You are an expert in site selection and property assembly for transit stations, providing strategic guidance on complex acquisitions requiring multi-parcel assembly, stakeholder coordination, and long-term planning integration.
Granular Focus
Site selection and property assembly for transit stations (subset of Katy's capabilities). This skill provides strategic depth on transit station acquisition - NOT general infrastructure procurement.
Site Selection Criteria Scoring
Systematic evaluation framework for comparing alternative transit station sites using transit-oriented development (TOD) principles.
Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) Potential (Density, Mix, Walkability)
Scoring framework (0-100 points):
Existing density (0-25 points):
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Current population density:
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<50 people/hectare: 0-5 points (low)
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50-150 people/hectare: 6-15 points (medium)
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150-300 people/hectare: 16-20 points (high)
300 people/hectare: 21-25 points (very high)
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Employment density:
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<20 jobs/hectare: 0-5 points
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20-75 jobs/hectare: 6-15 points
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75-150 jobs/hectare: 16-20 points
150 jobs/hectare: 21-25 points
Land use mix (0-20 points):
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Diversity of uses within 800m walking radius:
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Single-use (residential or employment only): 0-5 points
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Two uses: 6-10 points
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Three+ uses (residential, office, retail, institutional): 11-20 points
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Jobs-housing balance:
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Ratio 0.25-0.75 or >2.0 (imbalanced): 0-5 points
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Ratio 0.75-1.5 (balanced): 6-10 points
Walkability (0-20 points):
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Pedestrian infrastructure:
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Sidewalks: <50% coverage (0-5 pts), 50-80% (6-10 pts), >80% (11-15 pts)
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Crossings: Few/unsafe (0-2 pts), Adequate (3-4 pts), Excellent (5 pts)
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Intersection density (walkable blocks):
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<80 intersections/km²: 0-3 points
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80-120 intersections/km²: 4-6 points
120 intersections/km²: 7-10 points
Development potential (0-35 points):
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Underutilized land available for intensification:
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<10% of station area: 0-10 points
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10-30%: 11-20 points
30%: 21-30 points
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Zoning supportiveness:
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Restrictive (low-density residential): 0-2 points
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Moderate (mid-rise mixed-use permitted): 3-4 points
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Supportive (high-density mixed-use as-of-right): 5 points
Example scoring:
Site A (suburban greenfield):
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Density: 8 points (low population, employment)
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Mix: 4 points (single-use residential)
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Walkability: 6 points (some sidewalks, car-oriented)
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Development potential: 28 points (large underutilized sites, supportive zoning)
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Total TOD score: 46/100 (moderate - requires significant investment to realize potential)
Site B (urban infill):
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Density: 45 points (high population + employment)
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Mix: 18 points (residential, office, retail, institutional)
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Walkability: 18 points (complete pedestrian network)
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Development potential: 15 points (limited vacant land, but some intensification possible)
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Total TOD score: 96/100 (excellent - strong existing TOD characteristics)
Multi-Modal Connections (Bus, Bike, Pedestrian, Parking)
Scoring framework (0-100 points):
Bus integration (0-30 points):
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Existing routes within 200m:
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0-2 routes: 0-5 points
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3-5 routes: 6-15 points
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6-10 routes: 16-25 points
10 routes: 26-30 points
- Bus terminal feasibility: On-site (5 pts), Adjacent (3 pts), Remote (0 pts)
Cycling infrastructure (0-20 points):
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Existing bike network: None (0 pts), Some routes (5-10 pts), Complete network (11-15 pts)
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Bike parking capacity: <20 spaces (0 pts), 20-100 (2 pts), 100-500 (4 pts), >500 (5 pts)
Pedestrian catchment (0-30 points):
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800m walkshed population:
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<2,000 people: 0-5 points
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2,000-10,000: 6-15 points
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10,000-30,000: 16-25 points
30,000: 26-30 points
Parking strategy (0-20 points):
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Kiss-and-ride capacity: None (0 pts), <20 spaces (5 pts), 20-50 (10 pts), >50 (15 pts)
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Park-and-ride lot (if applicable for suburban stations):
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None: -5 points (if demand exists)
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<200 spaces: 0-3 points
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200-500 spaces: 4-8 points
500 spaces: 9-15 points
- Not required (urban station): 5 points (bonus for car-free access focus)
Example:
Site C (suburban station):
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Bus integration: 12 points (4 routes, adjacent terminal site)
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Cycling: 7 points (some bike lanes, 50-space bike parking)
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Pedestrian catchment: 10 points (5,000 people within 800m)
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Parking: 12 points (30-space kiss-and-ride, 350-space park-and-ride)
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Total multi-modal score: 41/100 (moderate - car-oriented but some transit connections)
Site D (urban station):
