Most transit stories promise a silver bullet: build the tracks, and the housing crisis solves itself. Dave Amos dismantles that myth with a rare, boots-on-the-ground look at Seattle, arguing that the city's most ambitious rail expansion is running headfirst into the messy reality of land use, industrial preservation, and environmental hazards. This isn't just about trains; it's about whether a growing region can actually build the neighborhoods it needs without displacing the economy that pays for them.
The Industrial Dilemma
Amos begins his journey at Interbay, a future station site sandwiched between wealthy enclaves and heavy industry. He immediately challenges the urbanist assumption that industrial land is simply "prime locations for redevelopment." "There aren't really any NIMBYs in areas like this," Amos notes, "so political opposition isn't quite as intense." It is an easy political win to build housing where no one currently lives, but Amos warns that this strategy carries a hidden cost: "if these inner city industrial areas get pushed out perhaps to the urban Edge you're potentially increasing commutes and adding more emissions."
The commentary here is sharp because it refuses to treat manufacturing as a relic. Amos argues that "you can't just eliminate industrial areas" because cities are "economic dynamos." If you strip out the factories and logistics hubs, the region risks becoming nothing more than a "big bedroom community," which is "not economically sustainable." This framing is crucial for busy readers who often hear that industrial zones are just wasted space waiting for apartments. Amos correctly identifies that the city's own "Urban Industrial" zoning, designed to keep high-density jobs near light rail, is the only thing preventing a total conversion to residential use.
You can't just eliminate industrial areas; cities are economic dynamos. If you get rid of manufacturing the entire city is just a big bedroom community and that's not economically sustainable.
Critics might argue that the housing crisis is so severe that preserving industrial land is a luxury Seattle cannot afford. However, Amos's point about the "urban edge" suggests that moving jobs further out creates a new, longer-term traffic problem that the light rail was supposed to solve.
The Geography of Constraints
Moving south to the Kent-DeMoo station, Amos exposes a structural flaw in how transit agencies often site their lines. He observes that Seattle "really likes to run their trains down the middle of interstates" because it avoids displacing neighborhoods. While politically expedient, this creates a physical barrier to the very development the system needs. "Building along a highway really limits the ability for Transit agencies to build a lot of highquality housing in walking distance to those new stations," Amos writes.
The author highlights a specific irony: Sound Transit is investing heavily in parking structures to feed the trains, with plans for "3200 new parking spaces along the Route." While this boosts ridership, it does little for the housing supply. Amos questions the necessity of this approach: "Does every station need a parking garage maybe not?" He points out that while some marginal land near highways is indeed unsuitable for living due to noise and pollution, the reliance on park-and-ride facilities often precludes the dense, mixed-use "Urban Village" concepts that actually transform communities.
Yet, Amos refuses to be purely cynical. He spotlights a specific project at the Kent-DeMoo station where Sound Transit is developing "199 units of affordable housing" on land previously used for construction staging. The project includes a "multicultural Community Center" and targets families, proving that transit-oriented development is possible even in difficult spots. The key, he suggests, lies in local zoning; cities like Kent are allowing multifamily housing up to "200 ft in some zones," a stark contrast to the single-family dominance elsewhere.
Trains and new stations aren't going to magically create Transit oriented development to solve a Region's housing crisis.
The Downtown Pivot
The final leg of Amos's analysis turns to the city center, where the challenge has shifted from building new tracks to repurposing empty office towers. The "Downtown Activation Plan" is a direct response to the post-pandemic reality where "downtown office vacancy is at 20%, the highest in decades." Amos notes that the plan is as much about public safety as it is about zoning, dedicating significant resources to "combating the fentanyl meth epidemic downtown."
However, the most actionable policy change Amos identifies is the streamlining of environmental reviews. By leveraging a recent state law change, the city can exempt residential projects from the Statewide Environmental Policy Act, removing a major bureaucratic hurdle. Furthermore, the city has rezoned a section of downtown to increase height limits from 175 feet to 440 feet, "essentially allowing 40 story Podium Towers." This is a bold move to maximize density in the region's best transit hub.
Amos's analysis here is grounded in the reality that the "Downtown is ahou plan" (a play on the branding "Downtown is ahou") is a reaction to a fundamental shift in how people work. The argument is that without these aggressive zoning changes, the city's core risks becoming a ghost town, regardless of how many trains run through it. The counterpoint here is that high-rise construction alone does not guarantee affordability or vibrancy; the success of these towers depends on the economic conditions that drive office demand and the ability to attract residents who can actually afford the new units.
Bottom Line
Dave Amos delivers a necessary corrective to the transit-optimism that often dominates urban planning discourse: infrastructure is a tool, not a magic wand. The strongest part of his argument is the insistence that industrial land must be preserved to maintain a diverse economy, even as the housing crisis pressures cities to convert every available square foot. His biggest vulnerability is the sheer scale of the challenge; while he identifies the right constraints, the political will to balance industrial preservation, environmental safety, and rapid housing construction remains untested. Readers should watch how Seattle navigates the tension between its "Urban Industrial" zones and the desperate need for new homes in the coming decade.