TOD News Briefs

The Week in TOD News May 2-8, 2026

NJ eTOD review (left) • LCOR picks “Charlie” leasing partner • CO House passes transit housing bill • CTA advances station art projects • SE Asia’s Satellite Cities (right top-to-bottom) 

Article of the Week

159R New York Bus from NJ TRANSIT
Courtesy of NJ TRANSIT

Affordable Housing and Transit Series: New Jersey 
Sohail Husein, Eno Center for Transportation | May 1, 2026 
In the seventh installment of its eTOD case study series, Eno examines how New Jersey is using TOD, affordable housing mandates, and coordinated state planning to address rising housing costs. NJ TRANSIT recently launched an initiative to develop agency-owned land and continues to support municipalities through planning guidance, outreach, and the Transit Village Initiative.


NJ TOD News

Hoboken Connect Residential Site rendering
Rendering of Charlie. Courtesy of LCOR

HOBOKEN—LCOR Taps SERHANT to Lead Leasing at 386-Unit Hoboken Rental Project 
Joshua Burd, Real Estate NJ | May 5, 2026 
LCOR selected SERHANT to lead leasing for Charlie, a 386-unit development that anchors the Hoboken Connect project. The broader project includes a new NJ TRANSIT bus terminal, public space, restoration of the Ferry Terminal Building, and additional residential and retail development.

Pedestrian plaza on George Street in New Brunswick during night with outdoor restaurant seating.
Pedestrian plaza on George Street in New Brunswick. Courtesy of New Brunswick City Center

Transit-Friendly 101: Back to Basics 
Staff, NJTOD | May 5, 2026 
This NJTOD feature outlines key considerations for municipalities beginning transit friendly planning efforts. It highlights examples from communities across New Jersey, summarizes core TOD benefits, and offers a step-by-step framework for implementation.
NJTOD will also host a TOD in Your Downtown event on the same topic on June 4 in Newark. See Taking First Steps Toward a Transit Friendly Future. 


Transit and Equity News

Department of Housing and Urban Development building in Washington D.C.
Andriy Blokhin | Adobe Stock

Change to Public Housing Policies ‘Hurts Everyone,’ NJ Critics Say 
Benjamin J. Hulac, NJ Spotlight News | May 6, 2026 
New HUD regulations would eliminate the requirement for a 30-day notice before filing a tenant eviction and allow work requirements for public housing tenants. Critics, including the Rutgers Law School National Lawyers Guild, say the changes will worsen housing instability and homelessness.

Construction on Freelon Apartments as of February 2026.
Construction on Freelon Apartments as of February 2026. Courtesy of San Francisco Housing and Development Corporation

CALIFORNIA—SoMa Affordable Housing Project to Provide Dozens of New Units 
James Salazar, San Francisco Examiner | May 8, 2026 
Developers topped off construction on Freelon Apartments, an 85-unit project with 58 apartments reserved for households earning between 30 and 60 percent of area median income and 22 units designated for people exiting homelessness. The development sits within a five-minute walk of light rail and Caltrain service and near transportation upgrades such as light rail signal prioritization. Completion is expected in summer 2027.

Rendering of Nashville faith-based affordable housing.
Rendering of Nashville faith-based affordable housing. Courtesy of Inspiritus

TENNESSEE—Faith-Based Organizations Turn Underused Land into Affordable Housing in Nashville 
Sibley Fleming, Urban Land | May 5, 2026 
An Urban Land Institute panel explored how faith-based organizations can use underused land for affordable housing. Nashville and other cities are reducing development barriers and providing grant funding to help faith-based housing projects move forward more efficiently and expand housing supply.

Colorado House of Representatives meeting room.
Colorado House of Representatives. Michael | Adobe Stock

COLORADO—House Passes Bill to Reduce Housing Costs, Save Coloradans Money 
Press Release, Colorado House Democrats | May 4, 2026 
The Colorado House passed legislation to support transit infrastructure and transit-oriented housing aimed at reducing housing costs. The bill would use tax-increment financing and new tax credits to advance the initiative. It now heads to the Senate.


