tod and parking: matching the requirements to the neighborhood by karina ricks

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SEEING THE WHOLE PICTURE Uniting on and off street parking policy and management for thriving places Rail~Voluton 2015 Karina Ricks, Principal @walk_left

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SEEING THE WHOLE PICTURE Uniting on and off street parking policy and management for thriving places

Rail~Voluton 2015 Karina Ricks, Principal @walk_left

2 RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

5 to 8 Parking spaces for every registered vehicle in a city

Source: Rich Renomeron

3 RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

15-40% Of urban traffic in major commercial areas are cars circling looking for parking

Source: Rich Renomeron

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The Conundrum

Private Off Street Parking

!  Controlled through zoning process (planning/zoning departments)

!  Often reserved for certain users !  Typically under used

Public On-Street Parking

!  Managed by transportation or public space departments

!  Typically available to all !  Too often over subscribed

5 RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

Supply comparison – on and off street

Average

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Supply and Utilization (Charlottesville, VA)

- 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000

On-street

Public off street

Private off-street

No of Spaces

58%

67%

92%

7 RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

Parking Reform

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HOW DO YOU: …WELCOME NEW DEVELOPMENT …MINIMIZE PARKING OVERBUILD …INCREASE AFFORDABILITY AND MOBILITY …MAINTAIN PEACE AND HARMONY?

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HOW? 1. OPTIMIZE WHAT THERE IS 2. KNOW WHAT YOU (REALLY) WANT 3. MANAGE ON AND OFF STREET TOGETHER

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Optimize what there is

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Optimize what there is: Share

OFFICE

RETAIL

PARK AND RIDE

RESIDENTIAL

RESIDENTIAL

RESIDENTIAL

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Optimize what there is: Decouple

More Parking?

More housing?

OR

13 RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

Optimize what there is: TDM

$200? $200 in “Free” Parking? OR

Credit: Joel Dinda

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Optimize what there is: Make Parking Easy

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Optimize what there is: Multimodal access •  Protected lanes:

•  49% more retail sales •  58% fewer injuries

•  Bicycle corral: •  12x more spending power

compared to auto space

•  Bus Lanes •  20% increase in bus speeds •  10% increase in ridership •  71% increase in retail sales

•  Bus stop v. parking space •  Bus - 25 people every 15 minutes

(100 people per hour) •  Parking - 1.2 people/15 minutes

(5/hour)

RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

!  Identify source of parking pressure

!  Clarify the most important outcomes (What do people want most?) •  Strong, diverse retail •  Equal access for all •  Protection for existing

residents •  The ability to stop fishing

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Know what you (really) want

RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

Confirm Issues – On-street Residential

!  Residential Permit Parking Restrictions •  Intended top protect

residents from outside pressures

•  Commonly around transit and destinations

•  “Enhanced” RPP

!  Curbside management •  Residents may need

protection from themselves

•  License to fish •  Concern (anger) over

more competition

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LOCAL  AMENITY  SUPPORT  “Strong, diverse businesses districts, walkable residential communities”

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Neighborhood Amenity Support

!  PRIORITY 1: LOADING + DELIVERIES Goods delivery challenges hinder many businesses Tools: Expanded loading zones, metered loading zones, off-peak delivery incentives

!  PRIORITY 2: HIGH-CAPACITY ACCESS Shared use and mass transit passenger vehicles bring more people to businesses.

Tools: Expanded bus zones, additional shared vehicle spaces, district (a.k.a. public) valet

!  PRIORITY 3: COMMERCIAL PATRONAGE Non-local patron access to sustain commercial quality and diversity.

Tools: Performance parking, metering “commercial adjacent” blocks

!  PRIORITY 4: RESIDENT-VEHICLE PARKING Residents need reasonable options for accessible parking.

Tools: Resident-exempt meters, small RPP zones, escalating rate RPP fee structure

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TRADE-OFFS ― Resident/business conflicts

REPRESENTATIVE CITIES

― San Francisco, CA ― Toronto, ON

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EQUITABLE  ACCESS  “All residents have the equal and affordable opportunity for access.”

