Tag: land value capture

  • Land Value Capture

    The $12 Billion That Isn’t There

    What the land value capture line in the McGill TRAM financial model actually rests on — and why a number doing the heaviest lifting in ALTO’s only public financial model is a planning placeholder, not a financing prospect.

    ⚠ What This Brief Examines

    The McGill TRAM financial model assumes that land value capture — the public capture of property-value uplift around new stations — will contribute $12 billion toward ALTO’s capital cost, reducing the amount that must be borrowed from roughly $53 billion to $41.23 billion.

    This brief traces that figure to its origin, tests it against the international precedents the model invokes, against the realised Canadian record, against the legal authorities ALTO actually holds, and against the timing of when capture revenue could plausibly arrive. On every test, the $12 billion comes apart.

    Headline Finding

    The $12 billion land value capture line is reverse-engineered from a 15-percent rule of thumb, not built from any property analysis. It contains no parcel-level valuation, no station-area market study, no comparable transactions, and no discounted cash flow.

    A defensible figure for the present value of plausible station-area capture is in the low single billions — well under 5 percent of capital cost — and it accrues over decades rather than during the construction window when borrowing must actually be priced. The line is the difference between a model that reads as “tolerable on paper” and one that reads as “permanently subsidised.”

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    Land Value Capture — Assessing the $12 Billion Claim (PDF)
    Full research note for federal decision-makers, parliamentarians, journalists, and residents along the corridor
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    Section 1 · Origin of the Figure

    A percentage, not a forecast

    The $12 billion originates in the McGill TRAM financial analysis, where it is described as land and real estate development gains “equivalent to roughly 15 percent of the total cost.” Fifteen percent of the assumed $79.8 billion capital cost is $12 billion. The ratio is asserted; the dollar figure follows arithmetically.

    That is the whole of its derivation. The report contains no parcel-level valuation, no station-area market analysis, no comparable transaction work, no discounted cash flow of expected development revenues, and no sensitivity analysis. Change the cost assumption and the “capture” number moves with it — without any change to the underlying property economics, because there are no underlying property economics in the figure to begin with.

    The line is also structurally load-bearing. Remove it and the borrowed principal rises from $41.23 billion to roughly $53 billion. At the model’s own 8 percent rate over 50 years, that adds about $1.05 billion a year in debt service. The companion brief concedes the consequence directly: its “No LVC” scenario requires average annual subsidies of $2.12 billion and never reaches self-sufficiency by Year 50.

    15%
    Rule-of-thumb ratio applied to capital cost — the figure’s entire basis
    $12B
    The resulting line — with no property analysis behind it
    $53B
    Borrowed principal without the line, up from $41.23B
    Section 2 · The Precedents

    The international examples do not transfer

    The TRAM brief grounds its capture case on three precedents — Hong Kong’s West Kowloon, an Australian East Coast HSR pre-feasibility study, and California’s High-Speed Rail. None is institutionally analogous to the ALTO corridor.

    Hong Kong West Kowloon

    The only case with realised capture at scale: a single super-prime tower site sold for HK$42.2 billion. But Hong Kong’s land is overwhelmingly state-owned under a colonial leasehold system, and the government grants development rights as a primary fiscal instrument. It bears no resemblance to Peterborough, Trois-Rivières, Laval, or even Ottawa-Gatineau.

    Australia East Coast HSR

    The cited evidence is a 2022 preliminary investigation with a near three-fold range ($43–126 billion), for a project that remains unbuilt. Citing an aspirational range from an unconstructed project as proof that ALTO can capture $12 billion is circular reasoning.

    California HSR

    Cited for proposed tax-increment financing concepts. After fifteen-plus years and over $13 billion of spending, California HSR has captured essentially zero, while costs escalated from $33 billion to over $128 billion. It is a cautionary precedent, not a supporting one.

    Two precedents the brief omits are more directly relevant. The UK’s HS2 explicitly considered capture and recovered a negligible fraction of capital cost — property values along the route fell on construction blight, and the government spent more on compensation than it recouped. Brightline in Florida, the closest North-American analogue with vertically integrated real-estate interests, is in distress on its Private Activity Bonds despite favourable conditions: no winter operations, sustained population growth, and no expropriation politics.

