Chicago has made substantial progress in encouraging more development near public transit in the South and West sides — five years after adopting a plan aimed to do just that.
In 2021, city leaders created an Equitable Transit-Oriented Development, or ETOD, plan. Former Mayor Lori Lightfoot said at the time that the plan would “expand … access and give our most disinvested neighborhoods the long overdue opportunity to enjoy these benefits while not being forced out of the community they call home.”
The city had long pushed for transit-oriented development, or TOD, projects near CTA bus or rail stops but shifted its framework to ensure more development in historically disinvested neighborhoods.
There’s been “substantial progress” on more than half of the 42 recommendations the city of Chicago laid out in its 2021 policy, though more work needs to be done, according to a May report from Elevated Chicago, a coalition of community-based organizations, artists, developers and civic leaders.
“It’s a huge amount of progress. I think we should be collectively proud as a city that we have made so much progress in intentionally investing in more projects, investing resources and technical assistance,” Juan Sebastian Arias, executive director of Elevated Chicago, said. “There’s a lot to be proud of, and there’s still quite a bit of work to do.”
Arias said developers have embraced more of the ETOD plan’s principles. And developers can often receive low-income housing tax credits for these projects, in addition to city funding.
The plan also laid the foundation for the city’s Connected Communities Ordinance, passed in July 2022, that was “a landmark reform to Chicago’s zoning code,” according to the report. The ordinance created incentives for developers to build more units than typically allowed outside of transit zones and limited residential parking near public transit, among other provisions.
Also in 2022, Lightfoot allocated $10 million from the Chicago Recovery Plan toward the first phase of the ETOD grant program — a huge win, according to Arias. Much of the funding went to mixed-use projects, including Starling, a community space in North Lawndale, and the Little Angels Learning Center in Englewood.
Projects like Starling and Little Angels show that the type of ETOD projects are diversifying, Arias said.
“That’s also reflective of what community residents are often looking for,” he said. “These are all the important components of what it takes to have a vibrant, walkable neighborhood that connects people to opportunity, connects people to whatever it is that they need. It’s grocery stores; it’s community space; it’s all those kinds of different investments.”
There are more than 100 ETOD projects in the pipeline, as of 2026, according to Elevated Chicago. While many are in the North Side, there’s a growing number on the South and West sides, with many clustered around the Green Line and theRed Line Extension. Some of those projects include the recently opened Westhaven Park Station apartments, along the Green Line, and Gateway 79, a 5-acre mixed-use development with multifamily and senior housing near the Red Line’s 79th Street station.
The city’s 42 recommendations lay out ways to encourage more ETOD projects, such as hiring a full-time manager focused on ETOD, allowing for more small-scale housing near transit zones and creating architectural design templates to streamline the approval process. Significant progress has been made on 22 of the recommendations, with 20 having “some progress,” according to the report.
One area that still needs focus is updating the city’s zoning code, Arias said. For example, Arias pointed to how the city’s zoning code still doesn’t allow for three-flats, a key missing middle housing type, to be built near transit.
“We have a big challenge as a city in that a lot of two-flats and three-flats that are currently existing, or that currently are affordable to working-class families, are being lost or deconverted into single-family homes,” Arias said. “We don’t have strong enough tools to disincentivize the loss of those units.”
Arias hopes this work and more can be accomplished by the ETOD Working Group, co-chaired by Elevated Chicago and the mayor’s office. At the group’s recent retreat, Arias said they spent time discussing zoning reforms and renter protections. There’s also been a push to integrate ETOD with other city initiatives, such as Mayor Brandon Johnson’s Cut the Tape that aims to speed the development process for companies.
The mayor’s office said in a statement it “was pleased to review the progress which has been made since 2021, while acknowledging there is still much work to do as we continue to collaborate with Elevated Chicago’s ETOD Working Group to advance measures which contribute to our shared goals and collective work of building a more connected, sustainable, and affordable city for every Chicagoan.”
The group also discussed the Red Line Extension, which will create opportunities for more ETOD on the South Side. Some of those opportunities are already being explored, Arias said, like the 2.5-acre parcel across from the Red Line’s 95th/Dan Ryan station that has a request for proposal out by the city and the Chicago Transit Authority.
“We’re going to have to collectively — as a city, as a state — put just as much investment into development projects, into affordable housing, into community ownership opportunities all along the Red Line train stations as much as we’re investing in the train stations,” Arias said. “It’s really important to not lose sight of the fact that transit is essential for connecting people to opportunity.”