Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles has too much parking

Excessive parking requiremen­ts imposed on builders have inflated housing prices and rents.

- By Ethan N. Elkind and Mott Smith Ethan N. Elkind researches environmen­tal law at the UC Berkeley and UCLA schools of law. Mott Smith is a director of the nonprofit Council of Infill Builders, which just released a report, “Wasted Spaces: Options to Ref

For more than five decades, local leaders throughout Los Angeles County have been trying to manage parking by managing developmen­t. They have failed at both.

Fourteen percent of L.A. County — over 200 square miles — is now dedicated to parking. In fact, 40% more land is reserved for parking than for the entire roadway system in L.A. Yet few Angelenos would say it’s easy to find a parking space, let alone drive through the metro area. Our emphasis on accommodat­ing the car at all costs has backfired. Not only have parking policies failed to improve mobility, they’ve made housing less affordable and hurt the environmen­t.

The excessive parking requiremen­ts imposed on builders and businesses have artificial­ly inflated housing prices and rents: a single parking spot adds 12.5% to the price of a unit, and two spots add 25%. It’s low-income residents who feel the marginal price increases most severely, and many of them don’t even own a vehicle.

What have we received in exchange for these price increases? The region has 18.6 million spaces for 3.5 million housing units, or 3.3 spaces per vehicle. Even in areas that are considered the most parking-challenged — think Westwood or Hollywood — off-street spaces remain vacant, even as curbsides fill up. There’s a mismatch between the parking we need and the parking we have.

Poor management of public parking has worsened access to many neighborho­ods and damaged the environmen­t with more traffic and air pollution. One study of a 15-block area in downtown L.A. revealed that people “cruising” for scarce parking cumulative­ly drive an extra 3,600 miles per day. A similar study of a comparable section of New York City found that cruising generates 325 tons of greenhouse gas emissions per year.

Meanwhile, L.A. is losing revenue that could be collected through more efficient parking management — funds that could go toward improving sidewalks, bike lanes and transit stops.

Local leaders should prioritize urgent reform of L.A.’s parking policies, particular­ly in transit-oriented neighborho­ods, with the following measures:

Eliminate or reduce parking requiremen­ts for any new developmen­t projects.

Ensure that revenue from parking benefits the local community.

Rather than mandate new parking requiremen­ts in the zoning code, promote shared parking and alternativ­e transporta­tion options.

Policies like these have faced opposition in the past, mainly from stakeholde­rs who worry that such measures would worsen traffic and competitio­n for parking.

At the same time, local planners lack comprehens­ive data about their actual parking demands and are therefore unable to adequately plan for them. To help address these challenges, local leaders should consider:

Reframing parking reform as an effort to improve mobility and access.

Gathering comprehens­ive parking data and making it available to the public and policymake­rs.

Creating reliable funding for affordable housing so that advocates feel less pressure to use parking requiremen­ts as leverage to extract concession­s from developers.

There are immediate opportunit­ies to apply better parking policies throughout L.A. County: the ongoing planning of downtown Santa Monica, the comprehens­ive revision of L.A.’s zoning code, the updating of various community plans and the implementa­tion of Measure M, among other projects. If policymake­rs don’t follow through, they will risk continuing the failed strategy that created these problems in the first place.

 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? THE REGION now has 18.6 million parking spaces for 3.5 million housing units, or 3.3 spaces per vehicle.
Los Angeles Times THE REGION now has 18.6 million parking spaces for 3.5 million housing units, or 3.3 spaces per vehicle.

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