can transform BRT
corridors, leveraging residential and commercial density,
economic revitalization, and environmental quality.
17. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 13
Bus Rapid Transit – A Cost-Effective, High-Performance Solution for New York City
What Makes Bus Rapid Transit Rapid?
The features that define BRT are those that enable it
to deliver speed, reliability, and customer experience
comparable to rail transit, but at a fraction of the cost.
Key elements that qualify a system as BRT include:
Busway alignment
By locating bus lanes offset from the
curb, BRT preserves space for parking
and loading, minimizes conflicts with
other traffic, speeds up bus travel, and
reduces overall congestion. Lanes on
center medians provide similar benefits.
Signal coordination
BRT buses communicate
automatically with traffic signals,
minimizing delays at intersections.
Platform-level boarding
Station designs featuring platforms
that are level with bus floors reduce
delays in boarding and provide
universal access for users.
Off-board fare collection
Allowing customers to pay their fares
before the bus arrives, either by using
a physical barrier like a turnstile, or a
proof-of-payment system like the one
in use by SBS, allows people to board
buses quickly through multiple doors.
This significantly reduces “dwell time” –
the time that buses spend at stops, and
greatly improves speed and reliability.
Quality of service and
passenger information
systems
Frequent scheduling and real-time bus
information speed passengers’ door-to-
door trip time, and greatly improve the
predictability of trips, especially those
involving transfers.
Highly visible and
comfortable stations
Iconic station structures make BRT
recognizable and easy to use, and
provide additional features that improve
customer experience, and increase bus
speed and reliability.
Dedicated lanes
Physically protected bus lanes keeping
other vehicles out ensure that buses can
move without delay. Physical protection
is less costly and more effective than
relying on camera or police enforcement.
Fully dedicated lanes can be most easily
achieved on wide streets where multiple
lanes remain available to other traffic.
19. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 15
Bus Rapid Transit – A Cost-Effective, High-Performance Solution for New York City
Bus Rapid Transit and Select Bus Service
ITDP’s standards identify the following five features as essential for a system to qualify as Bus Rapid Transit and achieve
significant increases in top speeds and reliability. Select Bus Service in New York City includes only some of these
features and therefore does not qualify as BRT. This paper identifies eight corridors on which full-featured BRT would
be achievable.
Full-Featured Bus
Rapid Transit
BRT Features Select Bus Service
Placement of busways to minimize delays
from obstructions and conflicts with
turning traffic. Corridors located in the
center of roadways instead of along curbs
are preferred to minimize conflicts from
turns onto and off of the roadway and
curbside activities such as parking and
loading.
Busway Alignment
Most SBS lanes are located along the
curb, or offset by one lane to maintain
parking.
Full-featured BRT systems utilize either
physically protected lanes or permeable
dedicated lanes with full enforcement
measures in place. Dedicated Right-of-Way
SBS uses a combination of colorized
pavement and bus-lane cameras
to enforce dedicated rights-of-way.
Enforcement cameras are only authorized
for one route in each borough and face
political opposition and uncertainty.
To reduce travel time, BRT systems rely on
fare collection in advance of boarding. Two
approaches are currently used – “barrier
controlled,” where passengers have to
pay fare in order to gain access to the
station, or “proof-of-payment,” in which
passengers pay at a kiosk to collect a
ticket that is subject to inspection on board
the vehicle by an inspector.
Off-Board Fare Collection
SBS uses a proof-of-payment system that
allows riders to pay their fares before the
bus arrives using MetroCards or cash. The
system works well in the limited space
available on New York sidewalks.
To minimize delays at intersections, full-
featured BRT coordinates traffic signals to
prioritize bus movements, minimizing the
time buses spend at red lights. In addition,
most or all intersections are configured to
prohibit other traffic from turning across
bus lanes.
Intersection Treatments
SBS has introduced traffic signal priority
and has limited turns on some routes.
Full-featured BRT systems feature bus
station platforms that are at the same
level as bus floors. This provides universal
access, improves comfort and safety, and
speeds boarding.
Platform-Level Boarding
SBS stops are generally at sidewalk level,
several inches below even low-floor buses.
20. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 16
Bus Rapid Transit – A Cost-Effective, High-Performance Solution for New York City
Bang for the Buck: Value vs. Cost of Full-Featured BRT
Cleveland’s 6.8-mile HealthLine is widely hailed as the most advanced BRT corridor in the United States with vehicles operating
on dedicated busways, serving iconic stations that provide real-time bus arrival information. HealthLine bus speeds average 12.5
miles per hour compared to 7.4 miles per hour for Select Bus Service, and less than 5 miles per hour for typical local bus lines.
The HealthLine was completed at a total cost – for stations, buses, and street improvements - for under $200 million, less than
$30 million per mile – compare this to the $3 billion per mile cost of Phase 1 of the Second Avenue Subway.
In its first five years of operation, the HealthLine has catalyzed over $4.3 billion
in development by connecting Cleveland’s downtown to its anchor institutions
– the Cleveland Clinic and university cluster seven miles to the east. The city
coordinated the modest capital investment in the HealthLine with zoning changes
that encouraged residential development and ground floor retail uses in downtown’s
historic but underutilized office buildings to strengthen the area as a 24/7 live-
work neighborhood. At the east end of the corridor, new development has focused
on leveraging the economic activity of the anchor institutions through businesses
that provide goods and services to the hospitals, universities, staff, and students.
In all, every dollar invested in the HealthLine has generated $29 in new direct
investment.
Buses for Resiliency
Upgraded bus infrastructure brings
additional benefits in resiliency. In
the days after Hurricane Sandy, the
vulnerability of our subway system
was exposed. From floodwaters
entering the East River tunnels to
salt water corroding critical wiring
and switches to the destruction
of the rail connection from
Howard Beach to the Rockaways,
Hurricane Sandy was a wake-up
call: New York’s subway system
could be knocked out by a powerful
storm. Now, more than a year
later, riders on the R and G lines
are dealing with long-term service
disruptions as the MTA works to
address “latent damage.”
