Evaluation of the land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit: The case in Changsha, China

Accurate evaluation of land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit (URT) is critical for project investment decision making and value capture strategy development. Early studies have focused on the value impact strength under the assumption of the same impact range for all stations. Howe...

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Main Authors: Wenbin Tang, Qingbin Cui, Feilian Zhang, Hongyan Yan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota 2021-05-01
Series:Journal of Transport and Land Use
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/1645
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spelling doaj-22d0c4d213504404b8d1f7204569cf102021-08-31T04:36:03ZengUniversity of MinnesotaJournal of Transport and Land Use1938-78492021-05-0114110.5198/jtlu.2021.1645Evaluation of the land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit: The case in Changsha, ChinaWenbin Tang0Qingbin Cui1Feilian Zhang2Hongyan Yan3Changsha Univ. of Science and TechnologyUniversity of Maryland, College ParkCentral South UniversityHunan University of Finance and Economics Accurate evaluation of land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit (URT) is critical for project investment decision making and value capture strategy development. Early studies have focused on the value impact strength under the assumption of the same impact range for all stations. However, the value impact range at different stations may vary owing to different accessibilities. Therefore, the present study releases this assumption and incorporates the changed impact range into the land value-added analysis. It presents a method to determine the range of land value-added impact and sample selection using the generalized transportation cost model, then spatial econometric models are further developed to estimate the impact strength. On the basis of these models, the entire value-added benefit brought by URT is evaluated. A case study of the Changsha Metro Line 2 in China is discussed to demonstrate the procedure, model, and analysis of spatial impact. The empirical analysis shows a dumbbell-shaped impact on the land value-added benefit along the transit line with a distance-dependent pattern at each station. In addition, the land value-added benefit from Changsha Metro Line 2 reached 12.099 billion USD. Lastly, two main value-added benefit capture modes are discussed, namely, land integration development and special land tax. https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/1645Urban Rail TransitLand Value-AddedExternalitiesGeneralized Traffic Cost ModelSpatial Econometrics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wenbin Tang
Qingbin Cui
Feilian Zhang
Hongyan Yan
spellingShingle Wenbin Tang
Qingbin Cui
Feilian Zhang
Hongyan Yan
Evaluation of the land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit: The case in Changsha, China
Journal of Transport and Land Use
Urban Rail Transit
Land Value-Added
Externalities
Generalized Traffic Cost Model
Spatial Econometrics
author_facet Wenbin Tang
Qingbin Cui
Feilian Zhang
Hongyan Yan
author_sort Wenbin Tang
title Evaluation of the land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit: The case in Changsha, China
title_short Evaluation of the land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit: The case in Changsha, China
title_full Evaluation of the land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit: The case in Changsha, China
title_fullStr Evaluation of the land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit: The case in Changsha, China
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit: The case in Changsha, China
title_sort evaluation of the land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit: the case in changsha, china
publisher University of Minnesota
series Journal of Transport and Land Use
issn 1938-7849
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Accurate evaluation of land value-added benefit brought by urban rail transit (URT) is critical for project investment decision making and value capture strategy development. Early studies have focused on the value impact strength under the assumption of the same impact range for all stations. However, the value impact range at different stations may vary owing to different accessibilities. Therefore, the present study releases this assumption and incorporates the changed impact range into the land value-added analysis. It presents a method to determine the range of land value-added impact and sample selection using the generalized transportation cost model, then spatial econometric models are further developed to estimate the impact strength. On the basis of these models, the entire value-added benefit brought by URT is evaluated. A case study of the Changsha Metro Line 2 in China is discussed to demonstrate the procedure, model, and analysis of spatial impact. The empirical analysis shows a dumbbell-shaped impact on the land value-added benefit along the transit line with a distance-dependent pattern at each station. In addition, the land value-added benefit from Changsha Metro Line 2 reached 12.099 billion USD. Lastly, two main value-added benefit capture modes are discussed, namely, land integration development and special land tax.
topic Urban Rail Transit
Land Value-Added
Externalities
Generalized Traffic Cost Model
Spatial Econometrics
url https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/1645
work_keys_str_mv AT wenbintang evaluationofthelandvalueaddedbenefitbroughtbyurbanrailtransitthecaseinchangshachina
AT qingbincui evaluationofthelandvalueaddedbenefitbroughtbyurbanrailtransitthecaseinchangshachina
AT feilianzhang evaluationofthelandvalueaddedbenefitbroughtbyurbanrailtransitthecaseinchangshachina
AT hongyanyan evaluationofthelandvalueaddedbenefitbroughtbyurbanrailtransitthecaseinchangshachina
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