    The most relevant evidence is Canadian — and it comes from a source the federal government itself supports. A 2023 study by the University of Toronto’s Infrastructure Institute, prepared for and supported by the Canada Infrastructure Bank, surveyed the realised Canadian record:

    • Per-deal ceiling: realised Canadian capture deals — joint development and surplus land sales — have typically raised $30 million to $110 million, with only the largest sales in the most expensive markets exceeding that band.
    • Corridor analogue: Montréal’s REM, the closest comparable, raised a $512 million station-area contribution — covering just 7.4 percent of the project’s $6.9 billion cost, itself well below a 2014 estimate of up to 35 percent.
    • Single station: Vancouver’s Capstan Station, described as having near-ideal conditions for capture, raised only $32 million over nine years.
    • The Hong Kong verdict: the same CIB-supported study attributes West Kowloon’s success to a combination of factors unique to Hong Kong, and concludes the model is fundamentally different from most capture models.

    A CIB-supported source thus reaches the same conclusion this note does: the marquee precedent does not transfer, and realised Canadian capture operates two to three orders of magnitude below the $12 billion line.

    Section 3 · Canadian Institutional Constraints

    The authorities required do not exist

    Capture at the scale TRAM assumes requires legal authorities ALTO does not have and that no level of government has proposed. Property and land use are provincial jurisdiction. Municipal zoning, development charges, and the property tax base lie outside federal control. There is no Canadian equivalent of U.S. tax-increment financing as a station-area capture tool, and Ontario’s closest analogue — Section 37 / community benefits charges — generates modest, parcel-by-parcel sums and has been further constrained by recent provincial reform.

    A structural obstacle compounds the jurisdictional one. The same CIB-supported study identifies fragmented land ownership as a core constraint: unlike Hong Kong’s state leasehold system, prime station-adjacent land in Canada is held by many separate owners. ALTO’s catchments — especially built-out central areas like Toronto Union and Montréal Central — are precisely this kind of fragmented holding, where capturing uplift at scale would first require slow, costly, politically fraught land assembly.

    The brief’s recommendation that government “empower Alto to lead development and value capture within 2 km around the stations” implies development authority over roughly 88 km² of station catchment — about 12.6 km² around each of seven stations. No mechanism in Bill C-15, the Cadence consortium structure, or any published ALTO document contemplates this. The Bill C-15 expropriation provisions are scoped to the right-of-way, not to station catchments; acquiring 88 km² would be a separate expropriation programme of significant scale, with compensation costs the model never nets against the $12 billion gross.

    On the procurement record

    Housing and TOD intent does exist in the procurement. A federal housing and TOD presentation to bidders — released under access to information — sets out a four-pillar housing strategy and contemplates that Canada would acquire project lands and explore station-hub development with the developer partner. That intent carried forward into the ALTO procurement, which required a high-speed rail proposal from all bidders.

    But the presentation is explicitly provisional throughout: “provisional guidelines,” requirements “to be refined,” an affordable-housing threshold “to be determined.” It attaches no budget, no land-assembly cost, no carrying-cost provision, and no capture-revenue target — and it describes a federal-acquisition-then-explore model that is the opposite of ALTO-led capture across catchments. The procurement confirms an intention to pursue TOD; it does not supply the costed mechanism on which the $12 billion depends.

    Section 4 · Station-Level Realism Check

    Even a generous bottom-up envelope falls short

    The TRAM model is corridor-wide and does not allocate the $12 billion to specific stations. Spread across the seven announced stations, it implies an average of roughly $1.7 billion per station. A station-by-station review of catchment characteristics shows how implausible that is — most of the corridor’s stations serve small markets or are already built out, so most uplift would accrue to existing landowners rather than to a public capture programme.

    Already built out

    Toronto:$1.0–2.0B — incremental only

    Montréal:$1.0–2.0B — incremental only

    Note:Most uplift to existing owners

    Small / thin markets

    Ptbrgh:$0.1–0.3B — CMA ~90k

    T-Rivières:$0.1–0.3B — CMA ~85k

    Québec:$0.3–0.8B — heritage limits

    Suburban / uncertain

    Ottawa:$0.5–1.5B — core receding

    Laval:$0.3–0.8B — greenfield TOD

    Total:$3.3–7.7B gross envelope

    Summed, a generous corridor-wide envelope — gross, undiscounted, spread over 20–30 years — reaches $3.3 to $7.7 billion. Even its upper bound falls short of the $12 billion the model requires. And that envelope still assumes full institutional empowerment of ALTO as a development corporation, which is not on the table, while ignoring both the carrying cost of land assembly and the compensation cost of catchment-area expropriation.