In the days following Sandy, the
network of “bus bridge” over
the East River demonstrated
the flexibility and capacity of a
bus system to meet unexpected
demands. Staging and loading
were challenging, but with
dedicated bus lanes, aggressively
enforced by NYPD, riders saw first-
hand how efficiently buses can
move them to their destinations.
HealthLine Station, Downtown Cleveland
i
21. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 17
Bus Rapid Transit – A Cost-Effective, High-Performance Solution for New York City
What Bus Rapid Transit Could Mean for
Underserved Neighborhoods
BRT would be transformative for areas of New York City
that now lack access to rapid transit. Many of these are
neighborhoods whose demographics and land use patterns
have changed dramatically during the past two decades.
Southeast Brooklyn, eastern Queens, the northeast Bronx,
and much of Staten Island have gained population as housing
costs have escalated in closer-in neighborhoods. Residents
of outlying areas include more immigrants, more people of
color, more families of lower incomes, and more households
with multiple wage-earners than they did in the decades up
to 1990.
Longtime residents of public housing developments in these
same neighborhoods also suffer from isolation. Twenty-eight
percent of New York City Housing Authority residents live
more than one-half mile from the nearest subway station.
Lengthy trips to work create an additional barrier for people
who already face significant challenges in finding good jobs.
Communities not served by the subway system need more
than just the upgrading of individual bus lines. They need
rapid transit that provides high-speed service to entire
corridors, including those spanning multiple boroughs. Travel
distances in these communities are long, and the penalty now
imposed by underperforming standard bus service is heavy.
The potential BRT corridors examined in this report are
characterized by distances and destinations that demand
greater improvements in bus speed and reliability, and
where street geometries can easily accommodate robust
BRT infrastructure, including physically protected lanes and
visible, comfortable stations. The dearth of other rapid transit
options in these areas justifies more substantial investment
in BRT.
There is also a greater imperative in outlying areas to improve
pedestrian safety, especially along wide streets that are now
dangerous to cross, and difficult to walk along. Excessive
street and lane widths encourage speeding and dangerous
driving. Sidewalks are interrupted by wide curb cuts, and
vehicle movements in and out of parking lots are often
unpredictable.
Bringing full-featured BRT to transit-starved
neighborhoods would dramatically signal a commitment
to bridging the gap in quality of life that has mirrored New
York City’s increasing polarization of incomes and wealth.
Car-oriented planning undermines retail corridors
22. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 18
Bus Rapid Transit – A Cost-Effective, High-Performance Solution for New York City
Planning for Transformation
Large parking lots now consume extensive frontage in many corridors that have the potential for more productive uses. Demand
for housing, especially affordable housing, is strong in a market where rental vacancy rates have not dipped below 5% since
1965. Additional residential density would strengthen demand for more retail, especially in communities where customers are
increasingly diverse. And unlike rail projects, BRT is unlikely to trigger land speculation and displacement.
BRT has the potential to transform corridors in areas of New York City whose vitality is now undermined by lack of transit access
and blighted by 1960s-era planning. To fulfill that potential, BRT corridor planning needs to be holistic, inclusive, and informed
by local aspirations and concerns. If new land value is created by the combination of infrastructure investment and rezoning for
greater densities, that value must be invested in ways that maximize public good.
The experience of implementing SBS has provided valuable lessons for the MTA and NYC DOT – including building the
agencies’ ability to collaborate in the planning, development, and operation of the system. They have also established
processes to engage stakeholders in the planning of new corridors, and gained understanding of the range of their
concerns. This has enabled the agencies to develop a palette of solutions to mitigate them, many of which are applicable to
SBS and to potential full-featured BRT including:
• Ensuring that local bus service is
preserved or enhanced rather than
degraded by the introduction of SBS/
BRT. This is especially important
to assure that improved service
strengthens retail corridors, most of
whose customers walk or use transit;
• Lane and curb configurations that
minimize loss of parking and loading;
• Using design improvements (such
as turn restrictions) that decrease
congestion and enhance safety for
other road users, including both
pedestrians and drivers.
The success of SBS has built a
reservoir of good will, as communities
experience the benefits of improved
service, and in most cases, discover
that anticipated negative impacts are
minor or nonexistent. Based on input
from local retailers, for example, bus
lanes have been located away from the
curb, preserving parking and loading
space. And traffic speeds along the
M15 route in Manhattan have actually
increased since the introduction of SBS,
where physical barriers and restrictions
on turns have reduced congestion and
lowered the number of injury-producing
crashes.6
Bx41 Select Bus Service on Webster Avenue – parking and
loading space maintained
23. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 19
Priority Corridors for a Full-
Featured BRT Network
The following proposal draws upon the earlier studies by the MTA, New York City DOT, and Pratt
Center, but emphasizes corridors in which BRT has the greatest potential to benefit underserved
residential neighborhoods and employment clusters. These are corridors where essential BRT
features, including exclusive bus lanes and visible stations, are physically feasible over most of their
length, and where subway service is not available within walking distance.
It also considers these corridors as elements in a network that would make a greater range of destinations accessible to riders
while minimizing transfer penalties and maximizing ease of use. Similar to the subway system, a BRT network allows users
to access large areas, but keeps the length of each route to operationally feasible lengths. BRT features, including the use of
enclosed stations with multiple docking bays, as well as centralized monitoring and dispatching, allow for comfortable and
efficient interline connections which increase the utility of the network.
While further analysis is needed to identify
detailed street alignments for the proposed
routes, we are proposing these corridors
as strong candidates for full-featured BRT,
which could offer significant benefits by
connecting now-underserved residential
communities, job clusters, and anchor
institutions.
