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The High Cost of Free Parking (2005)

di Donald Shoup

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1794153,409 (3.75)1
One of the American Planning Association's most popular and influential books is finally in paperback, with a new preface from the author on how thinking about parking has changed since this book was first published. In this no-holds-barred treatise, Donald Shoup argues that free parking has contributed to auto dependence, rapid urban sprawl, extravagant energy use, and a host of other problems. Planners mandate free parking to alleviate congestion but end up distorting transportation choices, debasing urban design, damaging the economy, and degrading the environment. Ubiquitous free parking helps explain why our cities sprawl on a scale fit more for cars than for people, and why American motor vehicles now consume one-eighth of the world's total oil production. But it doesn't have to be this way. Shoup proposes new ways for cities to regulate parking - namely, charge fair market prices for curb parking, use the resulting revenue to pay for services in the neighborhoods that generate it, and remove zoning requirements for off-street parking. Such measures, according to the Yale-trained economist and UCLA planning professor, will make parking easier and driving less necessary. Join the swelling ranks of Shoupistas by picking up this book today. You'll never look at a parking spot the same way again.… (altro)
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Mostra 4 di 4
Wow! It took me an entire month to read this book. I had read so many other books about parking and cars and they all mentioned this book and I can see why. This is seriously like the bible of cars and parking. I learned so much from it and I think Donald provides a lot of really good evidence showing why parking is an issue and why it doesn't have to be by making smarter choices about parking that are economically and environmentally friendlier. Could the book have been shorts by a few hundred pages? Absolutely, but it was still a good read. ( )
  Moshepit20 | Sep 22, 2023 |
This book would have benefited from being run through a slicer; it is too long by about 3x. There is a lot of good information in here, but the constant repetition does not help, and the book begins to wear long before it is completed. That being said, I did appreciate the level of work and thought that went into this, and it is an important topic. The chapters he said to go ahead and skip if you found statistics unpleasant were my favorite chapters in the book, because they detailed the critical information and how the numbers were actually achieved. He gave a lot of examples that were valuable, but in many cases, the stories could have been trimmed by 2/3 and still have been as valuable. As a planning book for expert reading, this might make some sense (but probably not), but as a published book for a general audience, he definitely repeated things too many times, and said the same words too many times over and over. A valuable book that reduced the value by being cumbersome and tedious by the end. ( )
  Devil_llama | Mar 20, 2019 |
Review of Shoup, Donald C. (2005). The High Cost of Free Parking. APA Planners
Press, Chicago 733 pp. $59.95

When Donald Shoup buys or borrows a new book (and he must do this a lot), you can just see him running to the index, look up the word “parking”, and then make note of the relevant sentences, since every time the word “parking” has ever appeared in some other book, it seems, it is cited in this 733 page tome. Parking is a critical linkage between transportation and land use, and deserves more attention than it has historically received. This book, with its concomitant media coverage, has drawn focus to the topic. The ideas contained within are familiar to those who have read many of Shoup’s academic articles on the topic. His critique of the ITE Parking Generation (and Trip Generation) rates is classic, and should be noted by any planner who seeks “appeal to authority” as a justification for their actions or beliefs.

“Appeal to authority” is however a technique Shoup frequently employs, when turning from analysis to advocacy, citing just about every urban critic’s rant against blacktop. According to Shoup, off-street surface parking is a Great Planning Disaster in the vein
written about by Peter Hall (1982) in the book of the same name. The worldview suggests omnipotent (but obviously not omniscient) planners force minimum parking requirements onto defenseless developers, who have no choice but to comply. It only briefly notes the hassle and transaction costs of paying for parking at a meter (suggesting they are a thing of the past with new technologies). But those transaction costs (fumbling for quarters at meters) are much like the headaches with stopping at a toll booth before the advent of electronic toll collection, headaches which ultimately led to “free” roads paid for with gas and property taxes rather than toll roads paid directly by users.

Clearly the parking requirements imposed by planners are a proximate cause, but are they really the underlying reason we have so much free parking? Alternatively, do we have lots of free parking because we (as a community) want spatial separation between our buildings in low-density suburbs, or do we have spread out buildings because we want space for free parking? One wishes that this question could have been answered somewhere in the text. Unpopular and uneconomic laws and regulations rarely last in democratic governments where legislators stand for elections whose campaigns are funded by developers. There are reasons the United States has “paved over paradise and put up a parking lot”, and the ill-informed planner seems more likely a tool rather than an agent.

His insights about cruising for free or discounted curb parking are also important, and likely do produce congestion in some dense urban areas. The models presented have pedagogical value, though the idea of a planning course using this as a text may be a bit excessive.