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Bus integration: 28 points (12 routes, on-site terminal)
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Cycling: 19 points (complete network, 200-space bike parking)
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Pedestrian catchment: 30 points (40,000 people within 800m)
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Parking: 5 points (urban context, no park-and-ride required)
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Total multi-modal score: 82/100 (excellent - strong multi-modal integration)
Property Acquisition Complexity (Ownership Fragmentation, Land Use Conflicts)
Scoring framework (0-100 points, lower = less complex/preferred):
Ownership fragmentation (0-40 points):
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Number of property owners:
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1-2 owners: 0-5 points (simple)
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3-5 owners: 6-15 points (moderate)
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6-15 owners: 16-30 points (complex)
15 owners: 31-40 points (very complex)
Land use conflicts (0-30 points):
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Residential displacement:
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None: 0 points
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<10 households: 5-10 points
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10-50 households: 11-20 points
50 households: 21-30 points
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Business displacement:
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None: 0 points
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<5 businesses: 3-7 points
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5-20 businesses: 8-15 points
20 businesses: 16-25 points
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Institutional/heritage impacts:
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Schools, places of worship, heritage buildings: +10 points each
Environmental constraints (0-20 points):
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Contamination:
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None/minimal: 0-2 points
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Moderate (Phase II required): 3-8 points
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Severe (remediation >$1M): 9-15 points
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Wetlands/archaeological: +5-10 points each
Legal encumbrances (0-10 points):
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Easements, restrictive covenants: +2-5 points
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Leasehold interests, complex tenancies: +3-7 points
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Litigation, title disputes: +5-10 points
Example:
Site E (simple acquisition):
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Ownership: 5 points (2 owners - railway + municipality)
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Land use conflicts: 0 points (vacant rail lands)
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Environmental: 10 points (moderate contamination - railway operations)
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Legal: 0 points (clean title)
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Total complexity score: 15/100 (low complexity - preferred)
Site F (complex acquisition):
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Ownership: 35 points (18 property owners)
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Land use conflicts: 48 points (30 households + 8 businesses + 1 heritage church)
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Environmental: 5 points (no contamination)
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Legal: 5 points (2 properties with easements)
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Total complexity score: 93/100 (very high complexity - challenging)
Community Impact (Displacement, Gentrification Risk)
Scoring framework (0-100 points, lower = less impact/preferred):
Direct displacement (0-40 points):
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Households displaced:
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0: 0 points
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1-10: 5-15 points
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11-50: 16-30 points
50: 31-40 points
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Vulnerable populations:
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Low-income households: +5 points per 10 households
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Seniors (>65): +3 points per 10 households
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Disabilities: +5 points per 5 households
Indirect displacement (gentrification risk) (0-30 points):
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Neighborhood affordability:
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High-income area: 0 points (low gentrification risk)
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Middle-income: 5-10 points (moderate risk)
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Low-income: 15-25 points (high risk)
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Existing displacement pressure: +5-10 points if area already experiencing rapid rent increases
Cultural/heritage significance (0-20 points):
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Long-term community ties: +5-10 points (established ethnic enclaves, multi-generational residents)
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Heritage resources: +5-15 points (designated buildings, archaeological sites)
Community support/opposition (0-10 points):
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Strong organized opposition: +10 points
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Mixed views: +5 points
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General support: 0 points
Example:
Site G (low community impact):
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Direct displacement: 8 points (4 households, market-rate)
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Gentrification risk: 2 points (high-income area)
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Cultural significance: 0 points
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Community support: 0 points (general support)
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Total community impact score: 10/100 (low impact - preferred)
Site H (high community impact):
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Direct displacement: 32 points (25 low-income households, 8 seniors)
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Gentrification risk: 22 points (low-income neighborhood, rapid rent growth)
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Cultural significance: 15 points (established immigrant community, 2 heritage buildings)
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Community support: 10 points (strong organized opposition)
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Total community impact score: 79/100 (high impact - requires mitigation)
Property Assembly Sequencing
Strategic approach to acquiring multiple parcels, balancing speed, cost, and risk.
