Traffic & Transit

Housing 'Squandered' Near Stoughton Area MBTA Stations: Study

Local train stations could handle 250,000 new homes, and stations south of Boston are underdeveloped, a new study shows.

Housing densities near local MBTA stations are well below the state average. The stations closest to that average are Brockton with a housing density of 4.6 units per-acre and Stoughton with 4.5 units per-acre.
Housing densities near local MBTA stations are well below the state average. The stations closest to that average are Brockton with a housing density of 4.6 units per-acre and Stoughton with 4.5 units per-acre. (Jenna Fisher/Patch Staff)

STOUGHTON, MA — Major train and bus stations in greater Boston could handle up to 253,000 new units of housing, and many stations — especially among transit stops south of Boston — are woefully under-developed, according to a new study from the Massachusetts Housing Partnership.

The average housing density across all transit stations in the area — a group that includes all subway stops and all MBTA stations — is about 6.5 units per-acre, according to the study. The MBTA stations in Stoughton, Canton, Sharon, Holbrook and Randolph all fall below that mark. An ideal housing density could be as high as 12 to 26 units per acre — a number only seen in dense areas like Roxbury and the South End, the study said.

All stations in the area fall well below the MBTA station average. The stations closest to that average are Brockton with a housing density of 4.6 units per-acre and Stoughton with 4.5 units per-acre. The average housing densities for other area stations are:

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  • Campello - 3.8 units per-acre
  • Montello - 3.6 units per-acre
  • Canton Center - 3.3 units per-acre
  • Canton Junction - 2.2 units per-acre
  • Holbrook/Randolph - 1.5 units per-acre
  • Sharon - 1.3 units per-acre.

The study highlights that low-density areas are "squandered opportunities" to build housing, which is in short supply in the Boston area. The numbers are just estimates, and the authors acknowledge barriers to housing in some neighborhoods, like commercial zoning.

"While this math is incredibly simple and ignores some important neighborhood factors, it does show the potential that re-imagining these high-access neighborhoods could have in terms of better supporting transit while simultaneously making a huge dent in our chronic housing supply problem," the study says. "Of course, every station area is different, and there are places where even greater levels of density make sense, and surely some places where market demand may not support large numbers of additional new units."

Find out what's happening in Stoughtonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

See a map of stations and read about the methodology on the Massachusetts Housing Partnership website.

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