    Section 5 · The Timing Mismatch

    Most of the value, in present terms, is fictional

    The model treats $12 billion as available during construction, to reduce the principal borrowed. In practice, capture accrues over decades. Land sales and development gains around new stations typically materialise five to fifteen years after a station opens, and construction on the full corridor is projected to take well over a decade. A realistic capture stream would produce most of its value between roughly 2040 and 2060 — long after the borrowing is priced.

    Discounted at the model’s own 8 percent rate, $12 billion realised over Years 15–35 has a present value of only about $3 to $4 billion at financial close. That is the figure that can actually reduce the borrowing requirement. The remaining $8 to $9 billion in the arithmetic is, in present-value terms, fictional — and the construction debt still has to be priced against the full undiscounted principal.

    $12B
    Gross, undiscounted — as the model treats it
    $3–4B
    Present value at financial close, at the model’s own 8% rate
    $8–9B
    The remainder — fictional in present-value terms
    Section 6 · Why It Matters

    One line, three improvements, all of them collapse

    The $12 billion capture line is the single most important — and least scrutinised — financing assumption in the only publicly available financial model for ALTO. It does three things at once, and all three depend on the same unsupported number.

    1

    It cuts the borrowed capital

    From roughly $53 billion to $41 billion — the difference being the $12 billion the model assumes capture will supply.

    2

    It pulls self-sufficiency forward

    From “never” to Year 48. Without the capture line, the companion brief’s own “No LVC” scenario never reaches self-sufficiency by Year 50.

    3

    It lowers the annual subsidy

    From $2.12 billion to $1.23 billion a year on average — the gap between “tolerable on paper” and “permanently subsidised.”

    Professor El-Geneidy has said publicly that the model uses “very generous” assumptions, particularly on demand, and that breakeven “can happen … but it requires a lot of work from the government to make it happen.” The capture assumption falls into the same category. Even on its own optimistic terms, the model shows cumulative subsidies of $61.6 billion through Year 50, on top of the initial $26.6 billion federal investment — a combined taxpayer exposure of $88.2 billion before any recovery from project revenues.

    Where Things Stand

    A placeholder, not a pillar

    The $12 billion figure should be treated as a planning placeholder rather than a financing prospect. Any business case, public communication, or appraisal that relies on it as a stable revenue pillar is overstating ALTO’s financial position by an order of magnitude — at the present-value point that matters most, the moment construction debt is priced. The defensible number is in the low single billions, it arrives over decades, and it cannot be borrowed against today.

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    Land Value Capture — Assessing the $12 Billion Claim (PDF)
    Reference note for federal decision-makers, parliamentarians, journalists, and residents along the corridor
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    Sources

    References

    1.
    Zhang, B., Negm, H., & El-Geneidy, A. (2025). High-Speed Rail in Canada: Insights from a corridor-wide survey and a financial analysis. Transportation Research at McGill, McGill University. Updated January 2026. Source of the $79.8 billion capital cost, the 15-percent capture ratio, and the $41.23 billion borrowed-principal figure.
    2.
    El-Geneidy, A., et al. (December 2025). Importance of Land Value Capture regarding the Canada High-Speed Rail. Transportation Research at McGill, McGill University. Source of the “No LVC” scenario and the $2.12 billion average annual subsidy.
    3.
    Pettit, C., Thackway, W., & Wade, R. (2022). High Speed Rail Value Uplift Preliminary Investigation Report. City Futures Research Centre, UNSW Sydney. The Australian East Coast HSR pre-feasibility range.
    4.
    On the UK case see HM Treasury, Oakervee Review of HS2 (2020); on Brightline see filings under SEC EDGAR for Brightline Holdings LLC and reporting in Bond Buyer through 2025–2026.
    5.
    Siemiatycki, M., Fagan, D., & Arku, R. N. (April 2023). Land Value Capture Study: Paying for Transit-Oriented Communities. Infrastructure Institute, School of Cities, University of Toronto. Supported by the Canada Infrastructure Bank. Source of the $30–110 million per-deal range, the REM 7.4-percent figure, the Capstan Station case, and the fragmented-ownership finding.
    6.
    Infrastructure Canada (April 10, 2024). Housing and Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) — High Frequency Rail (HFR) Project, Subject-Specific Meeting #4B. Government of Canada. Released under the Access to Information Act, file A-2025-00223.
    7.
    El-Geneidy quoted in Canadian Affairs, “The high cost of high-speed rail” (January 9, 2026; corrected February 27, 2026).
  • Acquiring the neighbourhood

    Acquiring the Neighbourhood

    What ALTO says publicly about land acquisition — the 60-metre right-of-way — and what a federal procurement document, released under Access to Information, shows the project was designed to do around its stations.