The corridors below are prioritized based
on their:
• Potential to benefit underserved populations
(equity impacts)
• Potential to catalyze development that
would benefit low- and moderate-income
residents (transformative potential)
• Physical feasibility of essential BRT
characteristics (full-featured BRT potential)
Corridors in the first tier are those that
provide the most substantial benefits to
riders and their communities, and where full-
featured BRT would appear to be physically
feasible over most of the proposed routes’
length. Second-tier corridors are those
which provide significant benefits, but where
achieving full-featured BRT may be more
difficult because of limited street widths over
a greater percentage of corridor length. While
the first-tier corridors may offer opportunities
to more easily implement BRT, all eight
corridors are worthy of further analysis. As
has been the case for Select Bus Service,
successful implementation in the most
promising corridors will generate support for
expansion of the network.
7
East Bronx
hospital cluster -
East Harlem
2HuntsPoint-Flushing-Jamaica
8Mid-Staten
Island-JerseyCity-
Holland
Tunnel
3 Staten Island North Shore
6 Sunset Park - JFK
via SE
Brooklyn
5FarRockaway-
Jamaica1LGA-Woodhaven-Rockaway
4 Sunset Park - JFK
via hospital cluster
0 52.5 Miles
Select Bus Service routes
Subway routes
Major roads
Tier 1
Tier 2
Proposed BRT Corridors
1 La Guardia / Woodhaven / Rockaway
2 Hunts Point / Flushing / Jamaica
3 Staten Island North Shore
4 Sunset Park / JFK via hospital cluster
5 Far Rockaway / Jamaica
6 Sunset Park / JFK via south east Brooklyn
7 East Bronx hospital cluster / East Harlem
8 Mid-Staten Island / Jersey City / Holland Tunnel
Proposed BRT routes
Conceptual map of proposed full-featured BRT network
24. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 20
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network – Summary
# Route Name Communities Served
Boroughs
Served
Full-
Featured
BRT
Potential
Transformative
Potential
Equity
Impacts
1 LaGuardia /
Woodhaven /
Rockaway
Jackson Heights, Woodside, Elmhurst,
Rego Park, Woodhaven, Ozone Park,
Howard Beach, Broad Channel,
Rockaway (west branch to Neponsit,
east branch to Far Rockaway)
Queens
*** *** ***
2 Hunts Point/
Flushing /
Jamaica
Hunts Point, Soundview, Castle Hill,
Zerega Industrial Park, Flushing,
Queens College, Kew Gardens, Jamaica
Bronx /
Queens *** *** ***
3 Staten Island
North Shore
West Shore Plaza / Arlington, Mariners
Harbor, Port Richmond, New Brighton,
St. George
Staten
Island *** ** ***
4 Bush
Terminal
to JFK via
hospital
cluster
Bush Terminal / Sunset Park / Flatbush
/ SUNY Downstate Medical Center /
Brookdale Hospital / Brownsville / East
New York / JFK
Brooklyn /
Queens
** *** ***
5 Far
Rockaway /
Jamaica
Far Rockaway / Rosedale / Locust
Manor, Jamaica
Queens
** ** ***
6 Sunset Park
/ JFK via
south east
Brooklyn
Sunset Park, Bay Ridge, Gravesend,
Marine Park, Flatlands, Canarsie,
Spring Creek, Lindenwood, South
Ozone Park
Brooklyn /
Queens
** ** ***
7 East Bronx /
East Harlem
Bay Plaza / Co-Op City / Hutchinson
Metro Office Park / Jacobi / Einstein
/ Calvary / Hospitals / Parkchester /
Soundview / Hunts Point / Port Morris /
East Harlem
Bronx /
Manhattan
** ** ***
8 Mid-Staten
Island /
Manhattan
via Holland
Tunnel
Eltingville Transit Center, Staten Island
Mall, College of Staten Island, Port
Richmond, Bayonne Bridge, Hudson-
Bergen Light Rail (Jersey City), Holland
Tunnel to Lower Manhattan
Staten
Island /
Jersey City /
Manhattan
** * **
“Full-Featured BRT potential” is greatest for corridors with wide, multi-lane streets over most of their length, and lower for corridors where a greater proportion of the route would travel on
narrower streets where creating exclusive rights-of-way and enclosed stations is more difficult.
“Transformative potential” is greatest for corridors with large areas of underutilized land, such as parking lots that offer potential for new development without displacing existing residents or businesses.
“Equity impacts” are highest for corridors that would serve large numbers of low- and moderate-income residents, and make connections to important employment and institutional destinations.
25. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 21
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network
LaGuardia /
Woodhaven /
Rockaway
Branches serving Rockaway
Park/ Neponsit / Belle Harbor
and Arverne / Edgemere / Far
Rockaway (extending beyond the
Q52 / Q53 routes)
Community Districts Served:
Queens 3,4,5,6,9,10,14
Neighborhoods served:
Elmhurst, Rego Park, Woodhaven,
Ozone Park, Howard Beach, Broad
Channel, Rockaway
Total Population: 1,007,312
Percentage of residents using
transit: 57%
Major destinations:
Far Rockaway, Riis Park / Rockaway
Beaches, local retail along entire
corridor, Forest Park, Queens
Center Mall, Woodside transit hub,
LaGuardia Airport
Sample trip times: Howard Beach to
La Guardia, 8.5 miles
65 minutes via best existing
transit route;
45 minutes via BRT – a 30
percent improvement
This corridor has strong potential for full-featured BRT over the entire length of
Woodhaven and Cross Bay Boulevards, and on most of the Rockaway Peninsula.
These streets have six to eight traffic lanes separated by center medians, in addition
to side medians in parts of Woodhaven.