The idea of unbundling the charge for parking from the charge for the other uses of land is also seemingly attractive. We bundle things all the time to reduce costs and increase convenience (e.g. we generally buy the lot and the house together rather than conduct separate transactions). We bundle to achieve efficiency by putting the cost of parking into the cost of everything else we purchase at stores, or the cost of rent for offices. Without bundling in our economy, we risk drowning in a sea of small charges. This book essentially calls for a full employment act for meter readers, and if carried through, would quite possibly end any unemployment problems remaining in the US.

I read with interest his chapter on “Taxing Foreigners Living Abroad” (not only because I wrote an article for Access with an identical title about toll roads being used more frequently in places with many non-resident drivers), as a way of changing the political dynamic and property rights associated with the on-street parking lane by allowing neighborhoods (or business improvement districts) to retain the revenue from parking, thereby obtaining local buy-in.

The solutions to the malaise are innovative, and in the end he reduces his many ideas to a three sensible reforms: charge fair-market prices for curb parking, return the revenue to neighborhoods, and remove requirements for off-street parking.

One cannot disagree with many of the proffered solutions as having roles in specific crowded and high-density places, the kind of places most planners prefer. Yet the vast majority of the United States now possesses sufficient free off-street parking to make
these solutions irrelevant for decades to come.



David Levinson
(Review originally appeared in Journal of the American Planning Association Autumn 2005, Vol. 71, Iss. 4, pg 459, 1.) ( )
3 vota dlevinson | Jan 8, 2009 |
734 p., illustrations, photos
  BmoreMetroCouncil | Feb 9, 2017 |
Mostra 4 di 4
The consequences of this curious situation—parking, parking, everywhere, but not a spot for me—have been disastrous for American cities. More parking encourages more driving, by incentivizing car ownership, pushing locations farther apart, and impairing the creation of safe, efficient infrastructure for transit, bikes, and pedestrians. So, adding parking supply doesn’t necessarily make it easier to park, especially when that parking remains free, divided between uses, and hard to find. Until you build so much parking that there’s no longer anything worth driving to.

Focusing on demand for parking, on the other hand, can help resolve this conundrum. That has been one of the central insights of Donald Shoup, the parking scholar whose 2005 book The High Cost of Free Parking put a spotlight on America’s tragic obsession with parking supply. About a third of downtown traffic consists of drivers looking for parking. By pricing the curb correctly, Shoup argued, you could make that traffic vanish overnight. In the long term, you could avoid the cost of creating more parking and use the extra money to encourage people to carpool, use transit, or ride a bike. When San Francisco adopted Shoup’s pricing suggestions a few years ago, some streets did get more expensive—but other places to park, including the city’s public garages, got cheaper.
aggiunto da elenchus | modificaSlate.com, Henry Grabar (May 3, 2023)
 
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[Preface] All of us, if we are reasonably comfortable, healthy, and safe, owe immense debts to the past. There is no way, of course, to repay the past. We can only repay those debts by making gifts to the future. —Jane Jacobs
[Chapter 1] You don't know what you've got till it's gone. They paved paradise and put up a parking lot. — Joni Mitchell
[Chapter 2] What I tell you three times is true. — Lewis Carroll
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[Preface] Who would have predicted that a 750-page book on parking could be popular enough to reprint as a paperback?
[Chapter 1] Children first learn about free parking when they play Monopoly.
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"In the beginning, the earth was without parking. The planner said, Let there be parking, and there was parking. And the planner saw that it was good. And the planner then said, Let there be off-street parking for each land use, according to its kind. And developers provided off-street parking for each land use according to its kind. And again the planner saw that it was good. And the planner said to cars, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it, and have dominion over every living thing that moves upon the earth. And the planner saw everything he had made, and, behold, it was not good." [p. 21]
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One of the American Planning Association's most popular and influential books is finally in paperback, with a new preface from the author on how thinking about parking has changed since this book was first published. In this no-holds-barred treatise, Donald Shoup argues that free parking has contributed to auto dependence, rapid urban sprawl, extravagant energy use, and a host of other problems. Planners mandate free parking to alleviate congestion but end up distorting transportation choices, debasing urban design, damaging the economy, and degrading the environment. Ubiquitous free parking helps explain why our cities sprawl on a scale fit more for cars than for people, and why American motor vehicles now consume one-eighth of the world's total oil production. But it doesn't have to be this way. Shoup proposes new ways for cities to regulate parking - namely, charge fair market prices for curb parking, use the resulting revenue to pay for services in the neighborhoods that generate it, and remove zoning requirements for off-street parking. Such measures, according to the Yale-trained economist and UCLA planning professor, will make parking easier and driving less necessary. Join the swelling ranks of Shoupistas by picking up this book today. You'll never look at a parking spot the same way again.

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