    ⚠ Document Under Analysis

    A Protected A federal slide deck — Subject-Specific Meeting #4B on Housing, dated April 10, 2024 — was released under Access to Information (file A-2025-00223, interim package). It was prepared for the consortia then bidding to become the project’s Private Developer Partner, roughly a year before the public consultations.

    The deck sets out a federal strategy to use the rail project as a vehicle for housing and Transit-Oriented Development around each of the proposed station locations. Its first pillar is to acquire station-area land and define a framework for its development. ALTO has made no public statement about land value capture or station-area land assembly, and frames acquisition publicly around the 60-metre right-of-way alone.

    Critical Finding

    The public discussion of ALTO expropriation runs together three different things. The first — the linear taking of a 60-metre right-of-way — is well documented. The second — fiscal and regulatory value-capture tools such as levies, charges and tax-increment financing — requires taking no one’s home. The third — station-area land assembly, in which a public body acquires a development portfolio around a station — does involve acquisition, and can reach beyond the operational footprint toward station-area homes; it is the variant urban residents have reason to watch.

    The released procurement deck shows that the third was designed into the project at the bidding stage. The honest qualification, drawn from the federal government’s own infrastructure bank, is that the financial payoff Canadian evidence supports for this kind of assembly is modest and market-dependent — which raises a value-for-money question, not only an expropriation one.

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    Acquiring the Neighbourhood — Full Brief (PDF)
    The three takings — right-of-way, fiscal value capture, station-area assembly — set against the released A-2025-00223 procurement deck and the Canada Infrastructure Bank’s own land value capture evidence
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    The Question

    A procurement notice that asks for more than track

    In February 2026, Transport Canada published a tender for Financial Advisory Services to the high-speed rail initiative (solicitation T8080-240075). Among the advisory categories it lists are two that belong to a specific vocabulary: “Land value capture and community benefits advisory services” and “Transit-oriented Development and community benefits advisory services.” Transport Canada was, in other words, procuring the capacity to do land value capture — even though ALTO itself has said nothing public about it.

    Land value capture (LVC) is the principle that public investment — a new station — raises the value of nearby land, and that the public purse can reclaim part of that uplift to help pay for the investment that created it. It is a respectable idea with a long international history. The question this brief addresses is narrower and more practical: how likely is LVC to feature in ALTO, and what would it mean for expropriation for people who live near a prospective station in Ottawa, Toronto or Montreal?

    Until recently, the honest answer was “likely as a financing rationale, but the public record confines acquisition to the right-of-way.” A document released under Access to Information now allows a sharper answer.

    The Released Document

    What the procurement deck shows

    The deck released under file A-2025-00223 is a Protected A federal presentation, “Housing and Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) — High Frequency Rail (HFR) Project, Subject-Specific Meeting #4B,” dated April 10, 2024. Its audience was the consortia then bidding to become the Private Developer Partner (PDP). Its purpose, stated on its own opening slide, was to explore how the project “can serve as a catalyst for housing development” and to describe Canada’s vision for “leveraging Transit-Oriented Development” near railway hubs.

    Three features of the deck bear directly on the expropriation question.

    A four-pillar housing strategy

    Pillar 1, “Land & Real Property,” is to “identify lands along the proposed Alignment for station hubs and define a framework for their usage.” Pillar 4 is to leverage funding programs to “increase housing supply near station hubs.”

    An acquire-then-develop sequence

    The Provisional Guidelines slide states it plainly: “Canada would acquire the lands needed for the project and would explore with the PDP opportunities to optimize the development of station hubs.”

    A worked visual concept

    The deck renders an aerial of an Ottawa station hub ringed by mid- and high-rise towers — labelled a VIA HFR/QMOT 2023 concept, “for information and conceptual illustration only.”