Dense residential development, separated from local retail by
eight street lanes. BRT along the center median would create safer
walking and driving conditions
Northern portions of the corridor are densely developed with multi-story apartment
complexes and ground-floor retail. South of Atlantic Avenue, Woodhaven and Cross
Bay Boulevards pass through lower-density areas, with street frontage dominated by
low-rise commercial buildings. Along this segment, retail frontage is discontinuous,
and sidewalks are frequently interrupted by driveways and parking strips. Lack of
foot traffic puts locally-owned stores at a disadvantage to chain stores; if a shopping
trip requires getting into the car, shoppers are likely to bypass small businesses in
favor of malls and big box stores. Implementing BRT here would make local retail
more accessible and competitive, by enabling the development of shopping hubs
around BRT stops. Experience in other cities shows that BRT is unlikely to trigger
land speculation and displacement. But when BRT is implemented as part of a
coordinated revitalization strategy, it can support targeted development of affordable
housing and retail.
A BRT route on this corridor would connect to the A, E, F, J, M, R, Z, and 7 trains as
well as the Long Island Railroad at Woodside. It would also provide an important
backup to the A Train in the Rockaways during service disruptions caused by
disasters or construction work.
First Tier Corridors
1
30%
improvement
26. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 22
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network
Hunts Point / Flushing
/ Jamaica
Community Districts Served:
Bronx 2,9; Queens 7,8,12
Neighborhoods Served:
Hunts Point, Soundview, Castle Hill,
Flushing, Kew Gardens, Jamaica
Total Population: 848,924
Percentage of residents using
transit: 50%
Major destinations:
Hunts Point Food Distribution
Center; Zerega Industrial Park;
Downtown Flushing; Citi Field,
Flushing Meadows Corona Park,
New York Hospital Queens; CUNY
Law School; Queens College;
Downtown Jamaica; Jamaica LIRR;
York College
Sample trip times: Downtown
Flushing to Jamaica, 7.2 miles
55 minutes via best existing
transit route;
36 minutes via BRT – a 35
percent improvement
This corridor connects Bronx and Queens communities that include dense
residential areas, vital job centers, and institutions not served by the subway system.
The percentage of residents who commute by transit understates the transit reliance
of the corridor as a whole. Workers in Hunts Point, shoppers on Flushing Main
Street, and Queens College students overwhelmingly use transit, and many suffer
lengthy and uncertain trips on local buses. Both the Bronx and Queens portions
of this corridor have gained residents and jobs during the past decade, but lack of
transit access threatens their continued growth.
Shoppers in Flushing’s vibrant downtown overwhelmingly arrive by
transit or on foot
photo by nycgo.com
Parts of the corridor are now served by the Q44 and the Q50, the only direct transit
connection between the two boroughs. The proposed BRT service would follow the
current Q44 route in Queens, but would connect the Bronx neighborhoods of Hunts
Point and Soundview, both of which are distant from the subway system. Dense
residential development in Soundview is separated from the closest subway line by
the Bruckner Expressway, with access available only via isolated pedestrian bridges.
BRT on this corridor would serve the residents of 8,207 public housing units, in six
Bronx and four Queens developments, most of which are over one-half mile from the
nearest subway.
Residents of Soundview’s Mitchell-Lama
apartments and public housing developments,
many of whom are seniors and retirees, are poorly
served by local retail, and poorly connected to
other neighborhoods.
Flushing’s Main Street is a key north-south
corridor connecting important residential,
commercial, and institutional centers. Its width,
from six to eight lanes over most of its length, and
its connections to major east-west transit lines, as
well as to Jamaica’s regional hub, makes it a high
priority candidate for BRT.
Q44 stop at Queens College
2
35%
improvement
27. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 23
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network
Staten Island North
Shore
Community Districts Served:
Staten Island 1
Neighborhoods served:
Arlington, Mariners Harbor, Port
Richmond, New Brighton, St. George
Total Population: 175,756
Percentage of residents using
transit: 31%
Major destinations:
West Shore Plaza, Howland Hook
container port; Snug Harbor Cultural
Center; Staten Island Ferry
Sample trip times:
West Shore Plaza to St. George Ferry
Terminal 7.2 miles
43 minutes via best existing
transit route;
23 minutes via BRT – a 47
percent improvement
The total population of the North Shore Corridor is smaller than those we have
examined in the other boroughs – 175,756 as of the 2010 Census. But this represents
an increase of 8.1 percent over 2000, the highest rate of growth of all of the study
corridors. While the percentage of commuters using transit in this area is relatively
low, the North Shore’s demographics suggest that many residents rely on transit
for other trips. Twenty-six percent of Staten Island Community District 1 residents
attend grades K-12 or college; 40 percent of residents receive some form of income
support. Among commuters, 31 percent travel 60 minutes or more to work – so
full-featured BRT would measurably improve quality of life for many North Shore
residents.
The North Shore also presents an outstanding opportunity to establish a full-
featured BRT corridor, using the 7.5-mile inactive rail right-of-way that runs from
Arlington to the ferry terminal at St. George. Using rail infrastructure already in
place would allow for a fully dedicated busway over most of the route, including
grade separations at intersections. This would allow for the highest BRT speeds of
any corridor proposed in this paper.
Illustration from MTA North Shore Alternatives Analysis, 2012
The MTA completed an analysis in 2012 comparing BRT to alternatives including
light and heavy rail, and found that a BRT corridor, using the rail line as an exclusive
busway, would result in trip times comparable to light rail - 23 minutes for BRT vs.
21 minutes for light rail. BRT would actually serve more riders, because it would
provide better connections to other major bus routes, including the other Staten
Island route included in our recommendations.
The MTA also compared capital and operating costs for each alternative on a present
value basis and determined that the combined capital and 20-year operating cost
of full-featured BRT for the full-length route would be approximately $538 million,
vs. $874 million for electric light rail, the next lowest-cost option. The BRT option
also produces fewer environmental impacts than the other alternatives. BRT would
support the North Shore’s continued growth and economic development by providing
an efficient and attractive alternative to driving in an area that suffers from traffic
congestion, and whose residents are less likely than their predecessors to own cars.
