Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

REVAMP FOR CITY PARKING

- PAUL WESTON

MOTORISTS will be paying $21 for a four-hour park in Surfers Paradise and face more fees and reduced time at popular spots such as Burleigh Heads, under major council carparking reforms.

The Bulletin can reveal the changes, which will also affect the Southport CBD and Broadbeach, will be introduced in February.

Officers conducted research and obtained feedback from councillor­s in a bid to ensure kerbside spaces were “within the optimum range of 60 to 80 per cent” usage.

While Surfers Paradise is yet to recover from the Covid downturn, the CBD in Southport faces more demand for spots.

Key parking changes include:

• The removal of 30-minute free parking in Surf Pde, Broadbeach; increasing the maximum length of stay from one hour to two hours; and increased stays west of Albert Ave, with fees going to $3.60 an hour.

• New paid parking along the eastern portion of Goodwin Tce between Rudd Park and Goodwin Tce carpark at Burleigh Heads; hourly fee of $1.50 and a maximum stay of three hours; the maximum stay at John Laws Park will be reduced from three to two hours.

• Southport will have progressiv­e pricing in the existing on-street parking spaces of $2.90 per hour for up to two hours, and $4.40 for two to four hours with a maximum stay of four at $14.60; these locations include Nind, Davenport, Hinze, Nerang and Lawson streets and Seabank Lane.

• In Surfers Paradise, retaining an hourly fee of $4.20 for one to two hours, $6.30 for two to four hours, and increase to $21 for a maximum stay of four hours; this will occur at View Ave, the Esplanade, Cavill Ave, Hanlan St, Peninsula Drive, and Appel, Trickett, Laycock and Clifford streets.

Southport-based councillor Brooke Patterson told the Bulletin: “The parking demand in Southport has shifted. There is more demand for all-day parking.

“On-street parking is at 55 per cent capacity in Southport, and most of that demand is in the all-day parking category. These changes simplify parking products in the CBD, so we deliver what the consumer wants, at a price they find acceptable.”

A council officer’s report found the CBD in 2021 recorded a 15 per cent increase in parking demand compared to pre-covid conditions, helped by all-day, on-street parking fees.

“Parking demand in Surfers Paradise is yet to return to

pre-covid conditions, likely due to impacts from internatio­nal and interstate travel restrictio­ns, while parking demand in Nerang and Palm Beach is generally similar to pre-covid conditions,” the council report said.

At John Laws Park in Burleigh Heads, parking occupancy is at 80 per cent and reducing the time limit “will improve parking availabili­ty by increasing

vehicle turnover”. Officers said on-street parking at Southport was 50 to 60 per cent, but off-street reached 80 to 90 per cent.

“Feedback received from stakeholde­rs as part of the study was that visitors to Southport CBD are generally seeking to park for longer than the current one- to twohour parking limits allow, deeming them not fit for purpose,” the report said.

Currently on-street parking

in Surfers Paradise is only for two hours, with the changes creating a four-hour stay at $21.

“During the study, feedback from Surfers Paradise business operators was that the existing one- and two-hour paid-parking time limits create a barrier for customers seeking to spend time in local shops, restaurant­s and at the beach,” the report said.

 ?? ?? Free parking for 30 minutes on Surf Parade, Broadbeach, will be removed.
Free parking for 30 minutes on Surf Parade, Broadbeach, will be removed.

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