    The construction of that middle sentence is the heart of the matter. Canada acquires; Canada and the PDP then develop. That public-acquisition-then-development sequence is the defining shape of the land-assembly variant of value capture — the Hong Kong “Rail + Property” family of models — not of a simple right-of-way taking. The federal housing department of the day (then Infrastructure Canada, INFC; now Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Canada, HICC) appears throughout as a named party, alongside VIA-HFR, Transport Canada and the PDP.

    This matters because it changes what kind of claim the Initiative can responsibly make. It is no longer necessary to infer a development intent from a procurement notice. The intent was set out, in a federal deck, to the people bidding to build the railway, a year before the public was consulted.

    Three Different Takings

    What “land acquisition” actually covers

    The single phrase “land acquisition” is doing the work of three quite different things. They differ in what they take, from whom, and at what scale. Distinguishing them is the whole of the analysis.

    Taking 01 The right-of-way
    What ALTO says publicly

    Acquisition is framed around a “final right-of-way” of about 60 metres in width; the corporation will seek negotiated agreements at market value before resorting to expropriation.

    ALTO public statements, May 2026

    What it is

    A linear taking: a continuous strip of land for track. The CEO has estimated the Ottawa–Montreal segment alone would cross roughly 1,700 properties, including about 500 farms.

    Bill C-15 sharpens the federal acquisition powers: first right of refusal on coveted properties, prohibition-of-work orders, the ability to skip negotiation and go straight to expropriation, with objections routed to the Minister of Transport rather than an independent hearing.

    Why this matters This is the taking the public debate already knows. It is real, it is large, and it is the source of the rural alarm along the southern corridor. But it is a strip — its footprint is the width of the line. It is not the mechanism by which a neighbourhood around a station would change hands.
    Taking 02 Fiscal & regulatory value capture
    The vocabulary in the tender

    “Land value capture and community benefits advisory services”; “Transit-oriented Development and community benefits advisory services.”

    Transport Canada tender T8080-240075, February 2026

    What it is

    Four of the five LVC classes catalogued by the Canada Infrastructure Bank are fiscal or regulatory: infrastructure levies, development charges, density bonuses, and tax increment financing.

    None of these requires taking anyone’s home. A homeowner near a station can be subject to a levy or a higher assessment without being expropriated at all. Montreal’s REM, for example, uses a $10/sq ft development charge in a zone around its stations — a tax, not a taking.

    Why this matters This is the part of “land value capture” that the alarmed reading of the tender gets wrong. Most LVC tools are taxes and zoning levers, not seizures. If ALTO’s value capture took this form, the effect on station-area residents would be financial — higher charges on new development, possibly passed through to buyers and renters — not displacement. The CIB notes the recognised downside here is “double taxation” concerns and pass-through to affordability, not expropriation.
    Taking 03 Station-area land assembly
    What the deck describes

    “Canada would acquire the lands needed for the project and would explore with the PDP opportunities to optimize the development of station hubs.”

    A-2025-00223, Provisional Guidelines slide (April 10, 2024)

    What it is

    The fifth CIB class: “Land Acquisition, Investment and Disposition” — the public body acquires a land portfolio, then sells, leases, or jointly develops it. The CIB names the Hong Kong MTR Rail + Property model as the archetype.

    The McGill TRAM study’s explicit recommendation is to “empower Alto to lead development and value capture within 2 km around the stations.” Two kilometres around a station is not a platform footprint — it is a neighbourhood.

    Why this matters This is the taking that touches urban homes, and it is the one the released deck shows was designed in. A station chosen for its “intensification potential” is, by definition, a station where the public body has reason to acquire more than the operational footprint. The C-15 powers attach to “lands needed for the project” — and the project’s own 2024 design defined “needed” to include development land for station hubs, not merely track and platform.
    Where the Threads Converge

    The Ottawa case

    Map of the Ottawa and Tremblay station area showing the Eastway Gardens neighbourhood east of the existing stations
    Ottawa and Tremblay station area, showing the Eastway Gardens neighbourhood east of the existing stations. Map by Ottawajin, via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. Unmodified.