3
47%
improvement
28. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 24
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network
Bush Terminal to
JFK via Brooklyn
Hospital Cluster
Community Districts Served:
Brooklyn 7,14,17,18,5; Queens 10
Neighborhoods served:
Sunset Park, Flatbush, East
Flatbush, East New York,
Lindenwood
Total Population: 969,044
Percentage of residents using
transit: 61%
Major destinations:
Bush Terminal, SUNY Downstate,
Kings County Medical Center,
Kingsboro Psychiatric Center,
Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center,
Brookdale Hospital
Sample trip times:
NYCHA Pink Houses, East New York
to SUNY Downstate Medical Center,
4.9 miles
55 minutes via best existing
transit route;
21 minutes via BRT – a 62
percent improvement
This corridor contains five major hospitals and numerous primary care facilities and
medical practices, directly employing over 20,000 workers and serving hundreds of
thousands of residents – including over 7,800 public housing residents in Brownsville
and East New York developments that are now isolated from subway lines.
Linden Boulevard in Brownsville – wide streets, lined with dense
housing and isolated from transit
BRT would provide a circumferential connection between subway lines that run
north-south through the area, enabling more efficient trips to destinations within
and beyond the corridor. The mobility benefits of this corridor are very substantial,
particularly as they connect residents to several major employment clusters. Full-
featured BRT appears feasible over most of the corridor, including where Linden
Boulevard provides a multi-lane connection to Conduit Avenue near JFK. Between
Bedford Avenue and Sunset Park, the east-west streets are narrower, but efficient
connections to the Sunset Park waterfront appear to be possible.
4
Narrower segment of Linden Boulevard in Flatbush
62%
improvement
29. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 25
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network
Far Rockaway /
Jamaica
Community Districts Served:
Queens 12, 13, 14
Neighborhoods served:
Far Rockaway, Rosedale, Locust
Manor, Jamaica
Total Population: 539,283
Percentage of residents using
transit: 42%
Major destinations:
Jamaica Center, York College
Sample trip times:
Mott Avenue A train station to
Queens College 12 miles
76 minutes via best existing
transit route;
55 minutes via BRT – a 28
percent improvement
Dollar vans fill transportation gap in Far Rockaway
Current demographics and travel patterns in Far Rockaway strongly recommend
BRT for this corridor. Isolation is a key factor in the persistence of poverty on the
east end of the Rockaway Peninsula. The long distances to job opportunities, health
care, shopping, education, culture, and recreation impacts all Rockaway residents,
but perhaps its young people above all. Twenty-seven percent of Rockaway residents
are students; many more young people of college age are deterred from enrolling
because of the distance and lengthy travel time to even the nearest post-secondary
institutions.
While both Long Island Railroad and local bus routes connect Far Rockaway to
Jamaica, LIRR fares are unaffordable to daily commuter, and current bus service
to Jamaica takes over 60 minutes.
Most travelers take the “dollar van,” the informal commuter vans that pick up
passengers outside the Mott Avenue A Train station. The dollar vans make the
trip much faster, making few intermediate stops, and the $2 fare is nominally
lower than a full-price MetroCard swipe. But unlike MetroCard, there is no volume
discount, and no transfers to other services, and the safety and reliability of the often
unlicensed vans is questionable.
A BRT corridor making a direct connection from eastern Rockaway communities
to Jamaica would open employment and educational opportunities to tens of
thousands of residents. Full-featured BRT could be implemented for much of the
route, using the Nassau Expressway and Rockaway Boulevard, but north of JFK,
local streets are narrower and more congested.
5
Full-featured BRT would bring substantial benefits to these corridors, which include populous underserved residential areas
and important destinations. We have designated them as “Second Tier” because implementing full-featured BRT would be more
challenging than for the first tier corridors. The second tier corridors include wide streets over a lower proportion of their length.
And some are already densely built-up, and would present fewer opportunities for new development that would complement
BRT. Still, these corridors are well worth evaluating, especially as a second phase in a full-featured BRT network, where their
value would be enhanced by the connections they would enable to first-tier corridors already in place.
Second Tier Corridors
28%
improvement
30. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 26
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network
Sunset Park / JFK via
Southeast Brooklyn
Community Districts Served:
Brooklyn 7,10,11,14,15,18; Queens 10
Neighborhoods served:
Sunset Park, Bay Ridge, Gravesend,
Marine Park, Flatlands, Canarsie,
Spring Creek, Lindenwood, South
Ozone Park
Total Population: 1,068,103
Percentage of residents using
transit: 55%
Major destinations:
Industry City, Brooklyn Army
Terminal, 58th Street Ferry pier,
Jamaica Bay parkland including
Marine Park, Canarsie Pier, and
Spring Creek Park; Gateway Center
Mall, and JFK
Sample trip times:
Bush Terminal to JFK 16 miles
90 minutes via best existing
transit route;
75 minutes via BRT – a 17
percent improvement
Brooklyn Army Terminal and entrance to 58th Street Ferry
Thirty-six percent of workers residing in the community districts on this corridor
travel 60 minutes or more each way to their jobs. Incoming commuters also suffer
from poor connections, especially to blue collar job clusters including the Sunset
Park waterfront, industrial areas north of Flatlands Avenue, and the numerous
logistics operations in and around JFK airport.
This corridor connects disparate residential areas. Many neighborhoods are
dominated by owner-occupied small homes, with higher density elevator buildings
lining Kings Highway and clustering near the north-south subway lines that cross
the area. Demographics vary markedly, with the values of many homes in Bay Ridge
and Dyker Heights exceeding $1 million, while the Spring Creek complex (completed
in 1974 as Starrett City) was sold in 2009 under a financing arrangement that
ensured long-term affordability for most of its 5,881 units.
Kings Highway and Flatlands Avenue make up most of the length of this corridor.
