The Distance That Costs: Transportation and Urban Housing Affordability

Ar. Poorva Priyadarshini, Assistant Professor, Amity School of Architecture and Planning, Amity University Gurugram


Introduction: Every morning, as the city begins to move, millions of people step out of their homes and begin a journey that silently shapes their lives. Some walk a few minutes to a nearby bus stop or metro station, while others travel for hours across the city, changing buses, trains, and roads before reaching their workplace or classroom. These daily journeys are rarely considered when we talk about housing affordability. Yet, they tell the real story of what it costs to live in a city. Housing is often labelled affordable when rent appears low, particularly in areas on the edge of cities. However, for those who live there, affordability is experienced through long commutes, rising fuel expenses, and lost hours of rest and family time. This paper explores housing affordability not as a static financial calculation but as a lived urban experience shaped by transportation cost.

When land prices rise in city centres, affordable housing is pushed outward. At first glance, this shift seems logical. Cheaper land allows cheaper housing, offering relief to households struggling with high rents. However, as residents settle into these peripheral areas, a new cost begins to emerge. Each kilometer between home and workplace translates into money spent on travel and time lost in transit.

Transportation costs include more than bus fares or fuel prices. They include the cost of owning and maintaining vehicles, the stress of congestion, and the exhaustion of long commutes. For students and teachers, these journeys often begin before sunrise and end late in the evening, leaving little time for learning, reflection, or family life. What appears affordable on paper slowly becomes unaffordable in practice.

Researchers began to recognize this disconnect when households that met traditional affordability benchmarks continued to experience financial strain. The Housing plus Transportation affordability framework emerged from this realization, suggesting that housing costs cannot be separated from mobility costs. A home is only truly affordable when it allows people to reach their daily destinations without excessive financial or physical burden.

In many cases, households living closer to employment centres pay higher rent but spend significantly less on transportation. Over time, their overall cost of living is lower than those residing in distant suburbs. Affordability, therefore, becomes a question of access rather than price alone. The form of the city itself plays a critical role in this story. Cities that grow outward rather than upward create longer distances between homes, jobs, and institutions. This pattern of urban sprawl increases dependence on private vehicles and weakens public transport networks. Residents living in such environments often have little choice but to spend more on transportation, even when their incomes do not increase.

In contrast, compact and well-connected neighborhoods allow residents to walk, cycle, or use public transport with ease. In these areas, daily life becomes less about surviving long commutes and more about participating in the city. Accessibility transforms affordability.

Public transportation has the power to rewrite the story of housing affordability. A reliable metro line or bus corridor can shrink distances and reduce expenses. Homes located near transit systems offer residents something more valuable than low rent: time, predictability, and opportunity. Transit-oriented development reflects this understanding by encouraging housing, workspaces, and services to grow together around transport nodes. Such environments reduce travel costs, support sustainable mobility, and create neighborhoods where affordability is experienced holistically rather than calculated narrowly.

The burden of transportation costs is not shared equally. Low- and middle-income households feel it most acutely, as a larger portion of their income is spent on commuting. Long travel times often force difficult choices, such as reducing educational expenses, postponing healthcare, or accepting informal housing closer to work.

These patterns are visible in Indian cities, where informal settlements often appear near employment centres and educational hubs. These settlements are not merely housing solutions; they are responses to unaffordable transportation. They reveal how people prioritise proximity over formal ownership when survival is at stake.

In Indian cities, the relationship between transportation and housing affordability is deeply intertwined with rapid urbanisation and uneven infrastructure development. Students and faculty members often travel long distances due to limited affordable housing near campuses. Rising fuel prices and overcrowded public transport further intensify the burden.

These daily journeys, repeated year after year, shape academic productivity, mental health, and quality of life. They highlight the urgent need for planning approaches that consider housing and transportation as parts of a single system rather than separate sectors.

Housing affordability is not just about the cost of a roof over one’s head. It is about the cost of reaching the world beyond that roof. Transportation cost quietly determines how much time people have, how much energy they spend, and how fully they can participate in urban life.

By listening to the everyday journeys of city residents, this paper argues for a redefinition of affordability that places accessibility at its core. Integrated land-use and transportation planning can transform cities from spaces of daily struggle into environments of opportunity. True affordability, ultimately, is not measured in square feet or rent receipts, but in the ease with which people can live, learn, and belong.

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