    Eastway Gardens — the residential pocket east of the Tremblay Road stations, known locally as Ottawa’s “Alphabet Village” for its lettered avenues — is where the abstract distinction becomes concrete. Reporting in the Ottawa Citizen in May 2026 found a neighbourhood already living with the prospect: Alta Vista Councillor Marty Carr, who represents the area, said “the majority of residents in that neighbourhood think that it’s likely that a station would come there,” and described “a lot of trepidation, and a lot of unknowns,” with homeowners “very worried about expropriation.” Alto has identified the area as a potential Ottawa stop, and Carr believes “the space exists” on an empty parcel along Tremblay Road between Avenue U and St. Laurent Boulevard.

    What makes that site attractive is the most telling detail in the reporting. Rideau-Vanier Councillor Stéphanie Plante — whose ward contains the downtown alternative, the former Union Station now serving as the Senate building — recounted what Alto had explained to her about the Tremblay option: “they have the space, it can be developed, the lands are ready to go.” David Jeanes of Transport Action Canada, who attended an Alto roundtable, noted the Tremblay area’s “significant intensification potential.” These are land value capture arguments in everything but name — and, in Plante’s account, they are Alto’s own framing of why Tremblay is preferred. The McGill study’s logic — prioritise “nodes with strong redevelopment and value-appreciation prospects rather than built-out downtown cores” — is exactly that reasoning, and it runs the same direction: toward the developable, ready site and away from the constrained downtown one. Alto’s CEO has said an above-ground station at the Senate building would “completely destroy the neighbourhood”; the Transport Minister cited the 2016 Rideau Street sinkhole and “geotechnical challenges” against it while praising the existing Tremblay station.

    The expropriation question is, in the same reporting, explicitly an urban one and not only a rural one. The CEO estimated to Radio-Canada that the roughly 200 km of track between Ottawa and Montreal would cross about 1,700 properties, including some 500 farms — the linear taking. But residents along Avenue U voiced the wider worry directly, one noting the “really nice big space” between Avenue U and St. Laurent that a station might consume. The conceptual aerial in the released deck is, pointedly, an Ottawa station hub ringed by towers. A site chosen partly for its redevelopment headroom is the site where the gap between a right-of-way taking and station-area assembly is most likely to be tested. The Eastway Gardens trepidation is, on this evidence, responding to something real in the project’s own design documents — even as the public-facing messaging confines itself to the 60-metre strip.

    The Honest Qualification

    What the federal evidence says the payoff is

    The case for watching station-area assembly does not rest on assuming it will be lucrative. The opposite is closer to the truth, and it is the federal government’s own infrastructure bank that says so. The 2023 Canada Infrastructure Bank land value capture study — authored at the University of Toronto’s Infrastructure Institute — is sober about how much development-based LVC actually raises in Canada.

    Modest sums, in practice

    The study’s author characterises the record this way: rail-project value capture typically generates “tens of millions to hundreds of millions of dollars,” with only schemes catalysing large amounts of high-density development in high-value locations generating over a billion. Against an ALTO capital cost of $60–90 billion, the typical case is a rounding error per site; the billion-dollar case depends on exactly the intensification a site like Tremblay is being chosen for.

    Hong Kong does not transplant

    The Rail + Property model depends on Hong Kong’s state leasehold land tenure. The CIB is explicit that Canadian station areas have “fragmented ownership involving multiple public and private entities,” which makes the land assembly that powers the model difficult to convene.

    This cuts two ways, and the Initiative should present both. It tempers the alarm: the financial incentive for aggressive, wholesale neighbourhood acquisition is weaker in the Canadian context than the McGill 15%-of-capital scenario implies, because the revenue simply has not materialised at that scale here. But it also sharpens a different concern. If the development-revenue payoff is modest and market-dependent, then the expropriation footprint of station-area assembly may be incurred for a fiscal benefit that does not arrive. That is a value-for-money question — the same family of question the Initiative’s subsidy-frontier work raises elsewhere — and it is at least as important as the expropriation question itself.

    The McGill financial model illustrates the tension. Its self-sufficiency scenario depends on LVC contributing the equivalent of 15% of capital cost — on the order of C$12 billion against its C$79.8 billion construction estimate. The CIB’s evidence on realised Canadian deals suggests that figure is optimistic by a wide margin. The residents’ exposure, in other words, rests on a development-revenue premise that the more cautious Canadian evidence questions.