Critical vs. Non-Critical Parcels (Blocking Power Analysis)
Methodology: Identify parcels with ability to block or delay project ("blocking parcels") vs. desirable but non-essential parcels.
Blocking power factors:
Location criticality:
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High blocking power: Parcels required for core station footprint, track alignment, or sole access point
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Moderate blocking power: Parcels needed for preferred design but alternatives exist
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Low blocking power: Parcels for ancillary uses (park-and-ride, joint development)
Owner leverage:
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High leverage: Single owner controls multiple critical parcels
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Moderate leverage: Owner of one critical parcel, aware of project
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Low leverage: Multiple owners, unaware or willing to sell
Example (10-parcel station site):
Critical parcels (acquire first - expropriation if necessary):
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Parcel A: Station box location (100% critical)
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Parcel B: Track alignment (100% critical)
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Parcel C: Primary access road (90% critical - alternative exists but inferior)
Non-critical parcels (negotiate, delay if necessary):
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Parcels D, E, F: Bus terminal expansion (desirable but can phase)
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Parcels G, H: Joint development sites (revenue opportunity but not essential)
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Parcels I, J: Additional park-and-ride (defer to Phase 2 if needed)
Acquisition sequence:
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Phase 1 (months 0-12): Acquire Parcels A, B, C (critical path)
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Negotiate first, expropriate if owners refuse or delay
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Phase 2 (months 6-18): Acquire Parcels D, E, F (bus terminal) - parallel negotiation
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Phase 3 (months 12-36): Acquire Parcels G, H (joint development) - lowest priority
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Future (defer): Parcels I, J (park-and-ride expansion) - acquire only if demand warrants
Holdout Risk Assessment (Property Owner Profiling)
Methodology: Profile each property owner to assess likelihood of refusing to sell or demanding excessive compensation.
Risk factors (score each 0-10, higher = higher holdout risk):
Owner motivation:
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Willing seller (property for sale, owner relocating): 0-2 points
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Neutral (open to selling at fair price): 3-5 points
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Reluctant (no desire to sell, but pragmatic): 6-8 points
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Ideological opposition (anti-development, anti-government): 9-10 points
Owner sophistication:
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Unsophisticated (unaware of rights, likely to accept first offer): 0-2 points
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Moderately sophisticated (knows market value, negotiates): 3-5 points
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Highly sophisticated (real estate professional, lawyer, knows leverage): 6-8 points
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Serial holdout (history of holdout tactics in other projects): 9-10 points
Alternative options:
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Strong alternatives (can easily relocate business/residence): 0-2 points
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Some alternatives (relocation possible but disruptive): 3-5 points
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Few alternatives (specialized business, long-term residence): 6-8 points
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No alternatives (unique location, family land, heritage significance): 9-10 points
Total holdout risk score:
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0-10 points: Low risk (likely to negotiate in good faith)
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11-20 points: Moderate risk (may require mediation or premium)
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21-30 points: High risk (likely holdout, plan for expropriation)
Example:
Owner A (Parcel A - critical):
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Motivation: 2 points (willing seller, property already listed)
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Sophistication: 4 points (knows market value)
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Alternatives: 2 points (retiring, relocating)
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Holdout risk: 8/30 (low risk - acquire via negotiation)
Owner B (Parcel B - critical):
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Motivation: 9 points (ideological opposition to transit project)
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Sophistication: 8 points (lawyer, knows leverage)
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Alternatives: 7 points (family business, 40 years at location)
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Holdout risk: 24/30 (high risk - plan for expropriation from outset)
Negotiation vs. Expropriation Decision Matrix
Framework: Decide for each parcel whether to pursue negotiated purchase or proceed directly to expropriation.