Both are very wide streets. Kings Highway features side medians separating through
and local traffic. Buses are also allowed to use the Belt Parkway in this area, which
could create a high-speed BRT connection from Canarsie to Spring Creek and on
to JFK. Creating full-featured BRT at the western end of this corridor will be less
straightforward; few east-west streets are wide enough to allow both exclusive bus
lanes and mixed traffic.
6
Residential density and wide
right-of-way, Kings Highway
17%
improvement
31. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 27
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network
East Bronx Hospital
Cluster / East Harlem
Community Districts Served:
Bronx 1,2,9,10,11,12; Manhattan 11
Neighborhoods served:
Eastchester, Co-Op City,
Parkchester, Soundview, Longwood,
Mott Haven, Port Morris, East
Harlem
Total Population:
822,520
Percentage of residents using
transit: 57%
Major destinations:
Bay Plaza Shopping Center, Jacobi,
Einstein, Calvary Hospitals
Sample trip times:
Parkchester to Jacobi Medical
Center 2.2 miles
25 minutes via best existing
transit route;
13 minutes via BRT – a 48
percent improvement
East Bronx hospitals, underserved by transit
Commercial and institutional expansion in this area has led to traffic congestion
that threatens to stifle future job growth. Poor subway connections have also limited
access of Bronx residents to job opportunities in this important hub. Developing
full-featured BRT in this corridor is complicated by the complexity of the historic
street pattern which features many irregular intersections, and which is additionally
fragmented by major highways. Some streets are wide enough to accommodate
dedicated BRT lanes and stations, but potential routes are circuitous. Still, BRT in
this corridor could reduce congestion and support continuing economic growth, so
further evaluation is justified.
7
48%
improvement
32. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 28
Priority Corridors for a Full-Featured BRT Network
Mid-Staten Island /
Manhattan via Holland
Tunnel
Community Districts Served:
Staten Island 1,2; Manhattan 1,2;
Bayonne, Jersey City
Neighborhoods served:
Eltingville, New Springville,
Willowbrook, Bulls Head, Bayonne,
Jersey City
Total Population: 521,777
Percentage of residents using
transit: 39%
Major destinations:
Staten Island Mall, College of Staten
Island, Port Richmond, Hudson-
Bergen Light Rail, Tribeca, Lower
Manhattan
Sample trip times:
College of Staten Island to Lower
Manhattan 16.3 miles
97 minutes via best existing
transit route (standard fare);
50 minutes via BRT – a 48
percent improvement
BRT on Richmond Avenue would serve Staten Island Mall and the
College of Staten Island
This corridor would connect the retail hub around the Staten Island Mall, as well as
the College of Staten Island, to the proposed North Shore BRT line, and to Bayonne,
Jersey City, and Lower Manhattan. The New Jersey portion of the corridor also
provides access to NJ Transit’s Hudson-Bergen Light Rail line, a connection that is
now only possible by car or by local bus.
While residential densities on the Staten Island portion of the corridor are relatively
low, population in this area is growing quickly (8.9 percent from 2000 to 2010), and
traffic congestion is already threatening Staten Island’s economic vitality and quality
of life. This corridor would provide much greater benefits if the North Shore corridor
is also developed than it would do on its own, and it should be evaluated as an
element of a network.
8
48%
improvement
33. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 29
Advancing BRT in New York City
Challenges, Strategies, and Next Steps
Planning Strategy
To deliver full-featured BRT in a form that achieves its full potential to improve
mobility, enhance equity, and transform communities, agency planners will need
to expand upon the collaboration MTA and DOT have begun. BRT planning must
integrate consideration not only of transportation, but of land use and density,
housing affordability, economic development, and public realm design. This will
require a multi-disciplinary, cross-agency team with leadership from the mayor’s
office, including the Departments of Transportation, City Planning, Housing
Preservation and Development, Environmental Protection, and Parks, as well as
the NYC Economic Development Corporation and the MTA. Though the agencies
have gained experience in cross-sector planning through several recent initiatives,
mayoral leadership will be essential.
Planning will not only need to be integrated across agency domains, but must
also engage stakeholders in the affected communities, and substantively
address the concerns that are brought forward.
Resistance to the kinds of changes that full-featured BRT entails – especially the
reallocation of lane space – is often based on concerns that can be dispelled with
accurate information. Many retailers, for example, assume that on-street parking
is essential for their customers, and are often surprised when surveys reveal that
most arrive on foot or by transit. And designers are often able to achieve best-
of-both solutions – street designs that accommodate BRT, improve traffic flow,
preserve parking, and create a safer and more attractive pedestrian environment.
Successful examples need to be shared with local stakeholders, and planners need
to use their tools to adapt to particular local needs.
Planning for transformative BRT must identify development opportunities linked
to transit improvement, and ensure that they benefit and not displace low- and
moderate-income people. This requires serious attention to concerns about
displacement, analysis of housing affordability, tenure, rent-regulated status, and
the incorporation of measures to protect incumbent residents. Planning must
also recognize that most small businesses occupy rented space and are highly
vulnerable to displacement as land values rise.
Innovative financing of full-featured BRT and associated local redevelopment, for
example, through value capture mechanisms such as Tax Increment Financing,
must be designed so that reliance on revenue derived from increased land values
does not add to displacement pressure.
Finally, the experience of planning SBS corridors shows that even modest changes
to streetscape and street operation may be resisted on highly localized grounds.
Problems raised by stakeholders can often be resolved by design treatments – but
they need to be taken seriously to avoid exacerbating distrust.
“... designers
are often able to
achieve best-of-
both solutions
– street designs
that accommodate
BRT, improve traffic
flow, preserve
parking, and create
a safer and more
attractive pedestrian
environment.”
“
34. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 30
Advancing BRT in New York City – Challenges, Strategies, and Next Steps
Political Strategy
Implementing full-featured BRT will require political champions at the local and
citywide level. BRT corridors will cross multiple neighborhoods and community
districts, often with vastly differing landscapes and demographics. City Council
representatives can ensure that the vision of corridor-wide benefits is not obscured
by local objections and can also ensure that local concerns are addressed. It is
important that council members act not only as champions, but as conveners of
disparate interests.