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Equitable Access

!  PRIORITY 1: DISTRICT RESIDENTS AT-LARGE As residents of the city, all should be able to enjoy amenities of the city regardless of neighborhood.

Tools: Large or city-wide RPP zones, nominal fee RPP, limited areas designated as RPP

!  PRIORITY 2: COMMERCIAL PATRONAGE Strong businesses are a source of jobs, services and opportunities and many rely on

patrons from throughout the larger region. Tools: Time limit-based management, nominal parking rates, enforcement

!  PRIORITY 3: LOADING + DELIVERIES Goods delivery is essential to business survival and strength.

Tools: Managed loading zones !  PRIORITY 4: WORKERS + VISITORS Where space permits, after meeting the needs of District residents, curbside space

should be managed for workers and visitors. Tools: No-fee visitor permits

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TRADE-OFFS ― Access without availability isn’t access

― Potential circling and congestion ― Greater uncertainty

REPRESENTATIVE CITIES

― New York City

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RESIDENT  PRIORITY  “Protect existing residents from both outside pressure and new parking demand.”

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Resident Priority

!  PRIORITY 1: EXISTING/BUILT RESIDENCES Newer buildings have the option to provide parking

Tools: RPP protection, small RPP zones, RPP–eligibility restrictions

!  PRIORITY 2: RESIDENT VISITORS + HOUSEHOLD WORKERS Visitor parking for built stock only

Tools: Limited eligibility for visitor/worker parking permits

!  PRIORITY 3: COMMERCIAL PATRONAGE Short term commercial patrons parking at retail amenities.

Tools: Performance parking, metered parking confined to commercial streets only

!  PRIORITY 4: NEW RESIDENTS/NEW DEVELOPMENT Under special conditions, new residents or new development projects (such as

adaptive reuse) may be granted use of the public curbside.

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TRADE-OFFS ― Minimal support to businesses

― Can pit neighbors against ― Creates obstacles to visitors

REPRESENTATIVE CITIES ― Arlington County, VA

― Toronto, ON

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AVAILABILITY  MANAGEMENT  “Maintain desirable levels of availability for all users and demands.”

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Availabiltiy Management

!  PRIORITY AGNOSTIC Supply is managed according to demand; adequate availability for any who may need to use the curbside. Price is the primary demand-management tool utilized to value the

curbside space. Tools: Performance parking districts, real time availability tracking and information, dynamic pricing, metered loading zones, escalating rate RPP, variable rate RPP (by area), small RPP zones, limited RPP designations, pay-as-y0u-go RPP permits, pay-by-phone Visitor permits

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TRADE-OFFS ― High-demand area = high price

― No special privileges ― Apolitical process

REPRESENTATIVE CITIES ― San Francisco, CA

― Seattle, WA

RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

Tailored Approach

!  Not all neighborhoods are the same •  Different amenities •  Different priorities and

objectives •  Therefore, use different

approaches

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RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

Manage on- and off-street together

!  Agencies must work in concert !  Recognize integrated use

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0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900

1000 1100

Park

ed V

ehic

les

Water Street Garage

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

TOTAL SPACES

Manage On- and Off-Street Together: pricing

!  Off -street parking = $2.50/hr !  On-street parking = free (2

hour limit)

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Manage On- and Off-Street Together: Share

-

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

1,600

1,800

-

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

1,600

1,800

Actual Demand Unshared Supply

30% unused capacity

RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

Manage On- and Off-Street Together: RPP

!  Residents !  Visitors !  Transient users

RAIL~VOLUTION 2015

Manage Together: Anticipate Change

!  Building (and financing) projects that will last 40 years when technology will change in in less than 10

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NELSON\NYGAARD CONSULTING ASSOCIATES © 2014

Karina Ricks Principal

[email protected]

@walk_left