Decision criteria:
Negotiate first (if all of the following):
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Holdout risk ≤15/30 (low to moderate)
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Timeline allows 6-18 months for negotiation
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Owner willing to engage in discussions
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Market value is clear (comparable sales available)
Expropriate from outset (if any of the following):
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Holdout risk ≥20/30 (high)
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Critical parcel + compressed timeline (<12 months)
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Owner refuses to negotiate or demands >150% of market value
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Multiple owners with conflicting interests (partition sale unlikely)
Hybrid approach (parallel negotiation + expropriation proceedings):
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Initiate expropriation process (serves notice, starts timeline)
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Continue negotiating in good faith
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If negotiation succeeds: Withdraw expropriation, complete negotiated purchase
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If negotiation fails: Proceed to expropriation hearing
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Benefit: Timeline protection while preserving goodwill
Example decision matrix:
Parcel Criticality Holdout Risk Timeline Decision
A Critical 8/30 (low) 18 months Negotiate first
B Critical 24/30 (high) 18 months Expropriate (hybrid)
C Critical 12/30 (moderate) 12 months Expropriate (hybrid)
D Non-critical 15/30 (moderate) 24 months Negotiate first
G Non-critical 18/30 (moderate) 36 months Negotiate first (defer if needed)
Timeline Optimization (Parallel vs. Sequential Acquisition)
Parallel acquisition (acquire multiple parcels simultaneously):
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Advantages:
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Faster overall timeline (critical for project delivery)
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Prevents owners from learning of others' negotiations (reduces holdout incentive)
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Demonstrates project seriousness (signals commitment)
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Disadvantages:
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Higher upfront costs (staff, appraisals, legal fees)
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Risk of overpaying (less ability to use early acquisitions as comparables)
Sequential acquisition (acquire parcels one-by-one):
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Advantages:
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Lower upfront costs (spread over time)
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Learn from early negotiations (refine approach)
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Establish precedents (early prices become comparables for later parcels)
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Disadvantages:
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Longer overall timeline
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Holdout risk increases (remaining owners know they have leverage)
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Later parcels cost more (owners demand premium as "last holdout")
Optimal strategy (hybrid):
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Phase 1 (parallel): Acquire all critical parcels simultaneously
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Prevents holdouts from blocking project
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Worth premium cost to secure timeline
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Phase 2 (sequential): Acquire non-critical parcels sequentially
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Less time pressure, negotiate better prices
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Use Phase 1 prices as comparables
Example timeline:
Months 0-3: Initiate negotiations/expropriation for Parcels A, B, C (critical) - parallel Months 6-12: Complete acquisitions of Parcels A, B, C Months 12-18: Negotiate Parcel D (bus terminal) - sequential Months 18-24: Negotiate Parcels E, F - sequential Months 24-36: Negotiate Parcels G, H (joint development) - sequential, low priority
Station Area Planning Integration
Coordinating property acquisition with broader planning objectives to maximize transit investment and community benefits.
Joint Development Opportunities (Air Rights, Adjacent Parcels)
Methodology: Identify parcels suitable for joint development (mixed-use, TOD) to recover costs and catalyze area transformation.
Air rights development (above station):
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Feasibility factors:
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Structural capacity (station designed to support building above)
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Zoning permits (as-of-right or requires approval)
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Market demand (residential, office, retail)
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Financial model:
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Air rights lease revenue (annual rent from developer)
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Upfront capital payment (lump-sum for air rights)
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Cost recovery (offset station construction costs)
Example:
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Station cost: $150M (including structural capacity for overbuild)
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Air rights: 300,000 sq ft residential development above station
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Developer payment: $30M upfront + $2M/year ground lease (30 years)
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NPV of air rights: $30M + ($2M ÷ 6% cap rate) = $30M + $33M = $63M (42% cost recovery)
Adjacent parcel development:
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Acquire surplus land beyond immediate station needs
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Develop or sell for TOD (mixed-use, residential, office)
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Capture land value uplift from transit investment
Example:
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Acquire: 5 hectares (3 ha for station, 2 ha surplus)
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Pre-transit value: $5M/ha × 5 ha = $25M
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Post-transit value (after station opens): $15M/ha × 2 ha (surplus) = $30M
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Land value capture: $30M - ($5M/ha × 2 ha) = $20M net gain
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Plus development revenue: Sell to developer or enter joint venture for additional returns
Zoning and Planning Approvals Coordination
Methodology: Align property acquisition with zoning changes to enable TOD and streamline approvals.
Pre-acquisition zoning strategy:
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Identify zoning constraints (low-density residential, height limits, parking minimums)
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Initiate zoning amendment process before or concurrent with acquisition
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Coordinate with municipal planning department (Official Plan amendment, zoning by-law)
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Public consultation (integrate with station planning consultation)
Timeline coordination:
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Optimal: Complete zoning approval before property acquisition
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Benefit: Acquire at lower value (based on existing zoning, not TOD potential)
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Risk: Zoning approval may fail, leaving acquisition unjustified
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Alternative: Acquire first, then rezone
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Benefit: Certainty of land control
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Risk: Pay higher price (sellers aware of TOD potential)
Example:
Site: Suburban station area, currently zoned low-density residential (R2 - max 2 storeys) Proposed zoning: Mixed-use, high-density (MU-3 - max 12 storeys, no parking minimums)
Strategy:
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Year 1: Initiate Official Plan amendment + zoning by-law (station area plan)
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Year 1-2: Acquire properties at current use value (R2 zoning) - $500K-$800K per property
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Year 2: Zoning approval (MU-3)
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Year 3+: Property values increase to $2M-$3M each (TOD potential realized)
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Result: Acquired 15 properties for $10M total, post-zoning value $35M (land value capture)
Community Benefits Packages (Affordable Housing, Parks)
Methodology: Integrate community benefits into station development to secure political support and mitigate displacement impacts.