As in many realms of planning, the stakeholders who stand to benefit from a
proposed change are less likely to mobilize in support than those who prefer the
status quo. Bus riders, suffering as they do from severe time constraints and
competing demands on their energy, have organized effectively in other US cities,
but have been less prominent in New York. Since those same individuals are often
actively engaged in their congregations, schools, and other organizations, a range
of community institutions could play a constructive role, and advocates can help to
forge connections with others – hospital workers, for example – who could directly
benefit. Grassroots organizing is essential if elected officials are to be pushed
and kept on task. And organized communities can be highly effective partners in
corridor-level planning and design, articulating local concerns, dispelling myths, and
problem-solving alongside agency staff.
Leadership from the top is indispensable. Governor Cuomo’s NYS 2100 Report,
commissioned to map a resiliency strategy for the State, points to BRT as a way to
both strategically expand New York’s transit system, and to build in redundancy and
flexibility that will be critical in meeting future disasters.
Mayor-Elect Bill de Blasio has the opportunity to build on the progressive
transportation legacy of the Bloomberg Administration, while advancing an agenda
to more broadly share its benefits. De Blasio must appoint DOT leadership that is
fully committed to bringing full-featured BRT to New York City, and to collaborating
with agencies and communities to deliver on its potential. No less important, he
must communicate the importance of transit in uniting our city, and that extending
its benefits to all New Yorkers is both essential and achievable.
“... organized
communities can
be highly effective
partners in corridor-
level planning and
design, articulating
local concerns,
dispelling myths,
and problem-solving
alongside agency
staff.”
“
35. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 31
Appendix 1: FAQs About BRT
• Will BRT take away parking spaces?
Corridors where BRT can be supported have six to eight lanes of traffic, and ideally can
accommodate BRT service either along the center median, or one lane out from the curb. Both
options preserve curbside parking.
• Is BRT going to harm local businesses?
BRT has proven to be a boon for local businesses and an engine for economic growth in cities where
it has been implemented. In the areas where New York City could and should accommodate BRT,
residents now often choose big box stores over local businesses in part because of the ease of
driving to these establishments. BRT gives shoppers the ability to reach locally-owned businesses
in now under-visited neighborhoods with ease thanks to quick and reliable bus service. Studies
consistently show that better transit service is a positive for local shops. According to the American
Public Transportation Association, every $10 million invested in transit operating costs yield $32
million in increased business sales.
• What impact will BRT have on congestion?
BRT is not only a positive for bus riders; it benefits people who continue to stay behind the wheel
of a car. The APTA found that people living in areas served by public transportation save 865
million hours in travel time and 450 million gallons in fuel annually. After SBS was introduced on
Manhattan’s East Side, taxi GPS data showed a decrease in overall congestion, along with fewer
crashes and injuries. With increased capacity, quicker trips, and more reliable service over SBS,
BRT carries even more passengers. By giving commuters an appealing alternative to driving,
just one bus can remove dozens of cars from the road each day. That’s a lot of cars no longer on
the road.
• Will BRT lead to increased gentrification in neighborhoods with the new service?
While BRT will make getting from far-flung neighborhoods to commercial centers, transit hubs
and other destinations a quicker and more reliable trip, the experience in other cities has been that
BRT has not triggered land speculation or gentrification. By building a network of BRT corridors
across the city, the buses will bring access to job stability, improved quality of life, and educational
opportunity to current residents of these communities.
• Does BRT have a negative impact on local bus service?
BRT is not a replacement for local bus service. On BRT corridors, it will be important to preserve
robust local service, since one of BRT’s features is fewer station stops. The MTA has done this with
the M15 service on Manhattan’s East Side and the Bx12 along Fordham Road in the Bronx. That’s
why the strong working relationship between the MTA and NYC DOT highlighted in the report, and
input from members of the community where BRT is introduced, will be important in ensuring
sufficient levels of local bus service.
36. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 32
Appendix 2: BRT Networks
Evolving Visions
Conceptual proposals for BRT
networks in New York City have been
put forward by the Pratt Center for
Community Development / COMMUTE!
Communities United for Transportation
Equity (2007), The New York City
Department of Transportation (BRT
Phase 2 / Future Corridors (2009) and
the Metropolitan Transit Authority
(2013). Equity criteria informing all three
plans include:
• Underserved areas – population and
employment density in areas isolated
from the subway system;
• Difficult trips – long travel times,
slow bus speeds, and high volumes
of transfers in corridors that include
major trip generators;
• Underserved areas experiencing
growth in numbers of housing units.
DOT’s study has provided the basis for
selection of several routes now being
developed as Select Bus Service Phase
2. All three proposals represent an
evolution from the DOT/MTA’s Phase
1 program, which selected a single
standard bus route in each borough
for upgrading to Select Bus Service
based primarily on rider volume. The
Pratt Center /COMMUTE! vision is the
most explicit of the three in projecting a
citywide BRT network, with an emphasis
on trips between boroughs. The utility of
such connections may not be apparent
based on assessment of current travel
patterns, because these trips are now
so difficult to make by transit that few
commuters make them. But inter-
borough BRT routes may be justified
based on the locations of important
job clusters and of dense residential
communities.
