Los Angeles Times

Orange County envisions transit future

As freeways get more clogged, developmen­t plans focus on getting residents to ditch cars.

- By Daniel Langhorne Langhorne writes for Times Community News.

Terri Swanson lives at the Crossing apartment community, a transitori­ented developmen­t adjacent to the Anaheim Canyon Metrolink Station.

Swanson and her husband moved to the complex in June so she could take a Metrolink train to Orange Station, from which she walks to her administra­tive assistant job at Chapman University’s Attallah College of Educationa­l Studies.

“That’s the main reason we decided to live there,” Swanson said.

The Anaheim community rents a one-bedroom, onebath apartment for $1,743 to $2,072 a month, according to the building’s website.

Swanson said she usually sees one other passenger get on her morning train while employees disembark on their way to Kaiser Permanente Orange CountyAnah­eim Medical Center or the PacifiCent­er office park. Her husband uses his car to commute to work.

“I see other cars leaving all the time,” she said.

The Southern California Assn. of Government­s encourages city government­s to offer incentives for residentia­l developmen­t, especially affordable housing, near transit hubs to alleviate traffic on some of the most congested freeways in the country.

Because transit-oriented developmen­t is a land-use issue, the Orange County Transporta­tion Authority does not take a policy stance on the practice, said Eric Carpenter, an OCTA spokesman.

“OCTA does, of course, encourage people to use public transporta­tion, including the Metrolink rail system as an alternativ­e to getting behind the wheel and adding congestion to our crowded freeways,” Carpenter said.

In 2016, Anaheim adopted the Canyon Specific Plan, which rezoned commercial properties on both sides of Anaheim Canyon Station as a transit-oriented area that could include workforce housing.

OCTA plans to start constructi­on in 2019 on a second track and platform at the Anaheim Canyon Station. The new platform will be on the same side as the Crossing apartments, allowing residents to board trains without crossing tracks.

From July to November 2017, a daily average of 338 Metrolink riders boarded at the Anaheim Canyon Station on weekdays. In that same time, a daily average of 1,614 riders boarded in Fullerton, 862 riders boarded in Santa Ana and 711 riders boarded in Orange.

Although transit-oriented living at apartment buildings such as the Crossing may not be incredibly popular now, public officials such as Placentia City Administra­tor Damien Arrula say Orange County’s demand for this type of housing will increase as the 91 Freeway becomes even more crowded.

Arrula spearheade­d Placentia’s role in a planned Metrolink station and a 246space parking structure in the city’s historic downtown. OCTA plans to advertise for bids on the station’s constructi­on in late April or early May. Placentia will be the first new station on the Union Station-to-Riverside line in a decade.

“As city employees, it’s our job to serve the community and to plan for the needs of our citizens, residents and visitors, and to support our local economy,” Arrula said.

The low vacancy rate among industrial or commercial properties can make it expensive for developers to purchase and redevelop them as high-density housing. Arrula said cities and developers that miss opportunit­ies to build workforce housing run the risk of higher land costs in the future. This could translate into higher rents.

Placentia plans to sell a parcel that formerly held a deteriorat­ing packinghou­se to a developer for a transitori­ented develop-ment. It’s preparing to request proposals from developers interested in acquiring the site.

To capitalize on this planned transporta­tion hub, the Placentia City Council approved dual plans to encourage redevelopm­ent of the industrial properties south of the BNSF railroad and revitaliza­tion of buildings in its historic downtown.

Another common strategy in transit-oriented developmen­t is to build parking structures so people can drive from their homes, park in a structure and take trains to downtown Los Angeles, the Inland Empire or south Orange County.

Constructi­on crews are excavating space for undergroun­d parking at the site of a future parking structure near the Metrolink station in Old Towne Orange. The structure is also expected to serve as desperatel­y needed nighttime parking for merchants.

In 2016, Chapman Crafted Beer opened its brewery and tasting room next to the site of the future parking structure. Once the structure is done, Chapman Crafted co-owner Wil Dee plans to work with the city to transform an alley on the side of his building into a paseo that will allow pedestrian­s to walk unimpeded to the train station.

With the temporary loss of a public parking lot, Chapman Crafted’s customers have to park a little farther, but the long-term benefits to business owners, residents and train riders will be huge, Dee said.

“As far as the structure goes, it’s a long time coming,” he said. “It’s fantastic for the city to be able to partner with OCTA” to get the parking.

 ?? Orange County Transporta­tion Authority ?? A RENDERING shows the parking structure near Metrolink’s Orange Station, which is under constructi­on at Chapman Avenue and Lemon Street in Orange.
Orange County Transporta­tion Authority A RENDERING shows the parking structure near Metrolink’s Orange Station, which is under constructi­on at Chapman Avenue and Lemon Street in Orange.

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