Regional and National TOD News

Local, state, and transit officials at Wickford Junction groundbreaking holding shovels on the site.
Local, state, and transit officials at Wickford Junction groundbreaking. Courtesy of the Rhode Island General Assembly

RHODE ISLAND—Wickford Junction Officially Breaks Ground on 152-Unit Housing Project 
Bill Seymour, Southern Rhode Island Newspapers | May 8, 2026 
Moran Properties began construction on The Residences at Wickford Junction, a 152-unit development in North Kingstown. The project sits next to Wickford Junction Station, which provides direct MBTA service to Providence and Boston, and is located within the Town’s new Transit Oriented Development Zone.

A walking tour group at a TOD mural in the Bronzeville neighborhood of Chicago, IL.
TOD mural in the Bronzeville neighborhood of Chicago, IL. Courtesy of Elevated Chicago

ILLINOIS—Elevated Chicago Expands “Elevating Culture Near Transit” Initiative With Three New Grants and Historic Partnership With CTA 
Press Release, Chicago Transit Authority | May 6, 2026 
The Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) partnered with Elevated Chicago to expand the “Elevating Culture Near Transit” initiative through three new community-focused projects. Planned improvements include live jazz performances at six CTA stations, murals and public art celebrating 95th Street history, and placemaking enhancements along the 35th Street corridor.

Construction workers on a grade crossing in North Wales, PA.
Construction on grade crossing in North Wales, PA. Courtesy of SEPTA

PENNSYLVANIA—Could Private Partnerships Save Pennsylvania Transit? Some State Lawmakers Think So 
Colin Williams, Pittsburgh City Paper | May 6, 2026 
Pennsylvania lawmakers are advancing legislation that would allow counties and municipalities to use public-private partnerships for transit infrastructure projects. Supporters argue the measure could help address the state’s transit funding challenges, while critics warn that such partnerships may increase long-term costs and prioritize profit over public benefit.

Rendering of Needham Heights development.
Rendering of Needham Heights development. Courtesy of Greystar

MASSACHUSETTS—Greystar and Haseko to Break Ground on 189-Unit Multifamily Development in Needham 
Staff, Boston Real Estate Times | May 5, 2026 
Greystar and Haseko broke ground on a 189-unit multifamily development in Needham Heights. The project is located within a multifamily zoning district created through the MBTA Communities Act and offers close access to transit services. Completion is expected in fall 2027.


International TOD News

Rendering of Shenzhen Metro Depot TOD.
Rendering of Shenzhen Metro Depot TOD. Courtesy of Woods Bagot Hong Kong

CHINA—Above the Tracks: China’s Unique Model for Transit-Oriented Development 
Anderson Chider Hsieh, Planetizen | May 8, 2026 
Since 2010, Chinese cities have increasingly developed mixed-use neighborhoods above metro depots, leveraging large tracts of state-owned land near transit infrastructure. Hsieh argues that U.S. transit agencies could reevaluate the redevelopment potential of their rail yards and depots.

Massive megablock city surrounding a rail line in the outskirts of Hong Kong
Mei Foo Sun Chuen in Hong Kong. Wpcpey | Wikimedia Commons

SOUTHEAST ASIA—After Le Corbusier: How Southeast Asia Turned the Satellite City into a Transit Megaproject 
Jonathan Yeung, Arch Daily | May 7, 2026 
Southeast Asian cities adapted the modernist “satellite city” concept into large-scale transit-oriented megaprojects organized around rail networks, dense housing, and integrated station districts rather than standalone landmark buildings. While these developments improve mobility and density, Yeung notes that they can limit public life.

Large traffic congestion in Karachi, Pakistan
Traffic in Karachi. AP Focus | Adobe Stock

PAKISTAN—Cities Unable to Breathe 
Maira Mumtaz, Dawn | May 6, 2026 
Pakistan’s rapid urbanization has contributed to severe congestion, unequal mobility access, and worsening air pollution, with the country ranked the world’s smoggiest in 2025. Climate activist Maira Mumtaz argues that expanding public transit, walkable infrastructure, and people-centered planning is essential to protecting public health and maintaining livable cities.