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Better Cities Project
  • Home
  • About Us
    Our Vision
    BCP’s vision is that free-market municipal policy solutions are broadly available, widely acceptable, and regularly employed, enabling American cities to achieve their full potential as engines of economic prosperity. We reject the idea that cities are lost to free-market principles or policies.
    Our Mission
    BCP uncovers ideas that work, promotes realistic solutions, and forges partnerships that help people in America’s largest cities live free and happy lives.
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    Address

    304 S. Jones Blvd #2826
    Las Vegas NV 89107

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    (702) 608-2046‬

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    Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.

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    info@better-cities.org

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Home Transportation and Infrastructure

Nashville’s transit plan requires zoning reform

Without land-use reform, Nashville’s $3.1 billion transit investment risks moving people out instead of bringing them in

Patrick TuoheybyPatrick Tuohey
April 21, 2025
in Transportation and Infrastructure
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Nashville’s transit plan requires zoning reform
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Nashville voters recently approved a $3.1 billion transportation package—the “Choose How You Move” plan—to boost bus service, improve sidewalks and enhance traffic safety. It’s the city’s most ambitious mobility investment in decades. But as Rthvika Suvarna explains in a sharp piece for Bloomberg, “Nashville’s $3 Billion Transit Plan Brings a Call for Zoning Reform,” that investment may not deliver the promised benefits unless city leaders tackle the zoning code holding everything back.

Right now, much of Nashville’s residential zoning caps density at low levels—often only allowing single-family homes. That creates a perverse dynamic: public dollars build out high-frequency bus corridors, but private developers are barred from adding the homes and businesses that would make those corridors thrive. The result? A lot of expensive infrastructure serving not nearly enough people.

Researchers at the Urban Institute issued a clear warning. Without land-use reform, new investment in transit could raise property values along key corridors while preventing new housing supply—exacerbating displacement and driving lower-income residents further from the very services designed to help them.

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They recommend a suite of modest reforms: legalize more multifamily housing, allow greater density near transit lines and reduce costly barriers like minimum parking requirements. In short, cities must make it possible for people to live near the transportation they’re funding.

The lesson here isn’t just for Nashville. Every city considering big-dollar transit expansions should heed the same warning: transit and zoning are two sides of the same coin. If you want your buses and trains to succeed, you have to let people build homes and businesses around them.

That may not be as politically flashy as a ribbon-cutting, but it’s what makes good cities work.

Tags: Economic DevelopmentTransitUrban TransportationZoning
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Patrick Tuohey

Patrick Tuohey

Patrick Tuohey is co-founder and policy director of the Better Cities Project. He works with taxpayers, media, and policymakers to foster understanding of the consequences — sometimes unintended — of policies such as economic development, taxation, education, and transportation. He also serves as a senior fellow at Missouri's Show-Me Institute and a visiting fellow at the Virginia-based Yorktown Foundation for Public Policy.

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