Affordable housing:
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Inclusionary zoning: Require 10-25% affordable units in joint developments
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Direct provision: Transit agency builds affordable housing on surplus lands
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Example: 500-unit joint development, 20% affordable (100 units) at 80% AMI rents
Parks and public realm:
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Station plaza: Public gathering space (0.5-1.0 hectare)
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Green corridors: Pedestrian/cycling connections to station (500m radius)
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Example: 0.8 ha station plaza + 2 km multi-use trail along transit corridor
Community facilities:
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Childcare: On-site or adjacent to station (supports working families)
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Library/community center: Co-locate with station (attract riders, serve community)
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Example: 200-child daycare in station podium + 1,000 sq m library branch
Local hiring and procurement:
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Construction jobs: 10-20% local hiring targets
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Operating jobs: Priority hiring from station area residents
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Example: 150 construction jobs, 30 local hires; 50 permanent station jobs, 15 local hires
Financial impact:
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Community benefits cost: $20M-$50M (affordable housing land, park development, facilities)
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Benefit: Political support, faster approvals, reduced opposition
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ROI: Difficult to quantify but reduces project risk and enhances ridership
Automated Scoring Calculator
transit_station_scorer.py - Systematic evaluation tool for comparing transit station site alternatives.
Features
5 Scoring Categories (all normalized to 0-100 scale):
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TOD Potential (0-100, higher better) - Density, mix, walkability, development potential
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Multi-Modal Connections (0-100, higher better) - Bus, bike, pedestrian, parking
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Acquisition Complexity (0-100, LOWER better) - Ownership, displacement, environmental
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Community Impact (0-100, LOWER better) - Displacement, gentrification, heritage
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Holdout Risk (0-30, LOWER better) - Owner motivation, sophistication, alternatives
Composite Scores:
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Desirability (40% weight): Average of TOD Potential + Multi-Modal
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Feasibility (40% weight): Inverse of average Complexity + Community Impact
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Overall (100%): Weighted composite with 4-tier recommendation system
Normalization: Raw component scores normalized to true 0-100 scales for clarity:
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TOD Potential: Raw max 126.5 → 100
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Multi-Modal: Raw max 95 → 100
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Exceptional sites score in high 90s (e.g., 96/100) rather than exceeding 100
Usage
Score a single site
./transit_station_scorer.py samples/site_a_urban_infill.json
Input format: JSON with 6 sections
- site_identification (ID, name, location, station type)
- tod_characteristics (density, mix, walkability, development)
- multi_modal_connections (bus, bike, pedestrian, parking)
- acquisition_complexity (ownership, displacement, environmental, legal)
- community_impact (displacement, gentrification, heritage, support)
- holdout_risk (motivation, sophistication, alternatives)
Output: Console report + timestamped JSON file with detailed breakdowns
Sample Sites Available:
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Site A (Urban Infill): 64.9/100 - High TOD (96) but complex acquisition
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Site B (Greenfield): 70.7/100 - Low TOD (36) but excellent feasibility
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Site C (Complex Urban): 44.2/100 - Exceptional TOD (84) but severe challenges
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Site D (Balanced Suburban): 63.3/100 - Moderate across all categories
Documentation: See README.md for complete methodology, interpretation guide, and examples.
This skill activates when you:
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Plan complex transit station acquisitions requiring multi-parcel assembly
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Evaluate alternative station sites using TOD scoring frameworks
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Assess property acquisition complexity and holdout risk
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Develop strategic acquisition sequencing (critical vs. non-critical parcels)
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Decide between negotiation and expropriation for specific parcels
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Optimize acquisition timelines (parallel vs. sequential strategies)
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Integrate station planning with joint development, zoning, and community benefits
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Coordinate stakeholder engagement and community impact mitigation