Skip to main content

NYC aims to improve transport accessibility

Proposal includes easement certification and a transit improvement bonus
October 26, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
MTA says provisions will help free up funds for it to make more stations accessible on a faster timeline (© Hakob Davtyan | Dreamstime.com)

New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) has entered a collaboration to make transit more accessible for those with disabilities and senior citizens. 

The Elevate Transit: Zoning for Accessibility partnership is expected to allow the MTA to leverage planned private development to achieve a fully accessible transit system faster. It will also incentivise private developers to design their buildings to incorporate public station accessibility projects or build the improvements at nearby MTA stations. 

The MTA says the initiative creates a new set of tools that build off its commitment of more than $5 billion of funding for 77 accessible subway, Long Island Rail Road, Metro-North Railroad and Staten Island Railway station projects in the 2020-2024 MTA Capital Plan.

The new proposal requires developers of most mid or high-density sites adjacent to the stations within New York City (NYC) to determine whether the MTA needs an easement – permanent access to a small piece of property for future accessibility projects.

According to the MTA, easements can help reduce expensive, time-consuming barriers to constructing elevators, such as underground utility relocations and allow for station designs that better serve riders.

If an easement is necessary, the developer would receive targeted zoning relief to offset the creation of an easement.

A separate part of the proposal expands the existing ‘transit improvement bonus’ from central business districts to other high-density areas in the city. 

This programme incentivises private developers to fund and build new transit station access improvements, such as elevators or other circulation improvements at already accessible stations, in exchange for a floor area bonus of up to 20%. Accessibility improvements attained through the bonus mechanism are achieved at no cost to the MTA and will be in addition to projects funded through the MTA’s Capital Plan. Each bonus application will still require a public review and approval process.

These provisions will help free up funds for the MTA to make more stations accessible on a faster timeline and provide more accessible routes.

Jessica Murray, chair of Advisory Committee on Transit Accessibility for New York City Transit, says: “I urge the MTA to track and invest the money saved from easements and privately-built elevators into making the system more accessible for people with visual, hearing, and cognitive disabilities, too.”

Aside from the MTA, other members involved the collaboration include New York City Council, the Department of City Planning and the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities.
 

Related Content

  • Microgrids & the new power generation
    August 31, 2021
    Public transportation agencies are turning to microgrids to provide critical resilience in the event of local and regional power interruptions. Gordon Feller looks at projects in Maryland, New Jersey and Massachusetts
  • Washington releases Vision Zero Action Plan
    December 18, 2015
    Washington DC Mayor Muriel Bowser, in conjunction with the Department of Transportation (DDOT) the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) and other city officials, has releases the District’s Vision Zero Action Plan, which aims to eliminate fatalities and serious injuries to people walkers, cyclists and drivers by 2024. The Plan is the result of an extensive planning process involving 30 government agencies, community groups and residents. It places a high priority on making safety improvements and ref
  • London’s strategy to tackle air quality problems
    October 21, 2014
    Colin Sowman talks to Matthew Pencharz, the man charged with charting London’s path between catering for traveller needs, conserving ancient buildings and conforming to modern air quality standards.
  • How can US transportation be ‘re-envisioned’?
    October 17, 2019
    In her address to this year’s ITS America Annual Meeting, congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, chair of the House Subcommittee on Highways and Transit, called for a ‘re-envisioning’ of transportation. Her speech is below – and ITS International asks a number of US experts what they would like to see ‘re-envisioned’…

    I would like to welcome  ITS America to the nation’s capital.