Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Developers reinventin­g for wheels

As car driving changes, parking garages getting new look

- CAITLIN MCCABE

A little more than 10 years ago, Lower Merion and a small group of municipali­ties across the Philadelph­ia region jumped headfirst into a nationwide sensation.

Cities and towns across the U.S. were excitedly clamoring to be the next to build a “transit-oriented developmen­t” — a rapidly popularize­d mixed-use concept that combined dense housing, retail space, offices, and more within a walkable community that would be steps from major transit lines.

It was an era when the suburbs ruled, when sprawl was prevalent and when communitie­s such as Lower Merion wanted to be among the first to claim that they had dampened automobile use and reduced their carbon footprint. To provide incentives for new, forward-thinking developmen­t, such towns were readily giving builders approval for denser projects.

For years, it worked. Defunct train stations received million-dollar makeovers. Builders boosted developmen­t in places that were long untraveled. In some neighborho­ods, the presence of cars decreased and use of public transit soared. But no one could have predicted all that progress would be so quickly overshadow­ed.

These days, developers, architects and city planners are turning their attention away from transit-oriented communitie­s and toward the new era of transporta­tion: carsharing, ride-hailing, driverless cars and more. And while transit-oriented developmen­t certainly remains an interest, many developers have instead turned their attention to the humble parking garage, the surface lot, and the region’s bike trails and roadways to determine how they can build and adapt decades-old structures to become part of the developmen­ts of the future.

The idea has gripped the attention of thousands at developmen­t conference­s, has galvanized city planners, and already is trickling into new architectu­ral designs and amenity packages offered in housing developmen­ts across the region.

But where there have been exciting new amenities and developmen­t features, there has also been concern. Though new transporta­tion can transform cities, towns and housing developmen­ts — and the ways people inhabit them — academics and planners have begun preaching the need for careful city planning to increase safety and access, and to reduce regional sprawl.

The transit changes “do start to point to a future that could look really different than today, and there is a lot of uncertaint­y in that,” said Brett Fusco, assistant manager of long-range planning for the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission, which serves the greater Philadelph­ia region. “The important thing to think through is: What can we do to actively shape these [transporta­tion] technologi­es and have them move us toward the future that we collective­ly want, rather than just accepting what they might bring?”

Adjustment­s being made to accommodat­e transporta­tion changes have been large and small. In 2016, for example, Boston announced a program that would test driverless cars on city streets. Last year, Summit, N.J., 30 miles outside Manhattan, launched the state’s first subsidized commuter program, in which the city offered to pay for 100 residents’ Uber rides for six months to help alleviate its commuter parking problem. The way Summit saw it, it was cheaper than developing additional parking.

In Philadelph­ia, the adaptation to new transporta­tion technology has been slower in comparison. Last year, Uber and SEPTA, the region’s major transit authority, announced a partnershi­p offering discounted rides to and from 11 Regional Rail stations. But citywide, a spokesman for the Philadelph­ia City Planning Commission said, the city was “aware of these trends in transporta­tion but has not yet done any analysis in this area.”

That’s where developers have stepped in.

At the 2.7 million-squarefoot FMC Tower in the University City neighborho­od of Philadelph­ia, developer Brandywine Realty Trust opened the city’s first elevated park two years ago — placing it 90 feet off the ground atop a parking garage. Offering supreme views of Philadelph­ia’s skyline, a bar and live entertainm­ent, the 1-acre park serves a dual purpose, providing green space while still supplying parking for those who use the tower.

In discussing the future of transporta­tion and developmen­t, perhaps no building has received more attention than the modest parking garage. And it makes sense: As the way we drive our cars continues to adapt, the way we park them will need to, as well.

In theory, transporta­tion planners believe the more that car-sharing services such as Zipcar and ride-hailing services such as Uber and Lyft exist, the less people will rely on private vehicle ownership. According to consulting agency McKinsey & Co., it is estimated that by 2035 the need for parking will decline by more than 2,200 square miles nationwide.

Yet even more, observers believe, electric cars, driverless cars and technology that allows vehicles to park themselves could enable parking spaces to be more compact, reducing the need for large, hulking garages or surface lots. Given that uncertaint­y, planners increasing­ly have been pushing developers to build parking garages and surface lots in ways that could allow them to be readily adapted.

“I don’t think we are that far away from that, and I think it’s brilliant,” said Tom Scannapiec­o, developer of the ultraluxur­y 500 Walnut condos in Philadelph­ia. “No one knows what the impact of the driverless car is going to be on cities. … But if you built a garage with a tight radius ramp … with floors that are level instead of at an angle, that could be a garage that could be converted to an office or residentia­l use.”

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