Large-scale redevelopment projects such as Boston’s “Big Dig” bestow numerous public benefits—often without charge—to nearby property owners. In the case of the Big Dig, these benefits include twenty-seven acres of newly created parkland, where once an elevated freeway stood. Beyond the immediate and obvious beneficiaries are nearby landowners seeking “better zoning” that might include a relaxation of maximum height or floor area ratios to enjoy the new view. This Article explores the often hidden impact of the nearby landowners’ means of accomplishing their desired result: bargaining with municipalities for private, derivative benefits. The Article compares legislative and judicial responses to land use bargaining in California and Massach...
Controversy often arises when landowners in blighted areas resist government driven urban-renewal co...
Over thirty years ago The United States Court of Appeals upheld municipal efforts to control growth ...
This Article will explore the propensity of transferable development rights to create or magnify den...
Large-scale redevelopment projects such as Boston’s “Big Dig” bestow numerous public benefits—often ...
This paper looks to several land use planning issues at stake in both the World Trade Center redevel...
Urban sprawl is one of today’s most pressing environmental challenges, especially in Massachusetts. ...
Americans witnessing the bulldozing of their country’s pastures, farmlands, and sensitive habitats t...
Consensus to proceed with Boston’s Big Dig Project was only reached after the Commonwealth agreed to...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...
Over the past 30 years, eastern Massachusetts has seen a remarkable combination of rising home price...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, 201...
In response to the ongoing debate over how much of the surface real estate reclaimed by the Big Dig ...
The City of Boston and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts have attempted to develop air rights over t...
Generations of scholarship on the political economy of land use have tried to explain a world in whi...
Municipal land use bargaining may imply as many problems as it heralds promise, but it is widely ack...
Controversy often arises when landowners in blighted areas resist government driven urban-renewal co...
Over thirty years ago The United States Court of Appeals upheld municipal efforts to control growth ...
This Article will explore the propensity of transferable development rights to create or magnify den...
Large-scale redevelopment projects such as Boston’s “Big Dig” bestow numerous public benefits—often ...
This paper looks to several land use planning issues at stake in both the World Trade Center redevel...
Urban sprawl is one of today’s most pressing environmental challenges, especially in Massachusetts. ...
Americans witnessing the bulldozing of their country’s pastures, farmlands, and sensitive habitats t...
Consensus to proceed with Boston’s Big Dig Project was only reached after the Commonwealth agreed to...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...
Over the past 30 years, eastern Massachusetts has seen a remarkable combination of rising home price...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, 201...
In response to the ongoing debate over how much of the surface real estate reclaimed by the Big Dig ...
The City of Boston and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts have attempted to develop air rights over t...
Generations of scholarship on the political economy of land use have tried to explain a world in whi...
Municipal land use bargaining may imply as many problems as it heralds promise, but it is widely ack...
Controversy often arises when landowners in blighted areas resist government driven urban-renewal co...
Over thirty years ago The United States Court of Appeals upheld municipal efforts to control growth ...
This Article will explore the propensity of transferable development rights to create or magnify den...