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Capitalization effects of rail transit and bus rapid transit on residential property values in a booming economy: Evidence from Beijing

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posted on 2024-11-02, 04:01 authored by Liang Ma, Runing Ye, Helena Titheridge
This research investigated the capitalization effects of proximity to rail transit and bus rapid transit (BRT) in fast-growing Beijing. Few related studies have been conducted for Chinese cities because the real estate market has only recently been established. Data were collected on apartment homes sold in the Beijing metropolitan area during 2011, and hedonic price modeling was employed to gauge the price premiums or discounts associated with proximity to transit stations. Overall, the authors identified an average price premium of around 5% for properties near rail transit stations, but no statistically significant effects were detected at BRT station areas. Moreover, the authors found that station proximity effects increased both in magnitude and spatial extent at stations Incited farther from the city center and those surrounded by low- and middle-income neighborhoods. For example, the price premium was as high as 10% in some suburban and low-income areas. The conclusion drawn was that rail transit investment was an effective strategy for Beijing to reshape its urban spatial structure, and local governments in China might consider a rail and property development model as a financing solution for rail transit investment. This study contributes to the evidence of capitalization effects of public transit from a booming and transitional economy.

History

Journal

Transportation Research Record

Volume

2451

Start page

139

End page

148

Total pages

10

Publisher

US National Research Council

Place published

United States

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006071772

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-03-21

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