    On this point the study’s author has spoken directly to the project. In a submission to the Senate Standing Committee on Transport and Communications, Matti Siemiatycki — who broadly supports value capture “as a matter of complementary public policy” — cautioned that the revenue-generating potential of LVC on the high-speed rail line is “likely limited by the few stations that Alto is proposing.” That is the author of the very study being applied to ALTO by name, reaching the same conclusion this section reasons toward: the development-revenue case is real but constrained, and the constraint is structural. (The caution is about how much LVC will recoup, not about expropriation; the inference that a constrained payoff weakens the case for an enlarged acquisition footprint is the Initiative’s.)

    Side by Side

    Three takings, one project

    Read together, the three takings are not interchangeable. They differ in shape, in who is exposed, and in what the public record acknowledges.

    Right-of-way

    Shape:Linear strip (~60 m)

    Exposed:Corridor owners; ~1,700 properties Ott–Mtl

    Public?Acknowledged

    Fiscal capture

    Shape:Levies, charges, TIF

    Exposed:New development; no homes taken

    Public?In tender only

    Station assembly

    Shape:Beyond the footprint (McGill: up to 2 km)

    Exposed:Development land around the station

    Public?In 2024 deck; not acknowledged publicly

    The pattern is the disclosure asymmetry. The linear taking is discussed openly. The fiscal tools appear only in a procurement notice. The station-area assembly — the acquisition of development land beyond the line itself — was set out to bidders in 2024 and has not been part of any public ALTO communication since. That gap, now documented rather than inferred, is the brief’s subject.

    The honest answer

    How likely is land value capture — and what would it mean?

    As with the cost and ridership questions, the answer depends on what is being asked.

    Is LVC likely to feature in ALTO? On the evidence, yes — as a design intent. It is resourced in the tender, named in the federal housing mandate, modelled by McGill, and set out to bidders in the 2024 deck. What is not established is that it has survived into the Co-Development Phase as an executed land-assembly program. The deck is a procurement-stage document in the conditional voice — “would acquire,” “to be refined” — describing intent and a negotiating posture, not a finalised plan.

    What would it mean for expropriation? That depends entirely on which of the three takings is meant. If ALTO’s value capture takes the fiscal form — levies and charges — the effect on station-area residents is financial, not displacement. If it takes the station-assembly form the 2024 deck describes, the effect can reach beyond the line into development land around the station — how far being the unanswered question — and the C-15 powers apply to that land as “needed for the project.” The deck shows the second was designed in; it does not show it has been executed.

    The defensible position is therefore precise. The most alarming claim — “LVC means ALTO will expropriate your neighbourhood” — is not supported, and the CIB’s own evidence on modest Canadian returns argues against wholesale assembly being worth the trouble. But the reassuring claim — “acquisition is only the 60-metre right-of-way” — is contradicted by the federal government’s own procurement deck. The truth sits between the public messaging and the public fear, and the released document is what lets the Initiative locate it.

    For the next federal statement

    Three questions to ask

    Where the next federal statement on ALTO land is concerned — whether in a corporate plan, a consultation report, or a public communication from ALTO — three questions follow.

    1. On scope of acquisition: Does “land needed for the project” mean the operational right-of-way only, or does it include development land for station hubs? If the latter, what is the geographic extent around each station, and on what basis is that land “needed”?
    2. On mechanism: Which form of value capture is contemplated — fiscal tools (levies, charges, TIF) that take no homes, or land assembly that does? If assembly, what is the expected development revenue, against what acquisition cost and footprint?
    3. On the business case: Given the Canada Infrastructure Bank’s own finding that Canadian development-based LVC has typically raised tens to hundreds of millions per deal — only the largest schemes exceeding a billion — what justifies the McGill model’s assumption of LVC at 15% of a $60–90 billion capital cost, and what expropriation footprint is being incurred to chase it?

    None of these questions presupposes opposition to housing near transit, which is a widely shared public good. Each asks only that the project state plainly what its own 2024 design documents already contemplate — so that residents near a prospective station can know whether they are reading about a tax, a strip, or a neighbourhood.

    There is also a constructive remedy already on the record. In his Senate submission, Siemiatycki recommends that the Bill C-15 acquisition powers “should only be used as a last resort,” and that “the original landowners should be given first right of refusal to repurchase any expropriated land not used for the project.” That second safeguard is precisely calibrated to the concern this brief identifies: a right to repurchase land not used for the project only matters if the project might acquire more than it uses — the surplus-acquisition dynamic that station-area assembly creates. Adopting it would cost the project nothing it needs and would directly answer the station-area resident’s fear.

