Untangling proximity and accessibility effects of transit on property prices

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Date

2025

Subject Area

place - north america, place - urban, land use - impacts

Keywords

Accessibility-based and proximity-based effects, Regional transit accessibility, Land value uplift, Continuous treatment or dosage effects, Spatial causal inference, Repeat sales

Abstract

Most research interested in understanding the causal impacts of transit investments on property prices approach the topic through the lens of proximity. However, recent research highlights the networked nature of accessibility impacts. This presents challenges in causal research, particularly in mapping accessibility impacts, defining treatment and control groups, and estimating property price effects. Using the Evergreen Extension in Metro Vancouver, this research examines how proximity to new stations and changes in accessibility over time are capitalized into property prices, disentangling their distinct and combined effects. As commonly applied in the literature, the proximity-based measures identify treated properties based on their distance to the nearest station. For the accessibility-based approach, we measure changes in gravity-based scores over time to capture regional accessibility effects and treatment intensities along an ordered continuum, identifying areas experiencing accessibility gains, losses or stability. Results show that the spatial distribution of accessibility-based effects extend beyond conventionally-defined proximity catchments, suggesting an accessibility-based approach can better capture potential treatment effects associated with network spillovers. Next, fixed-effects models, using repeat sales, are then estimated to causally identify price premiums associated with both the proximity-based and accessibility-based measures. First, we find that, in line with urban economic theory, 1) proximity to new stations is positively valued, 2) increases in network access and regional connectivity to employment yield larger positive price effects, and 3) there is a combined premium placed on both proximity-based and accessibility-based benefits. Second, while proximity effects align with expectations, where treatment properties closer to the new stations command higher price premiums than those farther away, accessibility-based price effects do not. Specifically, higher treatment levels in the accessibility-based models do not consistently yield the highest premiums. This prompts an important perceptual question on whether homebuyers view proximity as a more intuitive signal of accessibility than broader regional network connectivity, which may be more intangible. We contribute knowledge through a dynamic approach that captures accessibility impacts for causal estimations, moving beyond the limitations of proximity-based measures in transit impact research.

Rights

Permission to publish the abstract has been given by Elsevier, copyright remains with them.

Comments

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http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0967070X

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