ORLANDO-Transformation. That’s the word that enters economist David Marks’ mind when he looks at the plans for the SunRail commuter rail system that will link Orlando with Volusia, Seminole, and Osceola communities. As Marks sees it, the SunRail will transform Central Florida into a modern, sustainable community that will dramatically improve Central Florida’s economy.
“SunRail’s 61-mile route will eventually define the core of urban living in Central Florida,” says David Marks, a nationally-recognized urban economist who has amassed a 20-year study of sustainable communities. “For an area of about two-miles from these rail stations—an area of approximately 8,000 acres—we’ll see the sort of urbanization that has made many European communities and some American communities more livable.” The 120,000-acre SunRail corridor is home to about 423,000 people. That’s 16% of the region’s 2.6 million residents and about 28% of the region’s employees. Eventually, Marks predicts these figures could approach 50%. He says SunRail will also reduce the need for road-building efforts in outlying suburban areas and reduce traffic congestion in urban areas.