Pratt Center / COMMUTE! BRT Network Vision, 2007
http://prattcenter.net/sites/default/files/maps/COMMUTE_BRT_network.pdf
NYC DOT Future BRT corridors, 2009
http://www.nyc.gov/html/brt/downloads/pdf/brt_future_corridors.pdf
BUS RAPID TRANSIT PHASE II: FUTURE CORRIDORS
Phase II BRT Corridors
Phase I BRT Corridors
Key
Study Area
Subway Line
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
3
10
11
12
13
14
15
AA
B
C
D
E
F
16
37. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 33
Appendix 2: BRT Networks - Evolving Visions
MTA BRT proposal, 2013
http://www.streetsblog.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/sbs.png
[1] http://nycfuture.org/research/publications/behind-the-curb
[2] US Census Transportation Planning Package, 2006-2008 data as analyzed by
Pratt Center and by the Center for an Urban Future
[3] http://prattcenter.net/transportation-equity-atlas
[4] http://www.itdp.org/documents/BRT_Standard_ENGLISH_pub.pdf
[5] http://web.mta.info/mta/planning/sbs/docs/Bx12-SBS-OneYearReport.pdf
[6] In its first year of operation, M15 Select Bus Service reduced travel time during
peak hours by 18% and increased ridership by 12%. On segments where
pedestrian refuge islands and other street design changes were implemented,
crashes involving pedestrian injuries were reduced by 37%, and crashes involving
injuries to motor vehicle occupants were reduced by 27%. Data reported in
NYC Sustainable Streets Index, 2011, www.nyc.gov/html/dot/downloads/pdf/
sustainable_streets_index_11.pdf.
38. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 34
7
East Bronx
hospital cluster -
East Harlem
2HuntsPoint-Flushing-Jamaica
8Mid-Staten
Island-JerseyCity-
Holland
Tunnel
3 Staten Island North Shore
6 Sunset Park - JFK
via SE
Brooklyn
5FarRockaway-
Jamaica
1LGA-Woodhaven-Rockaway
4 Sunset Park - JFK
via hospital cluster
0 52.5 Miles
Select Bus Service routes
Subway routes
Major roads
Tier 1
Tier 2
Proposed BRT Corridors
1 La Guardia / Woodhaven / Rockaway
2 Hunts Point / Flushing / Jamaica
3 Staten Island North Shore
4 Sunset Park / JFK via hospital cluster
5 Far Rockaway / Jamaica
6 Sunset Park / JFK via south east Brooklyn
7 East Bronx hospital cluster / East Harlem
8 Mid-Staten Island / Jersey City / Holland Tunnel
Proposed BRT routes
Appendix 3: Maps
39. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 35
Appendix 3: Maps
more than -100
-99 to 100
101 to 300
301 to 500
more than 501
Population growth
Select Bus Service routes
(proposed and in progress)
Subway routes
0 52.5 Miles
Data at census tract level, Census 2010
Source: US Census 1990, 2010
Population Change 1990 to 2010
by census tract
40. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 36
Appendix 3: Maps
Median household income
$35,000
$35,001 - $50,000
$50,001 - $65,000
$65,001 - $80,000
$80,000
Subway routes
Select Bus Service routes
(completed and in progress)
0 52.5 Miles
Data at census tract level, Census 2010
Source: American Community Survey 2007-2011
Median Household Income
41. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 37
Appendix 3: Maps
Percent of commuters taking public transportation
40% or less
41% - 50%
51% - 60%
61% - 70%
more than 70%
Subway Routes
Select Bus Service routes
(completed and in progress)
Commuters Taking Public Transportation
0 52.5 Miles
Data at census tract level, Census 2010
Source: American Community Survey 2007-2011
42. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 38
Appendix 3: Maps
Average number of wage earners
per household
1 or less
1.1 - 1.5
1.6 - 2
2.1 or more
0 52.5 Miles
Subway routes
Select Bus Service routes
(completed and in progress)
Data at census tract level, Census 2010
Source: American Community Survey 2007-2011
Number of Wage Earners in a Household
43. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 39
Appendix 3: Maps
JFK Airport:
55,255 workers
Sunset Park
Waterfront:
32,957 workers
Central Brooklyn
Medical Centers:
20,623 workers
Downtown Jamaica:
18,674 workers
Flushing:
13,512 workers
Lower Concourse:
22,482 workers
Bathgate:
16,655 workers
Long Island City /
Sunnyside:
71,062 workers
East Williamsburg /
Maspeth IBZs:
16,103 workers
Hunts Point:
24,481 workers
Job Centers
Job Centers
0 52.5 Miles
Source: 2004 Census Transportation Planning Package
Select Bus Service routes
(proposed and in progress)
Subway routes
Staten Island
Retail Hub:
7,210 workers
Staten Island
North Shore:
10,849 workers
44. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 40
Appendix 3: Maps
JFK Airport:
55,255 workers
Sunset Park
Waterfront:
32,957 workers
Central Brooklyn
Medical Centers:
20,623 workers
Downtown Jamaica:
18,674 workers
Flushing:
13,512 workers
Lower Concourse:
22,482 workers
Bathgate:
16,655 workers
Long Island City /
Sunnyside:
71,062 workers
East Williamsburg /
Maspeth IBZs:
16,103 workers
Hunts Point:
24,481 workers
Job Centers
Job Centers
0 52.5 Miles
Source: 2004 Census Transportation Planning Package
Select Bus Service routes
(proposed and in progress)
Subway routes
Tier 1
Tier 2
Proposed BRT routes
Staten Island
Retail Hub:
7,210 workers
Staten Island
North Shore:
10,849 workers
Planning Package
45. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 41
Appendix 3: Maps
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!
!
!
!
!
!
!
! !
!
! Public colleges
! Private colleges
Select Bus Service routes
(completed and in progress)
Subway routes
0 52.5 Miles
Source: NYC Department of City Planning
Public and Private Colleges
47. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit 43
Appendix 3: Maps
Percent of households with no vehicles
15% and Under
16% - 25%
26% - 50%
51% - 75%
76% - 100%
Subway routes
Select Bus Service routes
(completed and in progress)
0 52.5 Miles
Data at census tract level, Census 2010
Source: American Community Survey 2007-2011
Vehicle Availability in Households
48. Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods: The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit
Contact
Joan Byron
718.636.3468
jbyron@prattcenter.net
Mobility and Equity for New York’s Transit-Starved Neighborhoods:
The Case for Full-Featured Bus Rapid Transit