    Download Full Brief
    Acquiring the Neighbourhood (PDF)
    Reference document for federal decision-makers, parliamentarians, journalists, and residents near prospective station sites
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    Where Things Stand

    Two accounts, one of them public

    As of May 2026, ALTO’s public account of land acquisition is the 60-metre right-of-way. The federal procurement record released under Access to Information shows that, a year before the public consultations, the project was being co-developed with bidders as a vehicle for housing and Transit-Oriented Development whose first pillar was to identify and acquire station-area land. The two accounts are not contradictory, but the second is materially larger than the first — and only the first has been put to the public.

    Sources

    Primary documents and references

    1.
    Housing and Transit-Oriented Development (TOD), High Frequency Rail (HFR) Project, Subject-Specific Meeting #4B, April 10, 2024. Government of Canada slide deck (Protected A), released under the Access to Information Act, file A-2025-00223 (interim release package). The document predates the ALTO rebrand and names Infrastructure Canada (INFC), now Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Canada (HICC).
    2.
    Public Services and Procurement Canada / Transport Canada, “Financial Advisory Services to Transport Canada for the High-Speed Rail (HSR) Initiative,” solicitation T8080-240075, CanadaBuys, published February 20, 2026. Source of the “land value capture” and “transit-oriented Development” advisory categories. canadabuys.canada.ca
    3.
    Siemiatycki, M., Fagan, D., & Arku, R.N. (2023). Land Value Capture Study: Paying for Transit-Oriented Communities. Infrastructure Institute, School of Cities, University of Toronto, supported by the Canada Infrastructure Bank. Source of the five-class LVC taxonomy, the realised-deal range (tens of millions to hundreds of millions, with only the largest schemes exceeding a billion), and the fragmented-ownership finding. cib-bic.ca
    4.
    Siemiatycki, M. Submission on High-Speed Rail to the Senate Standing Committee on Transport and Communications. Infrastructure Institute, School of Cities, University of Toronto. Source of the author’s ALTO-specific judgment that LVC revenue is “likely limited by the few stations that Alto is proposing,” and of the recommendation that Bill C-15 powers be used only “as a last resort” with original landowners given first right of refusal to repurchase any expropriated land not used for the project. Distinct from the 2023 study at source 3.
    5.
    El-Geneidy, A., Anabtawi, R., Zhang, B., Carvalho, T., Negm, H., Alousi-Jones, M. & Page, M. (December 2025). Importance of Land Value Capture regarding the Canada High-speed Rail. Transportation Research at McGill (TRAM), McGill University. Source of the 15%-of-capital scenario and the “within 2 km around the stations” recommendation. tram.mcgill.ca
    6.
    Transport Canada, High-Speed Rail Initiative from Toronto to Québec City — departmental roles, including HICC’s mandate on “strategies to increase housing supply near stations” and PSPC’s responsibility for the expropriation process. tc.canada.ca
    7.
    Ben Andrews, “‘Trepidation’ in neighbourhood next to Tremblay station after Alto officials throw cold water on downtown stop,” Ottawa Citizen, May 18, 2026. Source of the Eastway Gardens accounts (Coun. Marty Carr; residents on Avenues U and T), Coun. Stéphanie Plante’s account of Alto’s Tremblay rationale (“the lands are ready to go”), David Jeanes’ “significant intensification potential” observation, CEO Martin Imbleau’s “completely destroy the neighbourhood” remark (CFRA) and his Radio-Canada estimate of ~1,700 properties / ~500 farms across the ~200 km Ottawa–Montreal segment, and Transport Minister Steven MacKinnon’s “geotechnical challenges” comments. ottawacitizen.com
    8.
    Farmers Forum, reporting on the Bill C-15 acquisition powers as analysed by expropriation counsel (Davies Howe) — first right of refusal, prohibition-of-work orders, direct-to-expropriation, and ministerial rather than independent objection routing.
    9.
    ALTO HSR Citizen Research Initiative companion briefs: Reading the Answer (cost, ridership, subsidies) and The Report That Vanished (the parliamentary record and the documented marketing-led pivot). This brief is intended to be read alongside them.