What happens when a neighborhood is transit-ready but its residents are transit-averse?
Such a reaction doesn't come as a complete surprise. A few years ago, I sat around a table with developers to plan a new housing development in Florida. Some of us were eager to make that community less car-dependent, others less so. My colleague and I presented several design options that would encourage people to walk and get to know their neighbors. One was the creation of a central location where residents would come to pick up their mail; another was a neighborhood cafe as an alternative to the proposed drive-thru Starbucks in a strip mall on the outskirts of town. As we were showing renderings, we were interrupted by a member of the team who said with no small hint of frustration in his voice, "Sorry, but you can't design for the way you want people to behave."
One assumes that residents of King Farm moved here knowing the plans were in place for transit and it's not clear how it became a matter for debate. The almost silver lining is that the community isn't dismissing transit outright but rather is proposing that the light rail system runs around the development rather than through it as originally designed.
The lesson here? "If the residents see “no benefit,” what’s the point of designing for transit, exactly?" says Kaid Benfield, who writes about the intersections between development, community, and the environment. As he explains in his post on the Sustainable Cities Collective site, "'Transit-oriented' or 'transit-ready' may not mean squat if the transit isn’t fully committed."